I get it.
Frankly, at 13, it is my feeling that you go where you are told, whether it is to the supermarket, to granny's house for dinner, to France, or to your room . If you enjoy it, so much the better. But complaining about the holiday you get is bad behavior. And the fact that so many kids who live in two households are allowed a 'right of refusal' that would not be allowed in an 'intact' household, is just bonkers.
There's not a lot to do in the Loire Valley. It's pretty dull. It was made even worse because my grandparents who took us thought we should be grateful for taking us somewhere where we didn't want to go.
I'm sort of with your grandparents on this one. Didn't you think then, and don't you think now, that you should have been grateful? Even if you didn't then and don't now feel it was a worthwhile experience, they must have gone to trouble and expense to give you an opportunity, and the fact that it wasn't to your liking doesn't lessen their efforts.
If she was the one with the power, she might be dragging you off to a theme park or something, which you wouldn't like.
But she's not. She's the child. Making these decisions is an adult privilege, that comes with adulthood. I agree with notdisney, this is a problem that goes way beyond stepparenting or separate households, and right to the heart of our expectations of children. I hate it, not just as a stepmother, but as a mother. It is ridiculous to give children a say in things they do not have the experience or knowledge to make good choices about.
This is the holiday on offer, and frankly, holidays are not a rght, they are a gift and more than that, they are an ^obligation* to the family as a whole. It is about spending time together as a family, not about providing entertainment for individual members.
The truth is that most kids, is they could design their own holiday, would base it a) on what they've seen in the media, b) what their friends and schoolmates are doing and b) on their own past experiences and current pleasures. The first and second are not realistic. The third prevents them from discovering new things and new interests and from growing as people.