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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

How family-ish are you as a family?

61 replies

Ohlookitsarainbow · 23/03/2025 17:40

Feeling sad that Dd, 6, won’t have a similar family upbringing
My family weren’t perfect, but I have lots of happy memories of us all sat round the tv on Saturday nights (parents & my two siblings) or Sunday dinners or family board games at the table, things like that.
Dh and me aren’t getting on well at the moment, but even when things are ok, he doesn’t really participate in these sorts of things for long and certainly doesn’t suggest them or plan anything.
Small example is Dd getting excited now about Britains got talent on a Saturday and staying up for the whole show with a treat takeaway. He sit with us to eat the takeaway, but then shortly after will disappear upstairs or in the other room on the computer. Also, we just don’t do games as a family, Ive tried really hard but there’s never much enthusiasm so I’ve given up.
I feel extra sad about it as Dd doesn’t have siblings there either, it just feels like a different upbringing, I really want her to look back with fondness of us all together

How many things do you do together as a family? What other things do you do? Or am I being ott in trying to push/organise things?

OP posts:
Teenagehorrorbag · 23/03/2025 21:58

I agree, it is important to do things together and bond as a family - and it will generally be driven by what the child or children want. You need to sit down with DH and explain that.

DD (mid teens) loves Cluedo. Dh and DS really don't - to the extent that she put it on this year's Christmas list that she wanted a family game of Cluedo. So we had a game in January and she loved it! Otherwise we try and play games after Sunday lunch, all together - and sometimes on other nights. Everyone likes different things so we have to be flexible, but have had loads of fun over the years. Today we played the domino game 'Mexican Train' with elderly grandma, two teenagers and us - great fun! And we all like rummy. Doesn't have to be long or complicated.

TV too - not so much these days as DH and I watch stuff and the kids don't as they are on their own gadgets - but definitely fun for younger ones.

Hope you can persuade DH to join in - I really think it's a major thing for families and for memories in later life.

ItsUpToYou · 23/03/2025 22:17

Ohlookitsarainbow · 23/03/2025 20:53

Did it bother/affect you?

Not really. My mum was amazing and we did so much together that I don’t think I really noticed my dad. I used to look forward to the evenings he was out so mum and I could have what I called our “special nights”, which was basically just watching Saturday night TV on the sofa in our PJs!

CarpetKnees · 23/03/2025 23:49

Ohlookitsarainbow · 23/03/2025 21:45

No need to be so rude.

He does other things with her separately, but I’m talking about things we can all do together in the house (I did mention other activities too, such as board games)

It's not rude.

You have asked if YABU to try to make your dh sit through things he really doesn't enjoy, because you seem to think doing that will create "special memories" for your child.
The way a discussion forum works is that some people will agree with you, some will completely disagree with you and some will be somewhere in between.
If you only want people to agree with you, then don't ask 'AIBU?'.

In my opinion - which I am entitled to give - it's daft to make someone do something they don't want to do, when there are so many wonderful things that parents can do with their dc which could be lovely, enjoyable times rather than sitting in an atmosphere because one of the parents doesn't want to be there.
You don't agree - which is fine. It's a discussion forum.

Flomingho · 24/03/2025 00:35

As a family of 3 board games were often played with limited success. Our family time is evening meals sitting at the table to chat, we try to all go out for a nice walk or outing together at least once during the weekend. Now DD is a teenager and out with friends it is more difficult to fit in. As for watching tv together as a family, this tends to only happen if there is something on that we are all interested in watching or a new film.

Ohlookitsarainbow · 24/03/2025 00:38

CarpetKnees · 23/03/2025 23:49

It's not rude.

You have asked if YABU to try to make your dh sit through things he really doesn't enjoy, because you seem to think doing that will create "special memories" for your child.
The way a discussion forum works is that some people will agree with you, some will completely disagree with you and some will be somewhere in between.
If you only want people to agree with you, then don't ask 'AIBU?'.

In my opinion - which I am entitled to give - it's daft to make someone do something they don't want to do, when there are so many wonderful things that parents can do with their dc which could be lovely, enjoyable times rather than sitting in an atmosphere because one of the parents doesn't want to be there.
You don't agree - which is fine. It's a discussion forum.

Yes, for sure, it’s a discussion forum. However, the majority are able to discuss in a respectful, helpful way.

OP posts:
theprincessthepea · 24/03/2025 03:11

Think about it differently. What things do you like to do together? What things do you like to do individually that you can do together. Being a family isn’t about recreating cheesy moments that you think being a family is about - being a family is just that - accepting that you are all individuals and coming together and some families have routines and moments where you do spend time together. The question is when, where and what.

My family do spend time together - we have a shared interest in eating, talking walks, museums, travelling, visiting friends, and we have a few TV shows we like in common.

OH likes , sport, documentaries and dramas. I like dramas, documentaries, feel good movies. My daughter likes game shows, documentaries and her age group shows.

We often share Tv shows that we think we would all like and make the effort to watch them together - but we also appreciate that each person has specific taste. When I’m cooking OH and DD might watch show thing I’m less into but they love - and vice versa - when OH cook me and DD will watch something he doesn’t care too much about.

Find out what your partner is into. Maybe he hates BGT? Find out why and maybe think of something else. Or if he hates it, agree to watch something he is into afterwards. Or maybe do something outside instead. There is so much you can do as a family - it doesn’t have to be restricted to board games and Saturday Night TV.

PlumRaspberryJam · 24/03/2025 04:16

I see what you mean OP. I feel times have changed since I was a kid too. As a family we all watched tv together on Saturday night.

We have the Disney subscription so there’s a lot of movies to pop on and watch as a family with DH and DC.

Natsku · 24/03/2025 04:29

We play board games together sometimes, and watch films together but we don't watch any regular programme together as a whole family (bit difficult with a 7 year age gap between children - there's not much they agree on watching except Bluey, which I do watch with them but OH doesn't) but we watch different things with different children (like I watch Simpsons with DS and X Files with DD, OH watches origami videos with DS and used to watch the Harry Potter films many times with DD but she's gotten bored of them now and they haven't found something new). We sometimes all go for a walk together.
But we don't do a lot together, we sometimes don't even go on holiday all together as I like to take the children to visit my family in the UK but my OH usually can't take that much time off work, and struggles with spending that much time with people he doesn't know well without private space to go to (we sleep on a sofa bed in the dining room so no room of our own), did it twice but not since.

Growing up we did so much as a family - card games, going for walks/countryside rambles, bike rides, holidays (though not always everyone as there were 7 of us and that made it difficult to take everyone on every holiday) and watching telly. I do miss that.

TheBlueRobin · 24/03/2025 05:34

I was an only child and grew up in similar circumstance to your DC. My dad worked 6 days a week and his time home was for sleep or watching sport/reruns of old sitcoms. My mum put an enormous amount of effort and energy into quality time together such as games, walks etc. My Dad was just kind of there really but never engaged.

You asked for impact as an adult, and what I would say is that I'm fine, well adjusted and sought having lots of friends of my own. My friends all did loads of board games etc growing up so I've been introduced in different ways. It did make me realise how different my upbringing was and I am sad about it at times but my Mum did her best. I'm pretty introverted and happy to entertain myself. Most of my hobbies are solitary. My Mum died two years ago and I've had to adapt to a new relationship with my Dad, which hasn't been easy but we've got there - but still no board games!

Notsosure1 · 24/03/2025 05:47

namechangeformeeee · 23/03/2025 17:43

Get rid of him - sounds like you and dd will be a happier family without him. A man who can’t even be bothered to sit and watch something their child is excited about? No.

I understand the sentiment but you’re recommending OP removes her DD from a home where her father spends some time with her and her mum to one where he spends no time with her and her mum.

I’m not saying he’s not a selfish prick but how is being on their own when DD presumably wants to see him every day going to be better for her?

AlmostCutMyHairToday · 24/03/2025 11:09

Ohlookitsarainbow · 23/03/2025 21:46

Did it affect you at all that he wasn’t involved?

Uff that's a qn for therapy lol. I don't mind that he wasn't involved as I realised / accepted very early on that he just wasn't an involved kind of dad. But I'm pretty independent by nature and don't rely on others for my own happiness (maybe to my detriment). On the other hand my brother was very much affected and still strives for my dad's love / attention, which doesn't work and makes him miserable.
I'm 99% sure my dad is on the spectrum, undiagnosed, so I try to see it from that perspective to make a little peace with it.
BTW my dad has just split with my mum after all of these years (in their 60s/70s). Over the last 15 years I've listened to my mum literally complaining constantly about my dad but doing nothing about it, which unfortunately made me grow apart from her, so now I don't have a close relationship with either of them. They should have definitely split earlier, though I don't know if it would have been any better for me as a kid if they had split then - maybe it would have highlighted how little love my dad had to give as I'd have seen him even less, plus it's always been super awkward to spend any time on my own with him. But at least my mum would have been happier, maybe.

It sounds like your DH is more involved - great that he does activities with her separately. Maybe it's just a case of finding the right activity that suits you all. How about you all list 5 films, and each week you can vote which film to watch from each persons list. Or look into activity books, they might trigger some ideas.

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