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Do you get along with your parents?


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44 minutes ago, teef said:

that's great.  i want my kids to have that relationship with my parents too.  unfortunately my parents had me when they were older, and i had my kids when i was older, so they won't be able to see them in the teenage years.  i moved to a different suburb, but i always see them once a week.  my brother lives about 4 minutes away from them, and they'll go weeks without seeing his kids.  i don't get it.  everyone gets along, and i know his kids are in activities, but how in the world can you live so close, and go weeks without seeing each other.  we don't make a big deal out of our meet up once a week...it's usually a dinner together.  it doesn't take much to stay connected.

 

Exactly.  I'd say 2-3 nights/week, my conversations with my mom are me listening to her tell me how sad she is that her brother and his kids don't see them. 

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mom has been gone for 9 years. before she passed we got along very well, she really was my rock in the down times in my life.

 

relationship with my dad has always been rocky and I can't stand the ground my step mother walks on. she is the primary reason my dad and I have a poor relationship. she pretty much gave him an ultimatum, it was her and her kids over his from my mother. I was a young 10 years old when my mom and dad divorced and missed out having a real father figure growing up which unfortunately led to a pretty rebellious childhood. after growing up and becoming a dad myself I learned much from the poor relationship and made sure, even after my own divorce, that my child was priority one and I was there for her and even now in her adult life, I'm still there for her. so if anything, he taught me what it was like to be without a dad and the lesson being the total opposite in becoming a responsible, caring father and now grandfather.

 

shame, he's past 80 and time is not on his side but I accepted long ago the choices he made, were his.

Edited by DaBillsFanSince1973
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51 minutes ago, Gugny said:

 

Exactly.  I'd say 2-3 nights/week, my conversations with my mom are me listening to her tell me how sad she is that her brother and his kids don't see them. 

oh...that's not good.  have you or can you speak to him about it?  some people are not open to that kind of conversation.

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29 minutes ago, teef said:

oh...that's not good.  have you or can you speak to him about it?  some people are not open to that kind of conversation.

 

people.....

 

don't go on Skype so she can see you totally zoning out through the weather, illnesses of 80-year olds you never met.... yadda yadda yadda

 

 

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My parents are polar opposites, but I get along with both, just in different ways. My mom is basically a saint, has been my entire life, and I owe her the world basically in terms of what she's put up with in successfully raising 5 children, while maintaining her constant good cheer. My father who grew up in the difficult days of wartime and then post-war Germany (my grandfather was an ex-soldier who believed that he had to raise his own son in such a way as to steel him mentally against the horrors of any future war--he later was on record as saying he regretted how tough he was on my father), learned to never openly show loving emotion, and to this day still cannot bring himself to say the "L" word to any of us grown kids. That said, he was always the hard-working provider and man of good deeds, which is how he showed us that he loved us, and we've accepted that's just his way, as we've grown older. For the past decade, he's rented a house in Myrtle Beach each summer for the entire extended family to meet up at and have a reunion of sorts for a week at a time, and that's become a treasured tradition. With my own kids, I have to tell them daily that I love them, until they tell me enough already! :D   

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8 minutes ago, NoHuddleKelly12 said:

My parents are polar opposites, but I get along with both, just in different ways. My mom is basically a saint, has been my entire life, and I owe her the world basically in terms of what she's put up with in successfully raising 5 children, while maintaining her constant good cheer. My father who grew up in the difficult days of wartime and then post-war Germany (my grandfather was an ex-soldier who believed that he had to raise his own son in such a way as to steel him mentally against the horrors of any future war--he later was on record as saying he regretted how tough he was on my father), learned to never openly show loving emotion, and to this day still cannot bring himself to say the "L" word to any of us grown kids. That said, he was always the hard-working provider and man of good deeds, which is how he showed us that he loved us, and we've accepted that's just his way, as we've grown older. For the past decade, he's rented a house in Myrtle Beach each summer for the entire extended family to meet up at and have a reunion of sorts for a week at a time, and that's become a treasured tradition. With my own kids, I have to tell them daily that I love them, until they tell me enough already! :D   

So your grandfather was a German soldier.  Who'd he fight?  Americans or Soviets?

 

Anyway... It was the era... Lot of men were like that! Till @Gugny came along and broke the WAF mold!  LoL... Just busting on you Gug!

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6 minutes ago, ExiledInIllinois said:

So your grandfather was a German soldier.  Who'd he fight?  Americans or Soviets?

 

Anyway... It was the era... Lot of men were like that! Till @Gugny came along and broke the WAF mold!  LoL... Just busting on you Gug!

He spent his entire military career in the East from '41 on through the end of the war, then eventually escaped from a Soviet POW camp in '46. That probably saved his life, to be frank. Most in that situation did not ever see home again. Mother's side grandfather--was on both major fronts, ended the war in an American POW camp, was repatriated after about a year. He eventually became a US citizen in the 70's, as well as best friends with some former GI's, which was cool for me to see as a youngster.     

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16 minutes ago, NoHuddleKelly12 said:

He spent his entire military career in the East from '41 on through the end of the war, then eventually escaped from a Soviet POW camp in '46. That probably saved his life, to be frank. Most in that situation did not ever see home again. Mother's side grandfather--was on both major fronts, ended the war in an American POW camp, was repatriated after about a year. He eventually became a US citizen in the 70's, as well as best friends with some former GI's, which was cool for me to see as a youngster.     

 

wow....

 

at the cottage of my youth in the 1970s, a Russian emigrant was my friend and his grandpa sat quietly in a rocking chair on the sunporch all day long.

 

on the mantle was photos of him in uniform, a USSR tank commander, hi-lited at freaking Kursk

 

what i would ask him today if he were still around, starting with how the heck he wound up summering on Lake Simcoe..... 

 

 

 

 

Edited by row_33
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8 minutes ago, NoHuddleKelly12 said:

He spent his entire military career in the East from '41 on through the end of the war, then eventually escaped from a Soviet POW camp in '46. That probably saved his life, to be frank. Most in that situation did not ever see home again. Mother's side grandfather--was on both major fronts, ended the war in an American POW camp, was repatriated after about a year. He eventually became a US citizen in the 70's, as well as best friends with some former GI's, which was cool for me to see as a youngster.     

My next door neighbor, Serbian... Was conscripted by the Germans.  He came here in early 1950s after fighting Tito in the mountains of Serbia (Yugoslavia).  Grew up 12km from where Tesla was born.

 

Worked the rest of life at Ford in S.Chicago since the US brought him here... About 40 years. He collected a small German war pension till he passed away in 2012.

 

He was on the Eastern Front, fighting Soviets... Allies yes... But better than killing Americans.

 

His wife is 95.  Still kicking and living two houses down from me.  She just stopped driving this past year.

Edited by ExiledInIllinois
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7 minutes ago, ExiledInIllinois said:

My next door neighbor, Serbian... Was conscripted by the Germans.  He came here in early 1950s after fighting Tito in the mountains of Serbia.  Grew up 12km from where Tesla was born.

 

Worked his rest of life at Ford in S.Chicago since the US brought him here... About 40 years. He collected a small German war pension till he passed away in 2012.

 

He was on the Eastern Front, fighting Soviets... Allies yes... But better than killing Americans.

 

His wife is 95.  Still kicking and living two houses down from me.  She just stopped driving this past year.

WW2 was a tragedy on a scale incomprehensible for those of us who did not live through it, and probably also for those that did, actually. And back then they did not have even a PTSD diagnosis with any treatment options--the soldiers/civilians on all sides were expected to do their duty, and go back to "regular" life afterwards as if it never happened? Unreal. 

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1 minute ago, NoHuddleKelly12 said:

WW2 was a tragedy on a scale incomprehensible for those of us who did not live through it, and probably also for those that did, actually. And back then they did not have even a PTSD diagnosis with any treatment options--the soldiers/civilians on all sides were expected to do their duty, and go back to "regular" life afterwards as if it never happened? Unreal. 

Patton did slap the shell shocked soldier.  Times were a changing.

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12 minutes ago, ExiledInIllinois said:

Patton did slap the shell shocked soldier.  Times were a changing.

 

it was never good policy to beat up on damaged soldiers for the "free liberal" sides

 

Patton had a high-pitched squeaky voice in normal conversation, that would have made the movie a little different.

 

 

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2 hours ago, teef said:

oh...that's not good.  have you or can you speak to him about it?  some people are not open to that kind of conversation.

 

I just excuses.  "I'm busy,"  "They're busy,"  blah, blah, blah.  Never the real reason .... his C wife.

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19 hours ago, teef said:

i get along great with my parents, and they were the primary reason i wanted to be in this area.  they're both 79 now, and i want to make sure they're well taken care of.  we see them at least once a week for playtime with the grand kids. 

Good for you, you're a good son (pretty sure son is correct, apologies if not)

 

I've always felt i've won the parent lottery.  they set me and my brother up for success.  all we had to do was work hard.

Good for them, that's good parenting. 

Dad died following the Monday nite game vs New England last year, was still tailgaiting when I got the call. 82 days shy of 101. Mom turned 100 in July. I remember one of the guests at her birthday party saying it was the first 100th birthday party he had ever attended. Told him it was the second one I had hosted. 

Edited by Steve O
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12 minutes ago, Steve O said:

Dad died following the Monday nite game vs New England last year, was still tailgaiting when I got the call. 82 days shy of 101. Mom turned 100 in July. I remember one of the guests at her birthday party saying it was the first 100th birthday party he had ever attended. Told him it was the second one I had hosted. 

wow.  that is a long, full life.  I always say that my goal is to live to 100.  i hope to be in decent health at 100, but it's my goal.

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5 minutes ago, teef said:

wow.  that is a long, full life.  I always say that my goal is to live to 100.  i hope to be in decent health at 100, but it's my goal.

Careful what you wish for my friend. I've seen 100, not sure I want to make it. 7 years ago I didn't know what hoyer lifts, catheters, or UTI's were, let alone the difference between chucks and briefs. Mom still has quality though, as you say, decent health is the key. 95 would have been just fine for Dad, last 5 years of his life aged me 25. 

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