Imzadi
♥ Saved by an angel in a trench coat!
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2004
- Messages
- 40,327
She didn't speak to me for a month.
I'm curious, what did she do with her son the weekends that she wasn't talking to you? Was he home all weekend and she had to take care of him then?
If so, and I were you, I'd just set down some rules & boundaries: "I can only take him from ___ to ___." She most likely WILL withhold him from you for a few weeks. (Stand firm and keep texting or leaving a message each week and say you are available to see your grandson during the specified times YOU name if she wants some free time.) I'd think, once she realizes that SHE is the one taking care of him, or arranging other care for him - and it probably is not for the entire weekend and she is paying for the few/several few hours, then she may come to realize ANY amount of time you spend with him is a benefit to HER.
I would also have contingency plans ready for the next time she pulls the "I fell asleep" excuse. Like have a babysitter available in YOUR town. When she pulls the disappearance act, bring your grandson back home with you. If need be, get the babysitter to watch him until your DD comes to pick him up, even if it turns out to be on Monday when you are at work. YOU shouldn't be the one having to wait around for her (so naturally she doesn't show until she's done "napping") or that YOU have to drive him back again later. Again, when it becomes an inconvenience to HER, her being late or a no show will stop.
If she doesn't talk to you for a month or two again and withholds your grandson, so be it. You and your grandson have a looong life ahead of you. How you set up rules & boundaries NOW with your DD will be what happens for the next 16 years, until your grandson is old enough to see you on his own. Don't get stuck in the short term with a bad set up of being a doormat now that will continue for decades, even though it seems excruciating now without your grandson.
Nelson Mandela talked about the beginning of his 27 year imprisonment and how he and the other prisoners insisted on being called "MR. ___," no matter what else the guards did to them, "The battle for dignity is won or lost in the first few exchanges."
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