I just don't know anyone who was raised to not attend a grandparents funeral unless for extreme circumstances so this just BOGGLES my mind and FIL is very upset.
I am just flabbergasted that I am the ONLY one that feels this way...I am absolutely speechless.
But then again I guess I am not surprised after reading all the posts here on the DIS about families around the holidays and how people don't spend time with their extended families and things like that.....I just wasn't raised that way and neither were most of my friends. My family drives me crazy at times, but it is family. I don't know a single person who wants to go to a funeral...I certainly don't. But I go because it is just what you do to pay respects for the deceased and the living. I really just don't get it.....
Thats not very nice. You insinuate that those that posted here aren't as family oriented as you. That you were raised better and so were your friends. In reality many her are just as close to their family, they just don't agree with you.
Thats they was I interpret it anyway.
He has 8 personal days accrued so he didn't HAVE to go back to work even if he would get no bereavement. He CHOSE to go back to work. She doesn't qualify for anything at this point so she didn't have much of a choice. That is the distinction.
Thats not very nice. You insinuate that those that posted here aren't as family oriented as you. That you were raised better and so were your friends. In reality many her are just as close to their family, they just don't agree with you.
Thats the way I interpret it anyway.
Not at all, what I was trying to say is we all have to do things we don't want to do.
I think people need to do what they need to do. Your BIL has to live with the choices he makes and, if he's from Virginia, he *might* have missed most of last week for school and needed to get back today. Not all of Virginia was like that but much of Virginia was snowed in last week.
He showed up, he supported the family. I personally think that's enough and I don't think families should judge so harshly.
I am just flabbergasted that I am the ONLY one that feels this way...I am absolutely speechless.
But then again I guess I am not surprised after reading all the posts here on the DIS about families around the holidays and how people don't spend time with their extended families and things like that.....I just wasn't raised that way and neither were most of my friends. My family drives me crazy at times, but it is family. I don't know a single person who wants to go to a funeral...I certainly don't. But I go because it is just what you do to pay respects for the deceased and the living. I really just don't get it.....
Thats not very nice. You insinuate that those that posted here aren't as family oriented as you. That you were raised better and so were your friends. In reality many her are just as close to their family, they just don't agree with you.
Thats the way I interpret it anyway.
Actually--we don't.
Families who demand that--ought to look into a book called "Boundaries".
Not at all, what I was trying to say is we all have to do things we don't want to do.
I am just flabbergasted that I am the ONLY one that feels this way...I am absolutely speechless.
But then again I guess I am not surprised after reading all the posts here on the DIS about families around the holidays and how people don't spend time with their extended families and things like that.....I just wasn't raised that way and neither were most of my friends. My family drives me crazy at times, but it is family. I don't know a single person who wants to go to a funeral...I certainly don't. But I go because it is just what you do to pay respects for the deceased and the living. I really just don't get it.....
Thats not very nice. You insinuate that those that posted here aren't as family oriented as you. That you were raised better and so were your friends. In reality many her are just as close to their family, they just don't agree with you.
Thats the way I interpret it anyway.
Not at all, what I was trying to say is we all have to do things we don't want to do.
Um, people can pay respects in other ways - not just by attending the funeral.I am just flabbergasted that I am the ONLY one that feels this way...I am absolutely speechless.
But then again I guess I am not surprised after reading all the posts here on the DIS about families around the holidays and how people don't spend time with their extended families and things like that.....I just wasn't raised that way and neither were most of my friends. My family drives me crazy at times, but it is family. I don't know a single person who wants to go to a funeral...I certainly don't. But I go because it is just what you do to pay respects for the deceased and the living. I really just don't get it.....
Actually--we don't.
Families who demand that--ought to look into a book called "Boundaries".
It would not bother me at all. I have to give him a lot of credit for coming up to PA to begin with. He took what time he could and came to pay his respects and then had to leave for whatever reason.
I missed both my grandfather's funerals because of distance (MI and IA) and timing. Just because me and my family were not there, did not mean we didn't love my grandfather any less.
I totally agree.His life, his grief. No one has the right to judge how others deal with these situations.
I agree, this is misplaced concern and highly irrational. He is a grown man and he did what he felt he needed to do.How much interrogating did your family do to judge his decision?
So many details--and it is all so scary.
I get being upset--but I will have to say as an outsider, the manner of which everyone is being upset is highly irrational. Expected with a death in the family--but none the less, highly irrational.
He did nothing wrong.
This is true. You don't know what pressures his wife was putting on him. You think you know that she wanted to come but you don't know for a fact. She could have been giving him the dickens but he was playing it off like everything was fine. You DON'T KNOW, you might think you do, but if you'll be honest with yourself, you don't know. My brother in law, as a teenager, once made a very profound statement. He said, "Believe NONE of what you hear and only half of what you see".You don't know what he wanted. You are assuming based on the outcome. Maybe he would have preferred to stay, relax and have family time, but commitment called.