DP Boyfriends seem different don't you think? I wouldn't allow it personally. |
DP The difference is they aren't doing it in the room next to you. |
+1 Not even close, and not inviting him on vacation is not the same thing as "not accepting" him. |
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No Op. There is no reason this needs to be a thing. So no.
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That 2nd pp said when "you're engaged" you can bring the person. That's extreme. I wouldn't have gone on vacations with either set of parents for a decade before we married if they didn't let me bring my future DH. |
I vacationed without my boyfriend and with my parents in my early twenties. Not an issue at all. He still joined my family for holidays, he still felt accepted. We took vacations together. But I knew my parents wouldn’t extend a vacation invite until we got engaged, and respected that. |
| My sons are 20 and 18 and I would never in a million years allow this. |
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I would depending on my kid and the significant other. Good kid? Kind? Healthy relationship? Yes.
Toxic or controlling? No. |
| It’s fine. Just tell her you will bang on the wall if she’s a screamer in bed. |
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No ring, no bring |
| No. Just let it fizzle out. |
+1 and when it’s family photo time you’re the lucky photographer |
| NOPE. When our son got this age he started being allowed to bring a friend but never a girlfriend. Wayyyy too much togetherness and honestly, I felt like he wouldn’t enjoy the trip as much having to be “on” for the girlfriend of the moment. |
“If I can’t bring my boyfriend I’m not coming!” Guess whose ass would HAPPILY have been left at home in my family... |
Seriously. Although, I can't imagine tagging along on family vacations at age 26 anyway. |