Miami Herald

Mother’s relentless plea for grandchild­ren is likely to go unanswered

- BYCAROLYNH­AX tellme@washpost.com FollowCaro­lynon Facebookor­chatwithhe­r onlineatno­onEastern timeeachFr­idayat www.washington­post.com.

Dear Carolyn: I have begun to get more questions about dating and settling down, because my parents are desperate for grandchild­ren.

I think it’s magnified by some unresolved grief around my younger brother’s death recently. I used to be able to brush it off with, “I can knock that out for you right now, I just need some drinking money,” or, “I can barely take care of the dogs,” but

I think my parents see me approachin­g 30 and think of the opportunit­y lost with my brother.

I’ve outright said I don’t want children and added a fun joke about global warming. My mother’s response was, “Well, if you adopt, they’re already here, so they’re stuck when the Earth melts anyway.”

How do I disengage and discourage this conversati­on? The constant questionin­g is making me feel guilty for not giving my parents something they expect from me, and that’s tough because “Mom wanted grandkids” is not a reason to bring a child into the world.

— Letting Mom Down Easy

Letting Mom Down Easy: As wrenching as this will be, please talk to your mom without the jokes — good ones, by the way— and deflection­s. There’s a time for disengagin­g and discouragi­ng, and in fact it’ll be that time again as soon as you get the hard conversati­on out of the way. But for this one time, engage fully and unequivoca­lly in the hard conversati­on.

Such as: “We’re all hurting, Mom. It’s awful. I can’t make it better for us, though, by having a child. I can’t and I won’t, because I do not want to be a parent. And because our family’s grief and my future are separate things. Please respect my decision, even if you don’t like it or understand it, and stop asking me when I’ll have kids.”

If she pushes back, then you’ll need to say it’s not open to discussion or negotiatio­n. Then kindly/ calmly/firmly decline to discuss it again.

Quip and repeat.

I’m sorry you have so much pain to navigate.

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