pyrxtc said:Do you want her to be like you?.
What's wrong with her?
pyrxtc said:Do you want her to be like you?.
irishbosoxfan said:Yes while the OP said there will be 2 or 3 more opportunities to see the uncle doesn't mean her DD will go--If she doesn't go this time then she will be thinking of how to get out of those as well!
Obviously family means a lot to her DH as evidenced by the comment the OP made about his side of the family traveling a lot to see each other throughout the year and he wants to continue with that with his own family unluckily for him OP doesn't see that---I think what is important to our spouse needs to be important to us as well and if he wants DD to go then DD should go---He has a wife who doesn't share his love of family get togethers and now his DD is headed down the same path----You can only come up with so many excuses as to why someone isn't there before the family figures it out and he probably used them all up with the OP!
She is 15 and while she may have a life of her own that involves friends---FAMILY is the most important---(And if her friends don't understand that then they aren't the type of friends she deserves to have)
So what if she is bored off her gourd? Would you tell her when school gets boring she doesn't have to go? All of us get bored with different things but we don't just blow it off(meetings at work,doctors appts) If she didn't have PRIOR engagaments she should go--Just because isn't a valid reason to not do something
DH had every right to be mad about the situation and IMO wasn't being "childish" as another poster put it---For all the posters who believe she shouldn't have to go....Think of something that truly means a lot to you(graduating school,won an award,whatever) NOW imagine your spouse and child saying "You know what,bump you AND what makes you happy because I want NOTHING to do with it"-------How would you feel?
pyrxtc said:sorry, but I would tell ehr that her Dad would really like her to be there and she has to go. Sometimes you gotta spend time with family. Do you want her to be like you? Sometimes those stories are the best memorieswe ahve in our life.
Well, yeah, I wouldn't mind if she was like me?Marseeya said:Am I the only one who thinks a once a month trip to visit family 4 hours away is excessive?
My inlaws are 5-6 hours away and I can't even begin to imagine visiting them that often!
Christine said:FWIW, my MIL and FIL and their 125 lb Newfoundland are always welcome at my home at any time. I can have them there and still get my "chores" done. I have even encourage MIL to come because we live right next to Potomac Mills. Now, not to get into another type of thread but this can go in reverse. My DD is big into drama and has been in a few shows. They've never wanted to come for any of these things. I understand too. It's a long drive and everyone is busy. But don't pull that crap on me when I don't pull it on you, KWIM? They are retired, they have a lot more flexibility.
darrose said:Why is being borded a good reason not to go see family when its important to the dad?
Have her take some books to read, an art sketch book to draw in, a journal to write in, a deck of cards for solitare, etc and let her figure out how to entertain herself while getting to know her relatives better.
Its important to her dad. That should count for something.

Maleficent13 said:Well, here sits a woman who as a teenager was made to go to the grandparents. The house was small, the only thing to do there was read "Guideposts" and listen to my grandparents talk about their neighbors. My grandparents are both gone now, and I miss them, but believe me, it hasn't colored those mindnumbingly boring visits with anything like rose colored glasses. They were boring then; they are still boring in memory 20 yrs later.
I know people are saying "family is important" but really it appears that a few think that *grandparents* are important, but *children* aren't. If the OP's in-laws really wanted to see the grandchildren, why not make it fun and entertaining for them? Seems to me that the grandparents in this sitch are just as self-absorbed as everyone thinks the teen is. I would certainly not expect a child to come to my house and sit quietly for 5 days entertaining themselves while the rest of us talked about things and people that existed before they were born. I wouldn't do that to any adult that visited me (and I think most here would be appalled at my rudeness if I did); why would I do it to a child?
Maleficent13 said:You make it sound like they're all sitting around talking about historical events of national importance, or doing geneological research...when in reality, they're probably talking about the time Jimmy fell off the porch step and split his nose open. Woohoo, good times.
I'm not saying kids should be constantly entertained, but I am saying that a 5 day trip is a LOOOOOOOOONG time. An afternoon, sure, make her go and tell her to suck it up. 5 days, however, and there's got to be more to the gameplan than just "bring a gameboy and shut up".
Christine said::
FWIW, my MIL and FIL and their 125 lb Newfoundland are always welcome at my home at any time. I can have them there and still get my "chores" done. I have even encourage MIL to come because we live right next to Potomac Mills. Now, not to get into another type of thread but this can go in reverse. My DD is big into drama and has been in a few shows. They've never wanted to come for any of these things. I understand too. It's a long drive and everyone is busy. But don't pull that crap on me when I don't pull it on you, KWIM? They are retired, they have a lot more flexibility.
(I'm going with the assumption that they are in good health) I would let her stay home for this trip as long as she understands that she will be visiting the next time, when she can also spend time with her cousins. darrose said:Sounds like she would have had some boating (outdoor time) so are you assuming that all her time would have been inside reading guideposts because thats what you did as a teenager at your grandparents house?
Who knows what else she might have done to help her figure out how to not be bored at the relatives. Maybe she would have baked a cake, prepared some old fashion lemonade, made a materpiece with Jello.
She could read 10 novels in that time...but she can also do that at home. So why is her presence necessary so that her grandparents can witness this event? If it is all about family--why is it being suggested she read a book if she is so bored?