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"Gina said: 'KNOCK IT OFF!!'"
Please tell me they are planning to do their two week quarantine when they get home. |
This sounds like more of an issue of you simply not wanting to see or deal with his parents. There is probably a history there that you aren't relaying. This is less about safety and more a matter of having a convenient excuse to not see your ILs. If you gave a sh*t about these people you would find a way to visit with them safely especially since they are clearly welcome to do what they need to do to make a safe visit happen. Certainly, if they can see the clerk at the gas station, they can see their own son. But you do not want to see them. Maybe they are jerks, who knows? |
Yes, they are planning on the quarantine when they get home. I think they are desperate for some normalcy (aren't we all), but I can't put my family at risk so they can chat and drink. |
| It’s your home, OP. I think you are being silly. It’s fine for them to visit if you can all stay six feet apart. The deck makes it easy. Have them wear a mask if they need to go inside your home to use the restroom. At this point, we have stopped trying to completely isolate. We flattened the curve. That was the goal. We are wearing masks, avoiding crowds, and washing hands constantly. But we had two of our adult kids in our home yesterday. Small groups are ok. But again, your house, your rules. |
I'm the RI poster above and I would also say no. I love my parents and miss them terribly, as does my child, but we just need to gut through and follow the rules. I can't imagine the guilt if I made them sick and I can't imagine their guilt if they made their child or grandchild sick. The risk would be low, just I don't want to be that jerk. |
Agree with the above. As an aside, I am seriously thinking about having a very minimal powder room accessible to an outside porch, if I ever get a house built (or if I live in one easily modified). There could be access from inside the house, but I'd want to be able to lock from inside the house, if so. I come from a culture of place and time where it ends up being common to insist you need to use the bathroom, even if people don't seem to want to invite you in. I would dearly love to have a discreet cooler and outside-accessible toilet on the porch for exactly times like this. If I wanted to socially distance or keep the house private, there would be no reason someone could insist to come inside. I might never use it, but it would amuse me to have it. |
There was a whole book written on this about a decade ago. It was called "The Help." |
No, YOU think I want to have this for people who work for me, and you are incorrect. Assumptions say more about you than me. This is for certain members of my family, and for Mrs. Kravitz.
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READ the post next time before responding. OP’s husband does NOT his parents to come. He agrees that it’s unsafe. READ |
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Unless you have an underlying condition (if so you would have said so), then you sound like the daughter-in-law from Hell. No, your DH didn’t “agree”, the simp simply acquiesced. The bag of poop here is, well, you.
That said, given your hesitance, they can stay at a hotel then visit on the porch. |
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At most, they should sit six feet apart outside only to visit. No coming inside, no hugs and kisses.
If they plan to quarantine for 14 days when they get home, they know what they are doing has risks. How would they feel if one of their grandkids became seriously ill? Or their son? |
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“We’re sorry to have to say no, but we don’t want to take that risk. We can’t do that porch meeting and you cannot enter our house during the pandemic. We miss you enormously, but we can’t do that. We’re so sorry.” And when they have their foot-stamping fit, repeat you’re sorry a couple of times in a really sympathetic voice and then say you need to go and hang up. |
We all know the risk is OP appearing to not being in charge. |
| My in laws wanted to visit from FL as well. My husband thankfully said no as they would be staying in a hotel and visiting restaurants every day. We are still isolating ourselves. Luckily you and your husband agree. Don’t answer the door when they knock. |