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Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To expect my adult stepsons to acknowledge family birthdays

202 replies

Stepmonster50 · 17/05/2025 06:09

I’m feeling quite hurt and would really appreciate some outside perspective on this. My adult stepsons (late 20s and early 30s) have once again forgotten my daughter’s birthday, she’s 14. This has happened multiple times now, and each year I hope it’ll be different, but it never is.

I’ve been in their lives since they were teenagers. There parents had divorced before I met their Dad (my husband) I’ve always made an effort to be warm, supportive, and inclusive. I’ve done a lot for them over the years and never expected much in return, but remembering their sister’s birthday doesn’t feel like too much to ask. She’s at an age where these things matter, and she’s old enough to notice the absence.

To be honest, I have learned to live with being overlooked myself (they didn’t acknowledge my 50th last year either, despite being invited to celebrations), but the lack of consideration towards my daughters really stings. I’m starting to question how much effort I want to continue making in this dynamic when it feels so one-sided.

For background, when they see their sisters, they all get on well, they are close. They’ve been on family holidays with us, we’ve always welcomed them with friends and girlfriends. They have come to celebrate their Dad’s milestone birthdays and have a history of coming over when it suits them, rather like teens or younger adults might.

Have others experienced this with adult stepchildren? Am I expecting too much here, or is this just a case of emotional laziness on their part? I’d really appreciate honest views, genuinely trying to make sense of it all. I’ve found it really hurtful this time, and can’t really talk to my DH as he becomes very defensive of his sons.

OP posts:
Ireallywantadoughnut36 · 19/05/2025 14:48

Young men/boys are notorious for this, my 36 yr old brother just about remembers my kids if I remind him but he never remembers mine or my husbands and will msg me to ask when mum and dad's are. Try not to take it so personally, or I bet if you msg in advance and ask them if they'd like you to source a gift or card they'd say yes.... is it lazy and thoughtless, yes and ideally they'd be better, but honestly that's a key characteristic of men this age (tbh my husband doesn't remember his sister unless I prompt him). I hate saying it's a gender thing, because it shouldn't matter, but whether it's down to societies expectations all men seem rubbish at this in my experience (and yes they should do better but it's not personal at all)

Riaanna · 19/05/2025 15:05

Ingogneetoh · 19/05/2025 13:24

You have spectacularly missed the bigger picture here.

Based on…?

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