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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To find parenting adults so stressful

208 replies

Rockomum · 07/02/2025 23:54

Evening all, I’m really struggling right now and looking to see if anyone else feels the same.
I have 4 children, all of whom seem to be aiming to stress me out as much as possible.

DS1 is 24, he is off travelling, he started on a group tour but met 2 guys and 2 girls and has been travelling with them since, he’s head over heels for one of these girls and they have absolutely no plan. They all seem very free spirited which has meant missed planes and trains, multiple nights sleeping on airport floors, nights spent sleeping on a beach or in random places like that, lost one of his bankcards, hospital trip for a knee injury which he hasn’t at all rested and a seemingly endless amount of drinking.

DS2 is 22, just been broken up with and cheated on by the girl he’s been with since he was 15, trying to complete his masters, really struggling with his mental health, overwhelmed trying to work long hours as we can’t really help with money. He keeps telling us he feels lost and we trying to arrange therapy but private is expensive and NHS waiting lists are long. He lives 200 miles away so we can’t visit often and is struggling finding a social life apart from his ex.

DD1 is 20 and lives at home, she has arthritis which has had her more or less bed bound this winter. Her anxiety is through the rough from missing uni and friends. Constantly panicking about her future as she has no idea what she wants to do, has very low self esteem, feels envious of her siblings who are more independent and especially of DS1 as his life seems very exciting but inaccessible to DD. She cries most days, she has panic attacks and she’s had therapy etc.

DD2 is 18, first year of uni in London. Has had awful experiences with men on nights out, struggling to make friends, not enjoying her course very much. We are struggling to help her financially as London is so expensive it takes up all our budget on accommodation, so she has her minimum loan and a part time job she hates as people are rude. She calls me once a week wanting to come home but trains are expensive and she doesn’t always feel safe on the national express bus.

Meanwhile DH and I are struggling as there is so much stress, and DH had a cancer scare recently (luckily not cancer but we were scared). We both work long hours and when we come home there is always a kid to stress about and we aren’t young anymore so it takes it toll.

Every stage of having kids has had its hard parts but right now I’d do anything for teenagers again, living at home, where the problems were cleaning rooms, attitudes and homework. Or kids where it was fall outs with friends and running around to clubs every night. Now it feels like the problems are bigger, it’s their happiness, health, wellbeing, safety and future on the line. Everything they do has very real consequences.

I can’t sleep most nights for worrying, mostly about DS1 as I end up picturing him getting mugged on some beach or losing his phone. But the others too as they are struggling so much and I feel helpless.

Does anyone else feel like this? AIBU to feel like this?

OP posts:
laveritable · 08/02/2025 20:50

Stop trying to fix things! Listen to them. Give them pointers! They need to make their own money!

Firefly1987 · 08/02/2025 20:58

@CandyLeBonBon no not really, parenthood is a choice. I have a lot of empathy for her daughter who is ill and in pain though.

CandyLeBonBon · 08/02/2025 21:09

Firefly1987 · 08/02/2025 20:58

@CandyLeBonBon no not really, parenthood is a choice. I have a lot of empathy for her daughter who is ill and in pain though.

Why are on a website for parents? And specifically mums? Don't crick your neck looking down on everyone from that high horse, will you? 🙄

Firefly1987 · 08/02/2025 21:16

@CandyLeBonBon it's AIBU and she's BU. This place has some good debates and everyone is welcome. Just because someone is a parent doesn't mean they're always right you know 🙄pointing out having a lot of kids will be hard is not being on my high horse it's just common sense.

Staggeredatthisadmission · 08/02/2025 21:54

Magicpaintbrush · 08/02/2025 15:00

Oh my goodness, your poor DD, Rheumatoid Arthritis is so painful and debilitating, it ruins your life. She may not have been offered Methotrexate yet because she may have been too young for it before, but now she is an adult I would 1000% push Rheumatology to try her with it. I cannot express to you how completely life changing it has been for me - I was absolutely destroyed physically by RA and now I have not a single symptom and can live normally. It works by supressing your immune system so it can't mistakenly attack healthy tissue. It works gradually, it was about 3 months in that I started noticing a big difference, then over time it has continued to get better and better. After a year I only had some tightness/aching in my wrists (August) and by this Christmas just gone I realised even that had totally gone. I feel 100% normal and myself again, no pain or swelling or stiffness anywhere at all. I take methotrexate tablets on a set day each week, and also folic acid at the beginning and end of the week (methotrexate messes with your ability to absorb folic acid so you have to take supplements and not too close to your methotrexate tablet day). I would get her back to see the Rheumatology consultant and ask for her to be put on it, it could genuinely change her life if she gets on well with it.

@Magicpaintbrush

Gosh this has really shocked snd saddened me. My beautiful mum suffered RA from when I was 5 years old, until she died when I was 34. I was an only child and my dad died when I was 12 and I became a young carer for mum. I cannot even explain the sheer agony she suffered. To the point that I told her I’d help her to end her life and when she said she could never leave me, I told her we could die together. She was the bravest, funniest and most beautiful mum and her pain will live with me until the end of time. Reading that there is now a cure or at least a medication to stop it has really shocked me. It was her dream to see a cure and I am so happy to read you have found relief and others can get help too.
Thank you for posting this! X

cestlavielife · 08/02/2025 22:02

Dd1 might find young adult groups on discord for chronic illness. Suggest to her she tries on there

Dd2 national express is perfectly safe she should sit at front near driver

Ds travelling he will be fine

Ds at uni encourage to reach out to support

CandyLeBonBon · 09/02/2025 21:04

Firefly1987 · 08/02/2025 21:16

@CandyLeBonBon it's AIBU and she's BU. This place has some good debates and everyone is welcome. Just because someone is a parent doesn't mean they're always right you know 🙄pointing out having a lot of kids will be hard is not being on my high horse it's just common sense.

Are you normally this one-dimensional?

Firefly1987 · 09/02/2025 22:03

@CandyLeBonBon I just disagree with the OP putting all the blame on her kids, they're not really doing anything wrong. Life is stressful, her kids are just trying to live it and some of them are struggling but how is that their fault? They didn't get a choice in being born, the OP had a choice.

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