Discussion » Questions » Family » For those of you with kids, do your parents ever disagree with your parenting decisions.

For those of you with kids, do your parents ever disagree with your parenting decisions.

My F-I-L was livid that my husband didn’t name our first son after my husband, my F-I-L and the two that came before them.  My husband hates his first name, but it was also his dad’s grandpa’s and great-grandpa’s first name.  My husband told me he already had that shouting match with his dad by the time he was 12.  My F-I-L was also upset because we didn’t get our sons circumcised.  My own mom disagrees with us about spanking and LGBTQIA issues, but she supports all of our other parenting decisions, such as what we don’t let the kids watch on TV.

Posted - September 30, 2021

Responses


  • 44652
    mom only met our kids once.
      September 30, 2021 5:05 PM MDT
    3

  • 5451
    My twins only met my F-I-L a couple of times before he disappeared.  He said he wasn’t interested in the grandkids anyway and he didn’t want to be a grandfather.  They also only met my husband‘s grandmas a couple of times before they died.  I hope my twins were at least old enough to have some memory of them. This post was edited by Livvie at October 3, 2021 5:32 PM MDT
      October 2, 2021 11:41 AM MDT
    1

  • 34452
    If they did, they did not say anything. I know, we are more conservative as parents than either of our parents were. 
    There were a couple of times at their house, we had send the kids to the play room because of what my Dad put on TV.  My Step Mom noticed quickly and lined it out.  
    And a few times we let the kids climb on things that the Grandparents worried about. But most was said was: I can't watch.  

    But no arguements. Because we all respect each other's boundaries.  
      October 1, 2021 5:36 AM MDT
    4

  • 5451
    That’s reversed with my own mom.  I’m more liberal than my mom in some things, but we agree on other things except for the spanking and the issue with my first and her wife.  Religion is also a huge disagreement with us.  My first cousin and her wife isn’t an issue with my husband and me because we’re not Christians, but it is with my mom.  I just don’t want my kids hearing any judgments about my first cousin and her wife.  However, mom respects our wishes and she never says anything bad about my cousin’s marriage in front of the kids.

    Anyway, I’m super-conservative about what I let the kids watch on TV, and my mom definitely agrees with me on that. Our twins our only three, so right now they really don’t know about the stuff we don’t want them watching.  I want to keep it that way as long as possible, but I already have the banned cartoon list ready to go for when they’re older, lol.  I guess I’m just not the cool mom I thought I’d be when I was younger. This post was edited by Livvie at October 3, 2021 8:43 PM MDT
      October 2, 2021 11:36 AM MDT
    2

  • 34452
    Lol....we never are the cool parents we thought we would be.  And I think that is a good thing. It shows we grew up and are looking out for our children the best way we know how.
      October 3, 2021 3:27 PM MDT
    2

  • 5451
    Yeah, parenting just doesn’t work the way I thought it would before I had kids.  I thought I could just let my husband be the bad guy and handle all of the discipline while I could be the fun parent, but no, we both get to share being the bad guys equally.
      October 3, 2021 5:14 PM MDT
    2

  • 53526

     

      (That’s reversed with my own mom, I’m more liberal than her she in some things, . . . )

      October 3, 2021 8:38 PM MDT
    0

  • 5451
    I changed it to something else, but I didn’t copy you exactly because your way, though probably correct, sounds awkward to me.
      October 3, 2021 8:45 PM MDT
    0

  • 53526

     

       You can’t be more liberal or less liberal than her is.
      You can, however, be more liberal or less liberal than she is.

      October 3, 2021 10:41 PM MDT
    0

  • 53526

     

      Neither sets of in-laws live close enough to have had any opportunity for that kind of influence. My children are adults now, by the way. As far as what you wrote about naming the children, there was something happened along those lines.

      When my wife was in her eighth month of pregnancy with our second child, I was sent overseas on a six-month deployment. My mother went to stay with my wife to help out, spending that last month with her. The topic of the baby’s name came up between them, and all hell broke loose. I didn’t know anything about this until I made a phone call from Japan. My wife, already dealing with being pregnant and her husband being sent overseas, now had a nagging, meddling mother-in-law bending her ear over sheer nonsense. Imagine her mental state at the time. I calmed my wife down as best as can be done over a phone line thousands of miles away, and had her pass the phone to my mother.

      I then listened to a litany about why my mother disagreed with the name. In fact, it was the middle name we had chosen for the baby that had my mother up in arms. It turns out that when my mother was growing up, she had had a relative with the same name who had been very mean to her. She claimed the memory of that would always be triggered if we gave our baby the same name. This was my first time in my entire life hearing about this relative. 

      My mother had browbeaten my poor little wife over the issue, trying to convince her not to use the name. Of course, my wife didn’t know what to do, my mother was making too much of o big deal about it, so my phone call came just in time. Granted, my mother had had no further contact with that relative for about 40 years by that time, and didn’t even know if the relative was dead or alive. Additionally, it is an extremely common name, many everyday people have it, as do countless famous people, so my mother had heard the name zillions of times since her childhood, without it sending her off the deep end. I thought her stance was sheer craziness. I listened to every word my mother had to say and promptly ignored it all. I informed her that we would be naming the baby exactly what we had already planned on, and if she had a problem with it, it was her problem alone.

      Sure enough, when our baby was born, we did exactly that, neither knowing nor caring if my mother was still opposed. Today, more than two decades later, the matter has never come up even one time. I believe the way I handled it may have diverted my mother from even considering sticking her nose into our parenting, but like I stated above, we never lived very close to where she had day-to-day contact.
    ~

      October 1, 2021 6:40 AM MDT
    4

  • 5451
    We don’t live very close to either of my in-laws, but we keep in close contact with my mother-in-law.  We see them at least once a year.  We don’t know where my father-in-law is anymore.  My own parents are divorced, but my mom is 23 miles away and my dad and stepmom are 50 miles away.
      October 2, 2021 11:25 AM MDT
    2

  • 53526

     

      How close are you to Minneapolis, and would you be interested in doing some snooping around there for me?
    ~

      October 2, 2021 2:50 PM MDT
    1

  • 5451
    I’m 190 miles from Minneapolis.  Yeah, I can do some shopping around for you.  It would be my pleasure.  How about this wonderful new suit I saw in the store?




      October 2, 2021 9:31 PM MDT
    2

  • 53526

     

      SNOOPING AROUND for me; I said SNOOPING! And effective immediately, you’re officially banned from buying clothes for me! Grrrrrrr. 


    (Why is it I just can’t get any good help these days? Grrrrrrr.)




    ~

      October 2, 2021 11:09 PM MDT
    2

  • 2706
      Yes they did but only rarely did they voice what they disagreed with. Mainly because of the mutual respect and love we had for each other.
      October 1, 2021 6:58 AM MDT
    4

  • 5451
    That’s a good thing.  I don’t know if my dad or my husband’s mom and step-dad ever disagreed with my parenting.  If they did, they never said anything.  My mom is vocal about her disagreements, but she’s an excellent grandmother and she always yields to our parenting decisions, even though it clearly tortures her sometimes.
      October 2, 2021 11:45 AM MDT
    2

  • 16838
    Frequently. Mum was politically radical but socially and religiously extremely conservative (Catholic). When my wife and I named our firstborn Raelene, she fretted that there wasn't a Saint with that name whom she could ask to intercede on her granddaughter's behalf. She'd already been scandalised by the fact that said granddaughter was conceived out of wedlock.
      October 1, 2021 7:23 PM MDT
    3

  • 53526

     

      
      ~

      October 1, 2021 10:05 PM MDT
    2

  • 5451
    Raelene is a beautiful name.  I don’t know if there’s a Saint Olivia or not, and I also never checked to see if any of my kids‘ names were saints.  My own mom is extremely religiously conservative and also politically conservative (American definition of politically conservative), but I could never figure out exactly what Christianity has to do with right-wing politics, except for the abortion issue.


    This post was edited by Livvie at October 2, 2021 2:47 PM MDT
      October 2, 2021 11:06 AM MDT
    2

  • 53526

     

     Is she overdramatic with her protestations?
    ~

     

      October 2, 2021 2:48 PM MDT
    0

  • 16838
    It doesn't. Jesus was a Socialist, John the Baptist's teaching was parallel to that of Marx. Compare "if you have two coats, give one to your brother who has none. Likewise if you have meat." (Lk 3: 11) with "from each, according to his means. To each, according to his needs." (Das Kapital).
    So-called "prosperity theology" is the very antithesis of the message of the Gospels.
    I hope your mom can thread a needle with a cigarette.
      October 3, 2021 2:12 AM MDT
    2

  • 34452
    Has nothing to do with government. 

    Jesus said "Give unto Caesar what is Caesars and unto God what is God's." ...pay your taxes.  But WE (the church is to take care of the poor and the orphans. 

    Nowhere in the Bible does anyone say Give unto Caesar so Caesar can give unto the poor.  Government is not to take the place of God and the Church. 
      October 3, 2021 6:43 AM MDT
    1

  • 5451
    I’ve heard of churches that actually try, but it’s usually the state that actually can.
      October 3, 2021 2:19 PM MDT
    0

  • 34452
    I don't know of any church that does not try to help the poor.  Some more so than others and some who do it quietly. Many larger churches choose to do it in the background so as not to get the credit. 
      October 3, 2021 3:24 PM MDT
    1