What! I would have asked person to leave immediately. Why would any sane person carry a loaded gun to a friend's house? |
| What if the guest with the loaded sidearm is also the one giving the spanking? Is it appropriate to unholster it before turning the kid over the lap? |
| If I feel like I have to tell a guest no guns, no smoking, no spanking, etc. I'm probably not going to be inviting them to stay at my house anyway - doesn't matter who they are. This goes for excessive drinking and politics talk. |
| Family can’t spank my kids, but who am I to tell them how to raise their kids? We don’t spank, but I don’t think traditional spanking is abuse. |
That point, with a loaded gun being pointed at me, the only option was to comply and hasten the visit to a natural close. |
Yikes! |
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My house, my rules.
If you don't state that you vote stright D, you can't come in my house. I can't prevent people from lying but if you are to step foot into MY home, you will denounce Republicans or you will be excluded. |
B- Trolling |
| Honestly I can’t think of any rules I enforce for guests — and we host overnight guests frequently. I would draw the line at smoking the house but no one has ever tried. |
DP. I'm sorry that happened, but most of us are not being held at gunpoint by our houseguests. |
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You do not have to invite this brother to stay in your house again. I would not, personally.
But it’s fine to say “in this house we do not hit other people” or curse, or smoke, or whatever your rules are. If people don’t want to adhere to the rules in your house, they don’t have to stay over. Personally, I would tell my brother that my kids were upset seeing him hit his child and that can’t happen again in my home. If he thinks it’s ridiculous, he doesn’t have to come over again. But maybe it would cause him to reflect on what he’s doing and how it looks to other people, and whether he would like to have an alternative way of behaving. If he doesn’t, he doesn’t have to come in to your house. You’re not controlling his behavior. You’re simply controlling what you tolerate in your own home. I wouldn’t tolerate spanking, I wouldn’t tolerate people screaming obscenities, I wouldn’t tolerate people denigrating other people. It’s not impolite to insist on civilized behavior in your home. Doesn’t matter if they’re family or friends, or whatever. |
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We are fairly casual, the only rules we actively enforce are no phones at the table. We have asked guests to turn off/put away.
Other rules are absolutely no smoking, no guns, and I'm sure there are others, but none of our friends smoke or carry guns that I know of |
| I think things that affect my family members are non-negotiable. Therefore, no smoking inside, no other dogs (we have two), no loaded guns (I can't believe that's something someone even has to say!), etc. But for things that don't impact my family members, my guests can do as they please. Therefore, you're allowed to spank your kids (I sincerely doubt yours were traumatized, and I don't spank mine and think it's barbaric), eat dessert before dinner, stay up/sleep in late, etc. |
You sound dramatic, OP. Your kids are going to witness stuff like this (and worse) in public. You've never seen someone spank their kid at the store? At the park? I get it, this is your house, but I doubt your children would have been as upset if you hadn't made a big thing about it. I also imagine they've forgotten about it already while you're still wringing your hands. I don't condone spanking and I think your brother is probably pretty emotionally immature if that's his response to his children, but I think you're making a mountain out of a molehill with this. |
I've literally never seen anyone spank their child, in public or in private. Where do you live that this is such a common occurrence? |