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Elderly parents

Would it be unkind to visit on Christmas Day

94 replies

MmeHennyPenny · 10/12/2024 16:22

Normally my parents,who are in their nineties come to my house for Christmas Day and Boxing Day.
I also host lots of other family members :- two babies, two toddlers, teens, 6 people in their twenties and assorted middle aged people!
Last year was a disaster. My parents wanted to hold forth with quite unpopular and out of date opinions. They struggled to negotiate their way around my unfamiliar house. They were highly critical of the children’s presents. They demanded to be taken home early when things were not going their way.
Recently they moved into a residential home. They have settled well and enjoy all the communal activities.
The majority of the residents will stay there over Christmas and there are planned festivities, which my parents would enjoy.
However my parents want to come to my home again as usual.
They are both less mobile than last year and can be a little confused. They both still like to be the centre of attraction.
Would it be terrible of me to insist that we will visit them in their home on Christmas morning and take them out for a walk join them for tea on Boxing Day instead of our normal routine?
I would like everyone else to enjoy their Christmas Day this year and not have it completely dominated by my parents as usual.

OP posts:
FiniteSagacity · 11/12/2024 21:27

@GinaDreamsofRunningAway truly, I hope you have lovely tolerable elderly relatives but I will not be inflicting mine on my DC on Christmas Day.

My DC already thinks I’m a door mat for putting up with the abuse DF dished out in front of them when we took DF to a medical appointment. Some elderly people have no filter left. At all. It is no fun for anyone. Add to that all the medical reasons they are in a nursing home - bringing them to a space without carers and no adaptations… nope.

I hope to be a very different elderly person one day. And if I need 24 hour care and supervision, I will be writing down now that I don’t expect my family to provide that. It needs a team of people who have shifts and holidays and are paid to be enthusiastic.

Helpimfalling · 11/12/2024 21:47

Comedycook · 10/12/2024 16:47

No...I'd host them still. Lots of people have tricky relatives...they're in their nineties, to be blunt, they don't have many Christmases left. How about the other guests show a bit of patience for one day of the year?

This!!

Squeekey · 12/12/2024 03:50

Helpimfalling · 11/12/2024 21:47

This!!

I agree.

On the insistence of my sibling (early 20"s), my parents didn't invite my very elderly uncle to Christmas, when I was a teenager. Relative was harmless but with very outdated views. My sibling said it was them or him and my parents choose them.

It was his last Christmas. Even 20 years later I feel sad about it, angry at my sibling and my parents feel guilty and regretful is the decision they made.

EmotionalBlackmail · 12/12/2024 10:21

But there's always two sides to these things. The example above, I was the kid who never got a good Christmas because of elderly uncle with obnoxious views. Even though he's been dead for years now I still resent how my parents couldn't put their children first even just for one year.

Floralnomad · 12/12/2024 10:34

Helpimfalling · 11/12/2024 21:47

This!!

So you would happily expect your gay child to sit through a day of casual homophobia without causing an argument or falling out with their grandparents ? I think you would find quite quickly that it will severely affect your relationship with your child .

MumonabikeE5 · 12/12/2024 10:39

Sounds entirely reasonable. You are not leaving them in a grey cold house alone.

Waterboatlass · 12/12/2024 10:45

I'd visit them in the home and to ry and encourage as many family members to visit around Christmas as possible (not all on the same day) . Continuity and adjustment are important and it sounds like they're well settled and management have a nice Christmas schedule in place which they'll enjoy

shiningstar2 · 12/12/2024 10:47

You have a lot to do in Christmas day and it didn't go well last year. My own mother is 93 so I know what you mean about outdated opinions. Just one of her so easier but we have teens and one is what used to be termed Asperger's and gets really agitated at some of her opinions and gets upset trying to show her why she's wrong even though we tell him to just leave it 😱 Fortunately I can close these things down so she will be coming. In your shoes I would go for a compromise solution. Either call into home for an hour but not morning as will be awful to get away ... especially this first year. Then I would either bring them home or take them out on Boxing Day. Thst way you have given them something to look forward to. Very hard all round I know 💐

UnpropitiousNightmares · 12/12/2024 10:47

That sounds like a great plan OP, absolutely yes - do it!

NewName24 · 12/12/2024 14:15

EmotionalBlackmail · 12/12/2024 10:21

But there's always two sides to these things. The example above, I was the kid who never got a good Christmas because of elderly uncle with obnoxious views. Even though he's been dead for years now I still resent how my parents couldn't put their children first even just for one year.

Exactly.

NewName24 · 12/12/2024 14:17

Floralnomad · 12/12/2024 10:34

So you would happily expect your gay child to sit through a day of casual homophobia without causing an argument or falling out with their grandparents ? I think you would find quite quickly that it will severely affect your relationship with your child .

Quite.
I would not invite adults, who should be capable of keeping their views to themselves, to spend the day insulting and upsetting me children. Well, to spend the day insulting any of my guests in truth.

Gall10 · 13/12/2024 11:19

MmeHennyPenny · 11/12/2024 14:31

Casual homophobic, and racist remarks.
My daughter is gay and her long time partner’s parents were originally from Nigeria.
My parents don’t mean to be unkind (I hope) but they are of their time and use out dated phrases etc. Despite having things explained often.
They also believe children should be seen and not heard. This was how they were treated when they were growing up. I could go on with more examples but you get the idea?

Sorry but I don’t ‘get the idea’.
No opinion can be ‘out of date’ surely. It’s an opinion, not a yoghurt!

I8toys · 13/12/2024 11:26

I have no clue why people put up with awful behaviour just because they're family. It makes it worse somehow.

Floralnomad · 13/12/2024 15:53

Gall10 · 13/12/2024 11:19

Sorry but I don’t ‘get the idea’.
No opinion can be ‘out of date’ surely. It’s an opinion, not a yoghurt!

You must be very young then so I will explain . In the 70s and 80s homophobic comments such as calling gay people poofs was acceptable to a degree because some people did not know any better . Times have changed , for the better , and these types of comments are totally unacceptable by any person of any age .

TinyMouseTheatre · 14/12/2024 08:54

We have a houseful of Elderly and sometimes difficult relatives on Christmas Day and I'd still say not to visit them on Christmas Day.

Your suggestion of Boxing Day sounds like a good compromise but I'd recommend going earlier than teatime as confusion often worsens as they get more tired during the day.

People might say that you should host them but it sounds as though they will have difficulty in coping with the day and you've probably had years of looking after them daily before they moved.

They are safe and the home will be lovely on the day. Enjoy your Christmas Day and see them another day Flowers

Preferedseating · 17/12/2024 12:46

Gall10 · 13/12/2024 11:19

Sorry but I don’t ‘get the idea’.
No opinion can be ‘out of date’ surely. It’s an opinion, not a yoghurt!

You're being deliberately obtuse here I suspect

Preferedseating · 17/12/2024 12:47

I8toys · 13/12/2024 11:26

I have no clue why people put up with awful behaviour just because they're family. It makes it worse somehow.

Totally agree, if all the sanctimonious posters could just go and congratulate themselves on their patience in another room please that would be great ...

Trimbleton · 19/12/2024 11:54

Preferedseating · 17/12/2024 12:47

Totally agree, if all the sanctimonious posters could just go and congratulate themselves on their patience in another room please that would be great ...

It’s not sanctimonious to say that you are willing to put up with PITA relatives for the one day.

Preferedseating · 20/12/2024 19:12

Trimbleton · 19/12/2024 11:54

It’s not sanctimonious to say that you are willing to put up with PITA relatives for the one day.

Christmas is really special for a lot of people though, apart from my birthday, Christmas is my second most important day of the year. I'm not having it ruined by some miserable fecker just because we're related. Not interested in stapling myself to a cross for them, sorry. .

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