| Or is this the cost of doing business when you host a party? |
| That’s the chance you take when you host friends who drink too much |
| Did they clean it up? |
|
I don't host that sort of party, OP. So... it depends how much responsibility you want to take on as host of such a party, and also what sort of person the puker is. Are they an alcoholic? A new drinker? Should you have expected it and told them not to drink that much? If they had puked from an anaphylactic reaction to a food, would you feel as annoyed?
|
Well, how do you know when it might become "that" sort of a party? One too many fine wines and someone can become nauseated. |
| Of course I would be upset. |
| Lets just say they wouldn't be invited again. Dh and I are not a fan of people who are sloppy. |
|
Anyone can become sick at any time, whether it is from drinking too much, food poisoning (not from your home per se, just it hits when it hits), a stomach bug (again, you can feel fine and be hit hard three hours later), or nausea from heat, etc.
I would be annoyed if it was from alcohol, but then again, I usually only serve beer and wine. If you are serving hard liquor and it’s a long, upbeat party, well… |
Discreetly vomiting in a bathroom isn't sloppy IMHO. Puking in someone's yard is... |
| No. |
We'll have to agree to disagree. I think both are sloppy. If you're pregnant and discreetly vomit in my bathroom fine. But drinking more than your body can handle is sloppy to me. By the time you graduate from college you should know how much you can drink. |
| Not if they cleaned it up |
| The mere act of barfing? No. If they caused a problem, in terms of mess or causing a scene, then no invites in the future. |
| This has happened, and no, I wasn't upset because everything was thoroughly cleaned up. Now if I had to clean anything up, I would have been pissed! |
| I think it's the cost of doing business if you serve alcohol at a party. |