Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Parents can’t cope with antics of friends’ kid

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter @askingamy Copyright 2021 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: My wife and I are parents of four children under the age of 10.

Life during the pandemic has been a challenge for us, to say the least.

We have very close friends, “Roberta and Vincent.” We have spent quite a bit of time with them, and our children have become close.

Here is the rub: One of their children (“Steven,” age 7) is prone to breakdowns and meltdowns. He seems to demand to be the center of attention.

Steven is a nice, sweet boy, but it is hard to continue watching the same movie play out time and again with this young man.

As parents of four children, we understand how difficult it is to raise children. We love our friends. We do not want to lose our friendship, but also have grown tired of the same antics from Steven.

What should we do? Should we say anything to the parents?

— Uncertain in Sacramento

Dear Uncertain: You and your wife are seasoned parents, very much in the thick of family life, but surely you know from raising your own children that each child has their own temperamen­t.

If “Steven” is extremely sensitive, the noise and pandemoniu­m of a large gathering of adults and multiple children may be too much for him to handle.

Just as your family has struggled through the pandemic, he has not had access to the familiar routines, services and support he might receive in school. He has missed a year of social growth, during a very important developmen­tal phase of his life. And while your children might roll with the punches, he hasn’t mastered these skills.

You might ask these parents if there are ways you can help when Steven has a meltdown, or if there are things you and your family could do differentl­y in order to avoid one.

I hope you will approach this challengin­g situation with patience and compassion toward everyone.

Dear Amy: I am absolutely distraught because my adult son refuses to get the COVID-19 vaccine. He thinks it’s a hoax. He lives in another state.

I am fully vaccinated. My daughter who lives far away is also vaccinated.

Her 3-year-old daughter is not yet eligible for the vaccine. My son is traveling to the town where my daughter lives for a wedding. She told him that she can’t see him unless he’s vaccinated.

I too have told my son that I cannot see him without him being vaccinated. My health is just too compromise­d.

This is tearing me apart. My son is placing his misguided logic on me and is blaming me for not wanting to see him.

I love him, and I know he loves me deeply as well.

I understand that he has the right to make his own choices.

How can I get past this? — Sad Mom

Dear Sad: You’ve gone round and round with your son and now you both know everything you need to know about where each of you stands. Your attempts to control him have failed, and now he is blaming you for trying.

Stop discussing this with him. Your son lives far away, and you should assume that you will have to continue having a relationsh­ip with him from a distance, without the focus and pressure of seeing one another in person.

Perhaps as the pandemic continues to fade, you will be able to reassess your own risk regarding being in the presence of unvaccinat­ed people, but until then, anchor to the fact that you love him and know that he loves you. Accept his limitation­s and make a choice to move forward.

Dear Amy: Wow, you really missed the mark to “Family Afterthoug­ht” who was having a milestone birthday on Thanksgivi­ng this year and wanted to finally have a birthday and not share it with a holiday.

You suggested the person disregard their wishes again and celebrate the birthday after the holiday.

You are no more thoughtful than the family.

— Upset

Dear Upset: I can’t make “Family Afterthoug­ht’s” family more thoughtful and kind.

My advice was geared toward urging this “afterthoug­ht” to find ways to cope with it.

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