The Oklahoman

Grandma offers to babysit, but only on her rigid terms

- Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com.

My husband and I have two elementary-aged children. My mother occasional­ly babysits for us and freely volunteers to do so. If we sometimes hire sitters, she seems offended. However, she insists she must watch the children in our home, never hers.

While we appreciate her time, it would be lovely to drop the children off at her home occasional­ly rather than have to leave our house if we want a date night. I have made gentle suggestion­s, which she invariably declines. I should mention the condition of her home is borderline hoarder status. We have offered to sort things with her, and even hire a company to help her move anything she could part with. Her house is starting to smell funny and it’s definitely not very clean. I’m at a loss about why she won’t address this. It’s not a time issue; she’s retired. I suspect she’s deliberate­ly making the house unwelcomin­g to avoid having anyone over, including her grandchild­ren.

When she babysits at our house, she sets a very early end time (i.e., 9 p.m.), then complains about how tired she is and gets a bit martyrish, although she has told me on many other occasions that she enjoys our kids and they are “easy” to watch. I can’t help but feel this issue might be resolved at her house. Am I unreasonab­le, or do you have other suggestion­s?

Date Night in Michigan

Dear Date Night: You aren’t being unreasonab­le. I would describe your attitude as “entitled.” Your mother is also entitled. She’s entitled to set the time and place in which she will be performing this free service for you. If your date will extend beyond the time your mom is “available,” you will have to hire someone else, and she will have to accept it.

P.S. Continue to press your mom about the issue of her hoarding, because it may be a symptom of a larger problem.

Dear Abby: My partner, “Josh,” is a musician who insists on practicing with the band even though he doesn’t have gigs. We have two fragile family members who would die if they got COVID-19, so we have tried to avoid any risks. The bandmates are not careful like we are and one even has weekly gigs with another band! I want to ask Josh to stop band practice altogether, but I’m afraid he will resent me and ultimately end our relationsh­ip. I wish I didn’t have to worry, but he keeps putting himself in situations that violate everything we have worked so hard to accomplish. Why is it so hard for him to give up inperson practice? Why can’t he put everyone’s safety first? I’m so conflicted, Abby. What do I do?

Band Girlfriend in New York

Dear Girlfriend: If you are as deeply worried about the safety of your medically fragile relatives as you have stated, YOU should end the relationsh­ip. Josh may need to practice with his bandmates so they don’t replace him. He cannot be responsibl­e for their behavior, and for you to expect him to be is unrealisti­c.

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