lumpkin
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- May 24, 2005
- Messages
- 2,491
If your extended family is either not geographically near you or you don''t have a close relationship with them, I''d love to know how you provide your children with safe substitutes.
My husband and I are both youngest children by at least 10 years. Our sibblings either didn''t, couldn''t or long ago had children. The ones that didn''t or couldn''t are not really kid people and really are not interested in being involved with our kids. We each have one sibbling that had kids but those sibblings are estranged from the family and we never see them. We see the others on major holidays but otherwise they are not involved at all. Our parents are much older, approaching 80, and do not have the stamina, interest or inclination to be really involved. My extended family is a mess, through no fault of mine -- they were that way long before I came along, and I don''t want to go into detail. My husband''s family is a lot less dysfunctional, but they are not the kind of people you can be close to. They are really distant and as long as we keep things light and not too intimate, they are fine to deal with, but they are not really close to the kids, either. They love the IDEA of having grandkids but the reality of actually interacting with them is pretty foreign to them, LOL! I don''t mean to paint them badly, they are actually very nice people, just not the kind of grandparents (or aunt and uncle) who do much more than send birthday cards and exchange gifts during holidays.
Lately it has really been depressing me, and I know that at some point our kids will need community mentors for the kids that are not naturally there. I know they really, really need that. My older one is in scouts, and that is a great start, but he is going to need a mentor outside of the family that he has his own relationship with. But people are weird, ya know? We have a baby sitter across the street and she''s a nice girl and I was really hopeful that she would become a regular babysitter so the kids would have a sort of older kid influence (and we would regularly be able to have time alone together without worrying), but the police were over at her house on Easter. There were two police cars and an ambulance. I don''t feel comfortable asking about it. I know the grandmother lives there and has Alsheimer''s but I don''t know if it had something to do with her or not. The or not scares me.
As soon as I kind of let my guard down with people outside the family I find out things about them that make me feel unsafe with them and that make me untrusting of letting them be alone with our kids. We are looking for a church we like, but I''m kind of squeamish about getting too close to people there because I think people tend to put on their very best face at church, and it''s not necessarily who they really are. Does that make sense or sound ultra paranoid???
I''m stuck and I have not really been able to find any answers via internet or even my two very close friends. One doesn''t think we need to worry about finding a support network outside the immediate family and the other thinks I should be a lot more trusting. But, she has a really nice, trustworthy extended family. She thinks people are wonderful and has trusted her kids to others far more than I am capable of. Her family is far away, and she has "adopted" an older couple as surrogate grandparents to her girls. I just don''t think I could do that.
Anyway, I''d really appreciate any thoughts or experiences you''d like to share about this.
My husband and I are both youngest children by at least 10 years. Our sibblings either didn''t, couldn''t or long ago had children. The ones that didn''t or couldn''t are not really kid people and really are not interested in being involved with our kids. We each have one sibbling that had kids but those sibblings are estranged from the family and we never see them. We see the others on major holidays but otherwise they are not involved at all. Our parents are much older, approaching 80, and do not have the stamina, interest or inclination to be really involved. My extended family is a mess, through no fault of mine -- they were that way long before I came along, and I don''t want to go into detail. My husband''s family is a lot less dysfunctional, but they are not the kind of people you can be close to. They are really distant and as long as we keep things light and not too intimate, they are fine to deal with, but they are not really close to the kids, either. They love the IDEA of having grandkids but the reality of actually interacting with them is pretty foreign to them, LOL! I don''t mean to paint them badly, they are actually very nice people, just not the kind of grandparents (or aunt and uncle) who do much more than send birthday cards and exchange gifts during holidays.
Lately it has really been depressing me, and I know that at some point our kids will need community mentors for the kids that are not naturally there. I know they really, really need that. My older one is in scouts, and that is a great start, but he is going to need a mentor outside of the family that he has his own relationship with. But people are weird, ya know? We have a baby sitter across the street and she''s a nice girl and I was really hopeful that she would become a regular babysitter so the kids would have a sort of older kid influence (and we would regularly be able to have time alone together without worrying), but the police were over at her house on Easter. There were two police cars and an ambulance. I don''t feel comfortable asking about it. I know the grandmother lives there and has Alsheimer''s but I don''t know if it had something to do with her or not. The or not scares me.
As soon as I kind of let my guard down with people outside the family I find out things about them that make me feel unsafe with them and that make me untrusting of letting them be alone with our kids. We are looking for a church we like, but I''m kind of squeamish about getting too close to people there because I think people tend to put on their very best face at church, and it''s not necessarily who they really are. Does that make sense or sound ultra paranoid???
I''m stuck and I have not really been able to find any answers via internet or even my two very close friends. One doesn''t think we need to worry about finding a support network outside the immediate family and the other thinks I should be a lot more trusting. But, she has a really nice, trustworthy extended family. She thinks people are wonderful and has trusted her kids to others far more than I am capable of. Her family is far away, and she has "adopted" an older couple as surrogate grandparents to her girls. I just don''t think I could do that.
Anyway, I''d really appreciate any thoughts or experiences you''d like to share about this.