I read the headline of this Ask Amy column and my first thought was: OMG. One of my children has taken up pen to complain about paterfamilias and me. "Husband wants a break from vacations with in laws," it reads. The letter writer says he is a married man in his early 40s who lives carefully within his means. His in laws live 2,000 miles away, and for the past 10 years, he and his wife and family have gone to visit them twice a year–and that's become a point of argument with his wife. "Am I wrong," he asks, "to want to do something else with my vacation once in a while?" And, P.S., it only made him feel worse when his in-laws offered to settle the argument by paying his family's airfare.
"Ask Amy" is on his side. "This isn't really about money" she writes. "This is about not wanting to spend every single vacation with your in-laws. And brother, I'm on your side."
Hard to argue with her point or her tone. Are we sometimes tone deaf? Or cling too much to a grown child who has moved far away? Or allow our grown child to cling? Sometimes we can kid ourselves into thinking we're being incredibly generous and helpful–inviting our grown child and family on–and paying for–vacations. Togetherness on vacation is a fine, fine thing. But you can have too much of a fine thing. Certainly, your child's spouse can.
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