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A reader’s brother-in-law is insisting that she accompany her children to his 1-year-old’s birthday party, even though attending would require her to miss an important funeral.
My grandmother’s funeral and my niece’s first-birthday party are scheduled for the same date and time in New York. (The baby is my brother-in-law’s daughter.) Neither side will shift the start time by even an hour. We live in California with the rest of my family, so my husband, two children (7 and 9) and I are flying in for these events. I proposed dropping off my kids at the party where their grandparents and another uncle and aunt (not the baby’s parents) could watch them while my husband and I attend the funeral. But my brother-in-law says it’s disrespectful to leave our kids in the care of relatives. I don’t understand this! The party will be filled with people who love my children, and my husband and I don’t think the funeral is appropriate for them. But our brother-in-law wants us to attend the party together or not at all. Help!
SISTER-IN-LAW
Your proposal seems totally reasonable to me, assuming your husband’s parents or his (nonhost) siblings have the bandwidth to keep an eye on your children for a couple of hours. The problem now, though, is that — even if these family members were willing to create a village for you — your party host has rejected your proposal. Frankly, this strikes me as bizarre in light of your grandmother’s funeral.
Still, it’s better, in my experience, to accept the answers that people give us — and move to Plan B — than to rail for different answers. Would you consider sending your husband to the party with the children and attending the funeral alone? (Feel free to say no!) Or, could you leave your children with family or friends in California and fly in for the funeral with just your husband?
By necessity, you are sharing only a small part of the story here, but it seems a little excessive to fly two children cross-country for a baby’s birthday party. Still, I assume you have your reasons. So, I urge you to choose from the options available to you and spend the rest of your valuable energy grieving for your grandmother now.
My neighbor and I are great friends. He has two dogs that I watch happily when he goes out of town. He always gets me a nice gift as thanks. I recently got a new puppy and had an 11-day vacation scheduled. Asking someone to watch a not-yet-housebroken puppy for that long is a huge ask! But my friend was happy to do it. In return, I gave him what he thought was a generous gift. My question: Is it possible to break this cycle of gifts? I’d be happy to watch his dogs just to be neighborly, and I don’t like the pressure of having to match his gifts. Does that make sense?