Sounds wise. |
+1 |
It’s just a pair of pj pants from Old Navy. |
+1 My mom was irritated that my now-MIL invited me there for Christmas dinner when DH and I were dating in college (we had been dating a little over a year at that point). Attending dinner would have required me to leave my family on Christmas day and drive 3 hours to DH's house. I said no and went the next day instead. My mom never said anything to me about her irritation until after I came home. In hindsight, I can see why my mom was upset because extending the invitation means that you are asking someone to skip out on their own family's celebration, especially if the kids are in college and the parents are likely looking forward to seeing them for the holidays. |
Families would want their kids home for the holidays but a young couple may want to be together as well. No? |
This. I would be honored to host a SO of one of my kids. Much better than not inviting them and having your kid get away as soon as they can. |
Yes I remember those couple of holidays where I was madly in love with my BF (now DH) but we split up for the holidays. His family is more fun than mine so I don’t think he minded as much as I did. I missed him so much and resented that people thought it shouldn’t bother us to be apart. |
Yes, yes, and yes. |
Oh FFS; an invitation is not a summons. Unless MIL pouted because you didn't accept the invitation, the only ridiculous one in this scenario is your mom. |
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God people are so weird.
Of course they are invited. But you don't invite them yourself, you tell your kid the door is open and they can manage it. And if they come yes have a gift. Not like, an ipad, but some christmas sweets or funny socks or an ornament, something that shows you thought about it but that you clearly don't have a preexisting close relationship. I wouldn't invite SOs on family vacations until there were some signs that the relationship was serious (1 year+ and/or commitment) but they would always be welcome at my dinner table! People have such a hard time being generous, and not financially generous in spirit. It costs nothing to just be welcoming, and it pays dividends, you should all try it sometime! |
Before becoming extremely serious ie engaged to DH I would always just plan a separate holiday thing with my boyfriends, in college, it was before or sometime during the break When a couple becomes serious it's for them to work out how they want to spend the holidays and then speak to their separate families about it. As a pp mentioned it's best to let your kids know an SO is welcome and then they can take care of the inviting and logistics between them. |
They are invited to the home and we do a gift exchange so yes gifts. No family trips until engaged. |
| Yes ad. Yes |
Omg you’re still talking about your whittle baby 18 yo and her BF marching xmas pajamas? Barf. |
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If it comes up they can come for the weekend. Friend or SO. Many people don’t fly home for that weekend and then again 3 weeks later for winter break.
We don’t do gifts in thanksgiving so that would be odd. |