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Wedding Woes

It's ok to be bummed, but it's no one's "fault"

Dear Prudence,

My husband and I have been happily married for almost 50 years. We have four children and gave them the most stable, loving, idyllic childhood imaginable. I had my career but worked from home to more fully devote myself to them and our household. We were always happy and we’re still close, but none of them seem to want to pass that happiness on to a new generation.

My 46-year-old son is a devastatingly handsome man with a brilliant career, but I wasn’t at all surprised when he recently revealed he had a vasectomy in his 20s; otherwise, he would have left behind a string of illegitimate pregnancies. He has never been married, simply trades his much younger girlfriends in every few years like cars. My 44-year-old daughter also has a fantastic career but has never been interested in marriage or children. My 42-year-old daughter claimed she wanted a family, but only ever picked terrible, glamorous but unfaithful men; the last one just left her after stringing her along until her biological clock ran out. My 38-year-old son is gay and completely uninterested in settling down, much less having a family. I love each of them with all my heart. But my heart breaks with the knowledge that I will almost certainly never have a grandchild.

In contrast, take my younger half-sister. She’s been married and divorced three times and has had countless shorter-term relationships. The legal father of her only daughter demanded a paternity test, abandoned their then 6-year-old daughter when she turned out not to be biologically his, and when ordered to pay child support anyway, moved overseas to avoid it. She then proceeded to drag my niece through hell, forcing her to swap homes and father figures almost yearly, to live with an older stepbrother who assaulted her, and a religious fanatic who beat both of them. And guess what? My niece married a wonderful, well-off young man at 26, and now at 28 is expecting her first child. My sister, despite having saved nowhere near enough to support herself, is planning to retire early and move in with her to help care for the baby. And they say they want three to five children!

I haven’t said anything about my feelings to anyone but my husband, and I don’t plan to. But emotionally I’m struggling to accept how my sister can be forgiven for being a barely adequate mother, setting a dreadful example of marriage, and still become a grandmother, while we can do everything right, give our children the world, and not receive the same reward. Do you have any advice to help me reconcile this in my mind?

—Silently Struggling

Re: It's ok to be bummed, but it's no one's "fault"

  • OH.  MY.  GOD.

    Grandchildren as a REWARD?!?!

    Go get therapy and continue to STFU.
  • Uh, their lives are not built to serve you. 


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  • Expectations are the foundations of disappointment.  
  • I understand she's disappointed she won't have grandchildren, but it's hard to be sympathetic when she is so incredibly judgmental.  And with such a narrow vision of how people should live their lives.

    They don't want to "pass that happiness on to a new generation" and describing her player son as "devastatingly handsome" were my particular gag moments.

    I also hope that when it isn't part of a sad letter, she is much more thrilled than resentful that her niece has found a stable life after the hell she was put through as a child. 
    Wedding Countdown Ticker
  • You raised your kids, you aren’t entitled to have grandchildren. Children aren’t a reward for doing something right and your sister didn’t do anything to you by having kids that want their own kids. 

    Therapy. 
  • Casadena said:

    Dear Prudence,My niece married a wonderful, well-off young man at 26, and now at 28 is expecting her first child. My sister, despite having saved nowhere near enough to support herself, is planning to retire early and move in with her to help care for the baby. And they say they want three to five children!

    Everyday I’m baffled at how some people find love and it’s forever, find love and it’s short term or you know what? Some people don’t even fall in love at all. Or very late in life.  Stop comparing! 
    I don’t like your oldest son by the sounds of things.
    But to everyone else in that family, having children may not be out of the picture. There’s also adoption, surrogates, ivf. Etc (I know, I know, easier said than done) but that’s all up to the LW’s kids, not her. 

  • My grandmother's older brother had 3 kids.  Of the 3, one became a priest, the other a nun and the other married late. 

    You're not entitled to grandkids and you're not owed them.  Get a good therapist because feeling like somehow you're owed the offspring of others is going to only push your own flesh and blood away. 
  • I'm guessing your attitude that your children owe you grandchildren is just the tip of the iceberg about how off you are about how idyllic their childhood was. 

    Get a fucking grip. 
    Yuuuuuup


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  • ei34ei34 member
    Knottie Warrior 2500 Comments 500 Love Its 5 Answers
    These descriptions are wild. You can’t tell me that via six degrees of separation the kids won’t wind up seeing this letter 🤪
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