- Joined
- Jun 2, 2013
- Messages
- 3,413
Hey, don't sell yourself short! By virtue of the very fact that you are not her age, your relationship with her is different -- but that is not a bad thing; think of the difference not as a drawback, but enriching because it doesn't mirror her other relationships.April20|1400507048|3675943 said:I just know that I won't be nearly as much fun in a fun as other girls her age would be!
Kids are actually discomfited internally by the feeling that they have free rein, that the adults are not in charge, so don't be shy about setting limits, even if she protests, "But Mommy lets me...", which may or may not be actually true; I remember trying to pull off that act with my own aunt and uncle at about her age
Wishing you wonderful memories-making with her!
p.s. for momhappy ("(I've never left my kids for more than just a couple of days, so two weeks would be absolutely out of the question for me"):
Different kids have different personalities/temperaments & family circumstances-dynamics aren't all the same. By age 3-1/2, my son had already spent a week with my parents without me (they lived 500+ miles away, reveled in their grandchildren; he'd spent long weekends with them before the week-long visit) & had longer visits with them when in elementary school (at age 7, he was flying solo to visit them, having already established a hefty number of "frequent flyer" miles before then in the company of us his parents or his uncle). He loved, e.g., going boating, fishing, water-skiing with my parents, gardening and cooking with my mom, & having the greater freedom to safely ride his bike than is possible living in NYC (plus, they had 2 dogs!)
My mother died pretty quickly of ovarian cancer when my son was just 12. I shall always be grateful that the two of them had the gift of those preceding special times together.