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OP, the other place you can push back / draw a firmer boundary in the future is around the LENGTH of their visit.
For a Saturday wedding at a time when your family is busy and not in a position to host, it is INSANE for them to come Thursday and stay through Monday. Them arriving on Friday and leaving Sunday wouldn't solve all of the problems here, but cutting two nights off the visit might make you a lot less frustrated. I'm glad you and your husband are on the same page - don't underestimate how valuable that is! |
| I thought this might be real until you said your husband laid down the ground rules. That didn't happen. |
+1 that length may make sense for a planned visit when the time worked for everyone. Random extra days does not make sense here when they are a short drive away, not like flying etc. |
Let us know how that works out for you. Seems like a lot of people expect to be perfect humans in their golden years, never cranky, lonely, hungry or bored. |
When my teen acts out because she’s lonely, cranky, hungry or bored, I remind her to treat me and the rest of our family with courtesy and respect. I don’t accept disrespect from anyone. |
Good for you, neither do I. I also do not feel disrespected whatsoever when someone teases my teen for being tired or asks why we are having lasagna again. It’s just a different way to handle daily interactions and not be bothered by everything |
| I completely sympathize, OP. My father is always asking to stay until Monday morning when he comes to visit even though I have made it extremely clear that it is very much dispreferred and inconvenient for us. We have 3 kids in elementary school and need Sunday evening post-kid bedtime to plan for the next week. Monday mornings are always insane and adding my father to the mix (where is breakfast? how do I use your coffee maker? can someone help me with my bags? why isn't oldest up yet?) pushes us over the edge. Still. He makes it a big deal every time. Claims it will be different this time. He'll be no trouble on Monday morning. Ha! After falling for it repeatedly, we have now put down a firm boundary. No. You must leave Sunday evening. |
| I'm not sure why you're confused. They're inconsiderate and unable to understand the pressures on your time. They thought they could change your plans. It is not surprising though it's inconsiderate. I'd say it probably comes from a good place. Keep your boundaries; let go of the grudges. |
The people who say they will be no trouble (I'm easy!) are always the worst. |
If this were one or two comments, you’d have a leg to stand on. But you don’t, because it was a litany of complaints. Let me guess, you find yourself saying, “Geesh, it was just a JOKE” a lot… |
No, and it does not surprise me that you cannot envision what it is like to not be pissed off all the time |
I guarantee your “humor” doesn’t land the way you intend, if you truly intend good fun and not thinly masking your contempt or jealousy of others. |
The guests could have ordered in dinner for the entire family and themselves as a showing of thanks right? |
Respect is earned, not demanded. Whatever you think it is you're getting from people, it isn't respect. |
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Lasagna is actually better the second day, if made properly. I thought this was common knowledge.
Who cares if they served leftovers? It was a homemade meal, this is their family, and they stated upfront they were busy. The grandparents were totally unreasonable to expect anyone to change plans when the purpose of the visit was free lodging so they could attend a nearby wedding. |