This just sounds weird |
| "No" is the kind response. You mess-up the dynamic when you are not genuine. People know. It's much worse for relationships. You When you fib. Or when you are resentful, and think it doesn't show. It does. No magic words, Op. You don't get to craft this response and fool people into thinking you mean something else. |
Nah, there are ways to decline more elegantly. White lies exist for a reason. |
Open hearts, open doors. All are welcome |
| Yes and I decline. It's usually people with poor boundaries who are takers who make such an ask. They think it's no trouble, but would never do it themselves. |
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Spouse is from a smaller quasi-rural area about 4 hours away from our metro (think population of about 200,000; military base is the largest local employer).
Pretty much each summer for the first ten years of our marriage we hosted a different graduate student from spouse’s home town doing a summer internship in our metro. Neighbors, family friends, and church members. Everything from law school to physical therapy to occupational therapy. We’ve also hosted families who have had to come to the metro for more intense cancer treatments and various other things. No big deal to us, but we have always had the spare bedroom/bathroom capacity—so I might have felt differently under different circumstances. It takes a village. |
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Where do you live? Who is offering your home? This is so odd.
Agree on a white lie. |
It is not that odd to many people. Maybe to anti community DCUM people |
This is what my family thinks. |
So, wait, these aren't people you're very close to but you visit them, too? Make it make sense. If there's some expectation of reciprocation, that's a different scenario than the one you set up, OP. |
You don't even need to say "I'm sorry." There's nothing to be apologetic about. |
| No one believes your white lies |
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By secretly resenting just the act of asking, too many people are actually on a power trip. They deny the asker a genuine answer while they get to make fun of them.
Say no if your preference is no. I try to be of the mindset that anyone can ask anything. I'm not faulting them for asking something, no matter what it is. And I will say yes or no. And it will be genuine, without drama. That neither of us will hold resentment going forward, or snicker to others about, "how dare they ask to ..." If instead someone holds resentment re: the no, so be it. |
No we don’t. We say No |
Reading skills are key. |