You are correct. Millennials want to be treated so they are offended by splitting the tab for Grandma's 75th. |
Where are you eating and what circles do you run with where a restaurant dinner with drinks is $300 per person??? |
Again, some more, you can continue being indignant and mad about this. But it is going to continue to be a dynamic that some people think is tacky, and others are completely fine with. Plan, and accept/decline, accordingly. |
Next time just start a go fund me for it. It would be simpler. And the same idea. |
We've had people order a bunch of appetizers and expensive bottles of wine and then expect to split the bill. It's not that hard with alcohol. |
Babe, I don't do this; this is not how I issue invitations. I host frequently in my home. When we go out, we treat (or at least offer to). But I'm a realistic person who doesn't bitch and moan about reality. I see reality for what it is, and I plan and act accordingly. Stay mad, though. If you want. |
I was invited to a friend's husband's retirement party. Private dining room at Capitol grill. Lots of wine, apps, etc. At the end, I was given my portion of the bill--I almost passed out. Had no idea I was expected to pay for it, and as a single mother it was definitely not in my budget. Actually ruined teh friendship, since nothing let me know in advance that I'd be expected to pay or let me bow out gracefully. |
+1 This post comes up all the time. Who is this poster and what is so difficult about declining an invitation if you think something is "tacky"? What if you are the tacky one? |
OP here. The amount is not relevant. It’s who is doing the inviting. It’s a good thing my grandmother is dead, or this would kill her. Manners are dead and the responses on here prove it. |
You don’t get to redefine the definition of a word simply because you don’t like its meaning. |
Nah, it's just casual. Maybe you don't do casual. You'd rather sit ramrod straight in your backless chair at home, clutching your pearls and pursing your lips. If that's more satisfying than paying for your own beer at a bar to celebrate a friend, you do you, boo boo. |
I actually think the birthday person should pay for the entire meal. DH and I are swamped by paying for our parents' birthday dinners, grandparents birthday dinners and uncles, etc. When our birthdays roll around no one pays for them (my toddler?!).
Mothers Day and Fathers Day are horrible jokes. DH and I pay for EVERYONE. It will be a brunch of 15-20 and we get stuck with the tab. We're mothers and fathers too? When do I get to celebrate with my kids? I'm the only one who is actively mothering someone under 18, but I have to pay for parents, grandparents, aunts, great grandmas, etc. Also, DH and I make less than most there. |
I agree with you that it is tacky. I agree with you that my grandparents' generation didn't operate this way. But here's what: it is JUST as tacky to accept an invitation and then bitch and moan about it. This is a dynamic that IS. About half the poplulation thinks it is tacky and would never, and the other half thinks it is fine and does it. That's where we're at, buddy. Accept or decline. |
I casually entertain all the time. But I don’t expect my guests to pay their “share” and I certainly don’t do potluck. |
I would have handed the slip to the "friend" and walked out. |