Follow
Share

I used to love the Holidays. Now Im reduced to wondering if my mother or any of her other daughters are going to take ANY initiative to figure out where Mom spends the holiday or am I going to be the one making the decision AGAIN. Christmas, me and my Hubby go home to see OUR kids. NO mom can NOT go with us. She cannot afford the trip and to pay for hotel rooms and and to be in a car for a week ( LOTS of miles on this trip ) and Im am just NOT lugging her around with us the whole time. That's one of the lines I have drawn in the sand. Hopefully next year she will be there. in her own place again so she can become part of the visit , but until then she needs to go with another sibling. Only 1 sister has offered ( as usual ) and If my mother and her other daughters don't make plans shes going to that sisters in Tennessee whether she wants to or not. I know my mother dosent really want to go back to visit this sister, thats where she went last Christmas and it didn't end well....but that's too bad , that's whats going to happen If I am the 1 left to make her plans. It infuriates me the my mother cant or just wont take the initiative to do SOMETHING for herself ( at least HELP make a plan for HER life). And her other daughters don't care as long as they don't have to do anything themselves. So I already Know what I have to look forward to. Just 1 more thing to worry about....

This discussion has been closed for comment. Start a New Discussion.
Find Care & Housing
Wouldn't it be fun to put everybody's name in a cup, just like drawing names for Christmas presents...and the lucky winner got to come get the elder and take them into their own home for the holiday. I used to fantasize about this! Hold your ground and good luck!
(5)
Report

Wow, Mincemeat, that drawing is a good idea! Golflady, I know the problem. I wrote a post to this forum last year entitled something like "Siblings dropped the ball on Christmas Day" because nobody had invited my mother for Christmas dinner or even thought about a plan for her. I was living 90 miles away at the time and had planned to go home after the Christmas Eve get-together but then stayed behind at Mom's house to throw together a Christmas dinner for just the two of us so she wouldn't be alone with no dinner. It seems it's always the way, one sibling takes the initiative and the others don't give it a second thought. My two older sisters both live within 3-4 blocks of my mother - one of those was going to her daughter's family's home for Christmas Day; the other was staying home and cooking for herself and her husband but didn't think to invite my Mom (or me, for that matter, but I wouldn't have wanted to go anyway). It's a bummer to be the only one who bothers to focus on something as obvious as where Mom is going to spend the holidays. It bites big time.
(1)
Report

Oh Mincemeat I LOVE that Idea !!! lol I know that wont happen but now I can fantasize !!
(1)
Report

CarlaCB it does bite. I see you can defiantly relate to the story. Its just sad how many of the same stories we hear on here time after time. And then these siblings wonder why WE have turned so darn cold.
(1)
Report

Mincemeat in MY fantasy Since I am the ONLY
one taking care of mom I will be in charge of that cup and the drawing of the name......LOL
(1)
Report

I have cooked all the holiday meals for years and have tried to get others to come on TG or Xmas. No, they want to come the day or weekend after and then I get to cook TWO meals. One a sad little affair of our own....I like to invite other people who have no place to go, but after a couple times of sitting down with mr. narcissist, they do not come again. :(
So a couple of years I had yet another fantasy. I booked a casa in Santa Fe, planned to have a FUN time with just my hub and kids. Nope, had to cancel last minute cuz sibling just could not come and take care of father.
Golflady, forge ahead!
(1)
Report

Funny I was thinking the same thing today about the holidays.. Football season starts and next thing you know it's Thanksgiving then Christmas..

I am dreading every minute of it.. (The holidays not football)!
(2)
Report

For those of you who don't want to cook or clean for Thanksgiving in the USA, Cracker Barrel offers a full dinner at a reasonable price. I wish I could get my family to meet a Cracker Barrel.

I usually decide what we do on the holidays. I will ask others and get the, "Whatever you want to do" type answer. Of course, if we were doing what I wanted to do, we would do anything but having dinner at our houses. We would be at the Cracker Barrel on T'giving and eating cold cuts, cake, and candy on Christmas.
(2)
Report

I used to love the holiday also then as the years passed by while the same thing happened with me (siblings wouldn't step in and my mother wouldn't initiate anything... She didn't want to "interfere in their lives"!)... Anyway, I've found now that I just don't have the passion I once had for any holiday and have now 'accepted' that things that I thought 'mattered' don't matter any more. It's a 'weird' sensation being put into this type of caregiving role (when you are left to fend for yourself... and, your loved one)... You have to push and push... At least you have 1 alternative (your sister who had your mom last year for Christmas). Sometimes, there are no 'right' (or wrong) answers. You just have to make the best possible choice and go for it. The main thing is that your mother is safe and cared for.
(3)
Report

Holidays........BAH HUMBUG! I'm going to go out with my Jewish friends and eat Chinese food for Xmas!
(11)
Report

I think that's my idea of really enjoying any day Windyridge... Sit in a restaurant (ambiance is a big plus for me if possible... doesn't have to be expensive), sip on a nice drink with nice company... or,by yourself!... A great relaxing getaway!
(3)
Report

I think in a lot of families once the matriarch/patriarch are unable to co-ordinate the family gathering nobody really knows how to fill the gap, and often there is a sigh of relief that the annual holiday gathering with extended family is a thing of the past. I expect it will be just mom and I this Christmas as it has been for the last several years. I will be hosting Thanksgiving however (much earlier and less of a big thing in Canada) as it is the only way I can persuade the family to come and spend a day here.

Golflady, I'm not sure what kind of initiative you expect from your mom, surely it is not up to her to call around begging for a place at your siblings table but up to them to invite her!
(4)
Report

Yes cwillie... Now that you mention it... It's an end of an Era really. Sadly, the majority of families have a different definition of what 'family' is suppose to be like. There's a lot of selfishness, disrespect , arrogance, etc going around. I can't grasp this but gave up... Very, very sad.
(2)
Report

There is nothing better than gathering a many generation family around the dinner table. But why wont the younger generation reciprocate? I love to cook and host, but darn it, I would like to be asked to come over to someone (anyone) else's for a meal. (Crock pot, sandwich, whatever!) Mini rant over .....feel better now...kind of
(3)
Report

JessieBelle, just curious -- why can't you be at Cracker Barrel on Thanksgiving? Ask relatives who will be joining you (each family paying their own way) so that you can make reservations. It seems to be up to you, so why aren't you doing what you want? (This is a serious question, so I hope it doesn't sound critical or sarcastic.)
(2)
Report

Jessie, when they say "whatever you want to do" tell them what time you'll be at Cracker Barrel and that it's separate checks all the way. Take the bull by the horns!
(3)
Report

Tried that, Babalou. Mom still holds on to the tradition of what family should be and the things they should do. Going to Cracker Barrel is off her table. I do know what my personal tradition is going to be on holidays in the future. Sleep late and have leftover pizza.
(5)
Report

What holidays? Just another day for me & husband
(1)
Report

Have tried writing twice and give up. Dreading the holidays. Enough said.
(1)
Report

This thread struck a cord with me, although I am not a full time caregiver - I'm a "one-weekend a month" caregiver. I think this struck a thread because I just had the annual fight with my mom and my in-laws over holidays. it happens around Halloween every year. 2 out of 3. Not three out of three because I didn't call my dad and stepmom yesterday. I used to hate the holidays.

This will be a long post - get some coffee and sit back. I know I will get a lot of criticism, but here goes. I work full time and have a 7 year old son. My parents are divorced, live 4 hours away. My in-laws live across the country. Their generation has TOO MANY EMOTIONAL EXPECTATIONS OF THE HOLIDAYS AND WE CAN'T LIVE UP TO THEM. When I was growing up, our families took turns hosting holidays and I don't remember fights. It didn't matter if my mom had the dinner at 1pm or my aunt at 3pm or grandma made her stuffing this way and aunt Mary another way. The families got together and enjoyed each other and if someone had to come late or leave early to see other family, no big deal. But these were people who all lived in the same town and saw each other several times a week. The holiday was a fun get together, but no emotion around it.

Fast forward 30-40 years. We are expected to travel every holiday on the holiday (not before, not after, ON). No one cares that I have to work the Friday after Thanksgiving - my dad/stepmom and my mom demand that we spend 8 hours in the car to come up for Thankgiving and then 4 weeks later for Christmas and then another 2 weeks later for my dad's birthday. My in-laws do not care that flying to them involves three winter airports and we ALWAYS get snow delays or cancellations somewhere. WE have to travel even though they are all retired, and with the exception of my dad, in good health. They can go to Alaska or Branson, but NO WAY will they travel to us for the holidays. And when we do travel, it is not good enough because we don't stay long enough or we see both my dad and mom and they still hate each other 25 years after the divorce and complain long and loud that we will see both of them.

My generation is no better - only the battles are not about who travels when but the food. Between 5 siblings and their spouses, someone is gluten free, vegan, diabetic, free-range meat only, raw veggies only, etc and seem to expect that the meal will be tailored around their particular need. They can't bring anything to eat of course. And all through the dinner - comments about poisoning our kids by giving them gluten or non-organic or whatever. It is a religion and they are on the soapbox over and over and over all through the dinner.

so, why do I no longer hate holidays? five years ago my husband and I were driving back from another Christmas dinner, in a snow storm, bickering (which turned into a full blown fight at home) and our son was stressed and wailing in his car seat - can't think why he didn't enjoy 8 hours in the car that day! We had to be at work the next morning, but that weekend we sat down and asked ourselves why the hell we were putting ourselves and our son through this E V E R Y Y E A R. Because we pleased no one, we decided to please ourselves (yes, this selfish younger generation who doesn't appreciate FAMILY). We do NOT travel for Thanksgiving any longer. We go up between Thanksgiving and Christmas ONE TIME to see mom, stepmom, dad and stay home at Christmas. Christmas is spent going to Christmas mass, having a quiet and nice dinner the three of us, opening a few presents in our pajamas on Christmas, playing board games, and having an open house Christmas afternoon for friends, family, neighbors who want to stop by. We go to see my in-laws at Easter or summer. My parents generation HATE IT and we fight about it every year, or at least they try. WE say "this works for us and if you keep on about it, we won't come at all". BUT, WHEN WE GET TOGETHER WE ARE HAPPIER. We bring the dinner up between TG and Christmas so no one elderly has to cook a 2nd time (sorry mom, you can't hold that over us any more) and they are delighted with the new things they might never have tried. "you younger generation are so creative and adventurous! this is great" VS "why did you make the pie that way you know we always.....". We are more relaxed and have time to enjoy each other without all of the emotional baggage. AND when I get together with MY generation - gee, the ones with food-religions bring food and shut up about it. The meal is more relaxed and we talk and laugh and no one is on their soapbox about gluten free pie dough.

So, that is my rant. I know many of you will think we are selfish. It works for us and my son enjoys being with family when we see them and the holidays and hears about pilgrims, and the angels, and wise men, and Jesus in the manger and enjoys the wonder of the holidays. That to us is what it is about.

But every year at this time, my parents generation fight with us about it again......
(10)
Report

You are not selfish! You had my vote when I read you work full time AND have a 7yr.old. You are wise beyond your years and your parents are luckier than they will ever know that you have come to this decision. What a well thought out plan.I am not being sarcastic, I applaud you. OMG! they can travel to Alaska but not to you? H*ll NO! I don't know what it is with this "Greatest Generation" because you could sure fool me.The unrealistic expectations and sense of entitlement,just astounding.My mother also thought holidays are supposed to always be Hallmark quality.After a 12hr. shift of death/dying/blood(I am a retired ICU/OR nurse) I didn't feel very cheery, and it was night shift, when my husband and I got home I begged my mother to please just let us go to bed and we will do Christmass this afternoon, we will be rested, OH NO! that wasn't going to do at all..After that cmax am my husband and I always made it a point to volunteer to work the holidays(we don't have children) so that other co-workers that do had kids could be off,it was our little "excuse/lie" to get out of spending the actual holiday with them.
(5)
Report

I'm an only child and my only living relative is an elderly uncle 3000 miles away who I haven't seen since I was a kid. My mother hated cooking and complained bitterly about it. Boxing Day was my father's birthday and we did Christmas then. After he passed 16 years ago I made all the food, hauled it 200km to her house and we sat at the kitchen table.

After caring for her for four years she went into a NH 3 years ago and passed away a few weeks ago. As usual, on Christmas I'll make a nice meal, chow down on cookies and chocolates ... things I never do ... have a little wine and watch old movies Out in the country, wood stove going, peace and quiet, snow on the ground and surrounded by my beloved critters. I look forward to it.
(9)
Report

Thank you, Timbuktu! I'm feeling a bit raw today after my beatings yesterday. It is hard to communicate that we value and love them and want our son to spend time with them around the holidays not necessarily ON the holidays. Most of the year we are all reasonable people, but the holidays bring out some stuff that is hard to talk through. And with holidays the emotion and expectations are so deeply engrained too. As a friend of mine said "do what you can with love, listen with love, but remember, it is OK to love yourself too". I wonder why my grandparents generation seemed so low key (maybe they weren't) but I remember them as just glad to see people and my generation values holidays but it is not a hill to die on to be together ON the holiday. Why are my parents and their peers so adamant (75-90 is the age range I think)? I still don't have that one figured out. We were told yesterday by one of our elders - "well, next year we'll probably be dead and then you'll wish you had come" and my husband was on the other phone and said "well, you said that last year and you are still here" and that lead to world war III about disrespect, and we don't value family, etc. But it did think it was kind of funny.
(4)
Report

I always like the idea of the Castanza family's FESTUVIS celebration from the Sienfeld show. The family gathers, expresses their grievances and then have a big wrestling match.
(5)
Report

FESTIVUS for the REST OF US!
(3)
Report

Ah yes....The Castansas. All American dysfunctional family. Poor George could have spent his life blogging away on this forum
(3)
Report

Just wake me when itis over.
(6)
Report

I am just trying to get thru all the MD visits.Gonna eliminate one today that can wait,still have one wed. and thurs. They will be #65 and 66 for this year more to come because of her foot surgery. I put a tree up the first year when she moved in but the last 2 I just looked at it as something else I have to clean up.I have no "holiday spirit" and hate looking at the commercials showing all these happy people,such a disconnect from reality.
(2)
Report

Timbuktu - I totally relate to that! We are in a phase of endless dr. visits too - a boatload of specialists even with no surgeries planned (yet).

I have always been a total Grinch - hate holidays since my childhood. The first year we were all here with Mom, my sister put up Mom's tree and decorated her house, telling me "Well, don't you think she deserves to have Christmas too?"

The last two years, my sister has been sidelined by her own health issues, including a leg she can't bear weight on. So Mom ropes me in with this approach "Well, Sissie did it for me last year, but she can't do it this year, so will you put up my tree and decorate my house?" I warned my sister because I kner this would end up on my list as well!

In fact, the last two years, I've not only put up and taken down my mother's Xmas decoration, I've decorated and undecorated my sister's house as well!
(2)
Report

I relate to what so many of you have said. I enjoy Thanksgiving and Christmas now but lost that joy along the way with have to go here, have to do this and that, have to have to have to...it kills it after a while.

I miss seeing my in-laws with the caregiving requiring more time plus working on the day after most holidays. So they come and we just potluck, no dress up or fuss, just hang out, watch movies and stuff. Hub puts up a nice tree with lights and fresh pine cones that smell like ginger baked cookies and we have a nice time. Even my parents have a nice time.

We invite friends or whomever wants to come and have nowhere to go or need to decompress and rehab emotionally somewhere else after a stressful family dinner and we just all talk, play games, things that are relaxing and fun without expectation of presents or anything. It's the best time, peaceful and now I look forward to them.
(3)
Report

This discussion has been closed for comment. Start a New Discussion.
Start a Discussion
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter