One of my favorite parts about this board is that most of you are step parents, so I can get advice and perspective on the way J feels about things.
So, J is part of a blended family. He always has spent Christmas Eve with his BM, SF, and maternal Gparents. They go to Catholic Mass, dinner out, and then presents at his moms. Christmas morning he would always go over to his BD/SM/half sibs and do Christmas dinner and presents with them. He has done these things his whole life, every single year since his parents divorced when he was in 2nd grade. He is big on tradition, and has expressed in the past that he will probably have a hard time changing any of that, although he knows he will have to budge a bit now that we are together and I have children.
My parents live 2.5 hours away, and we will probably do Christmas with them on a different weekend so that isn't an issue.
Last year we had the kids Christmas morning at 8AM and for the rest of the day. We did Mass/dinner/gifts with his BM on Christmas Eve, sans kids, and then picked the kids up at 8 AM and had Christmas morning at home just the 4 of us. We went to his BD/SM/half sibs later on in the day for Christmas dinner and presents with them.
So, on to this year. I have the kids Christmas Eve, until 8AM Christmas morning. I will probably have to work for the first part of the day on Chriistmas Eve, so I will really have little time with my kids. I DO NOT want to drag them to Catholic Mass and dinner with J's family. I want to stay home and bake cookies and enjoy every minute of time I have with them. I don't want to share. I get very little time to begin with.
J's Mom will likely be pissed if we stay home. J will likely be upset too. Everyone wants to see the kids on both sides of Js family, I get it, but I am their mother and I don't want to run back and forth between family members houses while I have them. Also, I mentioned this to him this morning via text, and his response was "We have plenty of time to figure all that out", but I am of course stressed about it already. I told him he could of course go to mass if he wanted but we wouldn't be going. That was kind of a fib though, I would be pissed if he chose to go to Mass with his mother and not spend time with me and the kids, so I dont even know why I said that to him.
Anyways, after that extremely long explanation, I guess I am wondering if I am being a bitch by expecting him to not go do his normal CE tradition with his family and instead stay home with us. Am I being unreasonable by not taking the kids to mass and dinner with his family?
Re: LONG: Is it unreasonable of me... Christmas
No you're not unreasonable, but J's wishes and feelings count, too. It can't be "all or nothing." I would try to come up with a plan that works for both of you / your "new" family.
This.
You already know what his "ideal" holiday looks like, so write out for him what yours looks like and then find some middle ground. Maybe instead of spending Christmas Eve at one house and Christmas day at another, you spend a weekend hitting up the grandparents: his mom's on Saturday and then his Dad's on Sunday. A reasonable family will understand that things can't always stay the same, especially when kids are in the picture.
Banana44 said:
Here is my take on holidays, and this is probably a UO. This is my family now. My parents had their time when I was a child! If my parents want to be a part of my traditions then they can drag their asses to my house instead of me dragging my kids all over! If my parents don't like that - I don't care!
And also this. When you have your own family, you create your own traditions. Is everyone going to be happy? Nope. But as long as your household is happy, to hell with everyone else.
Created by MyFitnessPal - Free Weight Loss Tools
And we've gotten to this point. We have an extended family thing the Saturday & Sunday before (my maternal extended family and then DH's paternal extended family) on Christmas Eve we are supposed to have brunch with my dad and family but we went last year and due to distance I'm not sure we'll do it again. We get SK Christmas Day so that am DC will do Santa and then when SK gets there we'll do Santa again and open family gifts. And then relax!
Saturday after Christmas I'll cook a big meal and all families are invited to come up and see kids. If they don't, no biggie! (We didn't see MIL or FIL for Christmas last year, they are divorced.) My mom came up on Christmas Day which was fine because we didn't have to drag kids around.
I don't cater to my parents and extended families. We have our own family.
For Thanksgiving, we try to rotate who we see. Last year it was FIL & SMIL. This year it will be my dad & SM. My mom lives close so we'll also see her this year. We never see MIL for Thanksgiving. DH is fine with it, so am I.
It is great to start your own traditions and I get the BF craziness. My DH's parents aren't together and we are constantly party hopping. I think spending Christmas Eve with your kids making cookies is your decision and J shouldn't have to give up his traditions just because you don't want to go. I don't think it is ideal to do things separately but I think it is wrong to ask him to give up church because you get such little time with the kids. Maybe he can spend a few hours with you and the kids and then also spend time with his BM going to church later, after they are in bed. (Midnight mass?) or like PP suggested, you coul host his BM at your house and then they can leave for church.
DH and I have come to accept that we cannot go to every event/every single person's home due to our crazy schedule with SS, and DH having a BF too. However, it would be wrong for DH to tell me that I can't do something with my parents because it interferes wih his time with SS. He is welcome to do whatever he needs/wants to, but my family time and traditions aren't less meaningful. J chose to be with someone who has kids but that doesn't mean he has to give up everything and take on whatever it is your kids/you want to do. You both need to decide what activities are most important to you individually and a a couple. Then come up wih a schedule for the holidays. If you have to do some thing separately I don't think that is the end of the world.
I would really like to spend time with MY family on Christmas/CE but I have already conceded that probably won't be happening. There are too many people to see and I want J to be able to keep most of what he's used to and not change everything for us. So just like last year we will be doing our Christmas with my family on a different weekend. I feel like that was a good compromise and I don't mind that. I also don't mind doing Christmas day with his Dad's family every year like he always has.
I just don't think that every other year, staying home on CE and doing Christmas with just our family unit is too much to ask. We will obviously still do presents and stuff with his mom's family on a different day. I also wouldn't be opposed to them coming over for a while on CE. I just don't want to get out of work at 2pm, get home and get everyone ready for church (30 min drive), make 4pm Mass, do dinner out with that whole side of the family, and barely make it home in time to put the kids to bed. Then wake up the next morning and hand them off to X for the day at 8 AM. Where is the time for OUR family to bond and make traditions?
As far as the kids and I staying home and J going to Mass and dinner without us... I guess that I just the thought of that being the time that we have the kids for our "Christmas" and him wanting to be gone during that time instead of spending that time as a family together is upsetting to me.
This is our third Christmas together. The first year we did our own things with our own families and met up later Christmas day. Last year we did mass/dinner with his mom's family on Christmas Eve, had our own Christmas with the 4 of us Christmas morning after we picked up the kids, then did dinner and presents at his dad's. My family had Christmas with is the weekend prior. Last year was pretty perfect, but unfortunately my CO isn't set up to do that every year, only every other year.
I don't think you're wrong in not wanting to go to Mass and instead wanting to just hang out with the kids, especially since you have to work earlier. That does sound like a lot of hassle and driving on Christmas. At the same time, you can't be mad at him, if he wants to do Mass with his mom and fam. Going to Christmas Eve Mass is a pretty big deal to a lot of people, Catholics and others. If that's something he has done his whole life and it means a lot to him (it seems it does), you should be understanding, instead of passive-aggressive (offer it, but if he accepts, you'll resent him). That is honestly not fair to the guy.
It looks like you should stay home with the kiddos after work, have fun and bake cookies and let J go enjoy the Mass with his mom for a few hours. Then you guys can spend the rest of the night and Christmas day together. That is compromise. What you proposed is a one-sided, passive-aggressive demand.
Different things work out for different people. We tried alternating holidays. We both still felt slighted, our families felt slighted. We both tried the all our nothing approach and that didn't work at all (my family lives about 2hrs away as well). I tried to persuade him to spend Christmas just with us, our nuclear family, WW3 errupted.
Now we do our own thing. We go to family things together if our schedules allow, but we don't hold it against the other of there is something else we need to do/want to do with our own side of the family. I had a hard time being comfortable with this because I thought it was very important to present ourselves together as a family unit all the time. Now, I love this. We are so much more comfortable. IL relations are so much better. And we both are genuinely happy when we accompany the other to their family's events. It's not like we're dragging anyone anywhere anymore. And we still carve out some "us" family time (though I normally have to remind him that I want/need that).
Personally I find it strange that you would resent someone going to church on Christmas instead of baking cookies. Even if your SO isn't a regular church-goer, Christmas is a pretty big deal for those who believe (and I'm not talking Santa).
I do think you should be able to work out a compromise, and that you and your kids should have holiday traditions that belong to YOUR house and family, not just revolve around seeing grandma and grandpa.
I pretty much agree with Ilumine. I think trying to see both families around the holidays is the way to go and there should be compromise but that is something that needs to be worked out. We have the most chaotic 2-3 day Christmas I have ever heard anyone mention. But we do it every year the same way because neither my family nor my ILs get the shaft because they too want to see their children and grandchildren at on the holidays. Sure I could try to say, screw you all we are staying home but I'm sorry family is very important to me and someday those family members could be gone. I lost my brother last year very unexpectedly on Thanksgiving. I definitely don't regret running around between houses on Christmas Eve,Christmas Day and Boxing Day all those years because that was one more holiday I got with him before he passed. I might have regrets if I had not done that because that would have sucked if I didn't spend the last Christmas with him that I could have. Cookies can be baked days before Christmas Eve and still be set out for Santa. My sister and I get together every year several days before Christmas to bake cookies with the kids.