I think packing up my family, taking 2 days off work, and driving 6+ hours for a four day trip is going the extra mile. |
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I can see that you’re hurt but honestly I think your sil does truely enjoys you and wants to be close with your family, but for whatever reason is just clueless at the moment. I’ve def done things like this in the past that I now realize were so rude but at the time didn’t even see it.
Now for my sil who lives out of state, I would never invite her to our kids parties because I can’t stand her and certainly wouldn’t text and so on to encourage her to come! So be glad you have good family relationships! |
| 6-7 from DC......oh god, you're not stuck in the world's largest suburban office park, aka Charlotte, are you? My condolences. There's nothing to do there beyond target and kiddie hair cuts. Maaaaaaaaybe after the kid goes to sleep you can slip out for a beer? There are some decent breweries--and amazingly, not all of them are completely overrun by fintech trust fund bros. |
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I don't drive 5+ hours without having a very firm lay of the land of what I'm getting into.
Why did you not pick up the phone and plan the weekend with your SIL/MIL/other players involved? |
Um, yes you did. Unless you had all these extra activities planned before you got in 95, that's exactly why you drove all that way. Next time plan ahead. And stop being selfish while you're at it. Cause a big enough stink and they won't invite you again. |
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Learn the difference between attending a party and planning a trip.
Next time, if it's a trip, PLAN A TRIP. |
| Repeat after me. An invitation is not a summons. |
Why did you go on Thursday and not on Friday? Shoot, SIL may have expected that you’d come down Saturday morning. It seems like you made assumptions on their behalf when planning. That was a mistake. |
Because if I invite out of town famiily or close friends to my son’s birthday party and they accept, I’d 100 percent assume I’d be seeing/hosting them all week. If I invited my in laws to a Saturday birthday and they came in Friday at noon, I might not know exactly what are plans are on Friday and Sunday, but I’d certainly know I’d be spending time with them those days, in addition to seeing them at the party. |
| All weekend (not week) |
It’s different when they know you visit the grandparents with regularity. Then the invitation assumes you have a place to stay and can perhaps coordinate a ‘regular’ grandparent visit for the birthday weekend. But keep being mad and huffy about it, with the knowledge that you can convince exactly zero people to agree with you. |
| You were invited to the birthday party and she will see you at the birthday party. I don't think you should feel annoyed. This was the plan, and I don't blame her for not wanting her child to be overly exhausted at this party that she is so excited about. |
EXACTLY. When you *plan a trip,* you pick up the phone and make some arrangements and sketch out some plans. The invitation you received was for, what, a 3-hour party? That's what your host promised you, and delivered. |
+1 |
Uh, no, an invitation assumes exactly nothing. My out-of-town wedding guests were promised a rehearsal dinner (for some), a dessert recetion the night before for all out-of-towners, and a wedding/reception. That's what we delivered. Did we tell them a hotel block at a discounted rate was available? Yes. Did we provide a little basket that included maps and suggestions of things to do? Yes. But nobody got salty that we didn't want to meet up with them at the Air and Space Museum the mornning before... In my family, we always send everyone the invite, knowing that out-of-towners likely can't make it. When out of towners do make it, they MAKE ARRANGEMETNS with us or with my aunt or cousin who also live locally. No one has ever, ever showed up literally the day before and demanded to see us. How very odd. |