Would you cancel your Disney trip IF your kids were completely ungrateful and disrespectful?
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The problem here is this: we have my two step children on the weekends & so they go home to their Mom and then all of a sudden there are issues. So the Mom steps in & states that they don't have to attend things with us. I have no control of the situation. My husband supports me & tries to get the kids to attend, but he has only so much control too.Do 5-6 year olds really get being ungrateful? How does an 8 year old get to decide what they are doing?
Yes we have a court order for visitations. We get them on weekends & she gets them during the week. I usually only schedule things during our time together. HOWEVER, this vacation is booked for 2 weeks in July & its not court order visit, so she could technically say... "No I changed my mind, they can't go".
Yes we have a court order for visitations. We get them on weekends & she gets them during the week. I usually only schedule things during our time together. HOWEVER, this vacation is booked for 2 weeks in July & its not court order visit, so she could technically say... "No I changed my mind, they can't go".
Would you cancel your Disney trip IF your kids were completely ungrateful? I am seriously considering it!!!
Two of my kids are my step children, ages 6 and 8. One is my own, age 5. My two step children think that I only consider and plan events for my 5 year old (which is so not true). Lately, they have been refusing to attend events (at the last minute) that I paid for & planned b/c they claim that they are aimed towards "younger kids" like my 5 year old. This has been costing me a TON of money!!! So, in fear that they are going to try to do this for DISNEY (which cost about $5k), I am considering canceling & going at a time when the kids can appreciate it & not complain constantly. Disney told me if I cancel now, I could get my money back (as we already paid for it).
Am I just being an emotional Mom? Would you still bring them?
We were having some behavioral issues (constant whining, mostly) before we took our then-4 and 6-year-olds on their first Disney trip. We had a long talk beforehand and actually had them sign a little contract which set forth the behavior we expected on our vacation, and what the consequences would be if they didn't behave. (For example, everybody gets to select 2 attractions or character meets per day that are their must-dos in our designated park, and we'll try to be sure they're in the touring plan. Nobody whines about anyone else's choices. If you begin whining or complaining about participating in activities chosen by others, you will forfeit your chosen activities for the following day. If bad behavior persists, you will spend the next day confined to our hotel room with a 'Kids Night Out' babysitter.) I meant that, too -- I had the "Kids Night Out" phone number programmed in my phone in case we needed it.
Overall, it worked extremely well. I kept a copy of our little contract with me in case the kids needed reminding, but for the most part, they didn't. We also made sure we were all adequately fed and rested at all times, which made it easier for all of us to make good choices.
I am a child of divorce myself (I was 5 at the time), and I hope you won't blame the kids for how they're acting. I remember feeling tremendous guilt whenever I "dared" to let loose and have a good time with my Dad and stepmother, because I felt like I was betraying my mother. (Candidly, my mother did all she could to bolster those feelings of guilt -- although my parents' divorce had been her choice and my stepmother didn't come into the picture until long after it, Mom was insecure and wanted to cement her status as the favorite parent. She often said things like, "You don't have to do anything that woman wants you to do, because she's not your real mother," or "Be wary of anything she suggests, because she doesn't love you like I do, and will put you in dangerous situations because she knows that if you get hurt, it will hurt me.")
We visited my Dad and stepmother every other weekend and for one week in the summer, and I have to say that by the second or third day of that one-week vacation, my sister and I would start to forget how much we were supposed to "not enjoy ourselves" and would have a wonderful week when all was said and done. My advice would be: talk with the kids (and their mother, if she's amenable) beforehand to clarify behavioral expectations, even having the kids help with writing out a list of rules and consequences. Watch the Disney planning video as a family to help the kids understand that WDW isn't just a place for little kids (but expect some backlash or sour grapes if they go excitedly home to Mom and tell her that now they can't wait for the trip). Take them on the trip, watch for them to let their emotional guard down, be flexible even if they don't, and follow through on the pre-determined consequences if their behavior isn't acceptable. (And be sure their father is committed to backing you every step of the way.)
Being a stepmother is hard: so often you're damned if you do ("you forced them to go on a vacation they didn't want!"), and damned if you don't ("you abandoned them at home to take a vacation without them!"). It took me 25 years to get to the point where I fully understood and sympathized with my stepmother's efforts to develop a relationship with me, when the only asset she had was my father's support... but you know what else I remember? I remember the summer they took us to Disney World when we were 7 and 9, and how much genuine fun we had on that trip, Mom-imposed guilt or no! I say go for it.
Cancel - or at least cut the two step kids out of the trip
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