Thank you! 🤗 |
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Op here and it’s a different situation because our families are extremely close and I really like her family but her husband is difficult - and her family knows this too.
I suspect her husband is on the spectrum in some way - very smart guy with a big banking job but cannot read the room and she doesn’t push back on him when he’s rude. He’s rubbed off on her too |
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Do you treat everyone when it’s “your turn” and you go to a restaurant? If so, your friend just needs to chill. Has she not seen your space? You could also say, “I know John feels how small it is, based on comments he’s made.”
Do you have a rec area in your building where you could host? |
What about doing a brunch or something that isn’t cooking intensive then make it your thing? One of my friends has a small apartment and does a tree trimming party every year. Nice or not, it sounds like they want you to go through the hassle of hosting in your space. |
| Invite her over one night. Just the two of you, to have dinner and hang out. Let her SEE how small your place is, how limited your seating is, etc. |
Does your apartment have any sort of common area/party room you can reserve or rent? |
| Op here and I cannot imagine asking anyone to host something, ever - is that just me? |
There we are then. |
That's rude - not everybody cooks and that's fine. Food is not automatically better because it's homemade. I suggest you tell her that you don't cook but are happy to pay for prepared food at a friend's home, a restaurant, a park, etc. -- and then actually do this. Host dessert at a bar or pastries at a park. If she doesn't like it she doesn't have to attend. |
+1 However, I have a sibling who lives in 5+ acres w massive square footage and never hosts. This sibling loves cramming in others smaller homes w her 16267373 kids. We would NEVER ask this sibling to host either. Folks are strange. |
| Also should note money is no object for anyone else in this group. Each individual makes over 150k a year |
Sounds like you could definitely show more effort in your contributions. I don't host because I'm a terrible cook but I overcompensate with very nice, substantial contributions to the meal that I pick up from a nice bakery, or a large charcuterie plate, fancy salad etc... plus a good bottle of wine. Hosting is expensive and it does sound like it's been uneven from a financial not just a hard work perspective. |
| The suggestions here are good but it sounds like these people will and have complained about pretty much everything suggested so far: her place when she hosts, her not hosting at her place, her paying for pizza rather than cooking, etc. I suggest she stop trying to please them at all. It doesn't appear anything will unless she buys a large house and entertains often, and they'd probably say something then too. |
| Just say you already feel bad about it, any embarrassing comments aren’t going to make you a chef, enlarge your place, lessen your work load or increase your budget to buy furniture and equipment. You need her support, not her unproductive criticism. If it’s such a burden for her, she too can stop hosting and y’all can meet outside or outdoors and share costs. |
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How many in the friends group?
I’m older but I don’t invite husbands. 1. They dint want to be there. 2. I don’t want to invite people who come begrudgingly. You can host 6 women. |