Not dual working parents with long hours with kids. Hosting people who don’t do their own cooking, entertainment, shopping, planning, and picking up after themselves sux. I wouldn’t do it for longer than a weekend, and even now w older kids weekends are family time and lots of games, Bday parties, homework projects, planning for future stuff- NOT entertaining and cooking for houseguests. Btw Op, any way a nanny or AU pair or housekeeper/cook/nanny can help? If you gave her regular hours half days or a few days a week? |
Are you comparing a retired couple hosting houseguests with a working family w young children having houseguests? Gawd. |
Paying $200-300/night for an urban or suburban Airbnb is quite generous |
|
When my mom was alive, my parents did whatever we asked and paid their own way. Now that she’s gone, my dad has become pseudo helpless and we pay for everything up front. He gives us bulk amounts of money, which winds up covering what we pay over a period of time.
OP, I hear what your’e saying about having to entertain your parents. Long-term guests (anything more than 3 days) need to be given chores and be a part of the household. If your’e working, ask your parents to start dinner. Give them a grocery list and your credit card and tell them to pick up food. Send them to school to pick up the kids or have them drop the kids off at play dates. You have to stop treating your parents like guests - because they are not. I told my ILs when they first started visiting that they should treat our house like theirs and showed them where food items were, cleaning supplies, etc. You should clean the guest room clean before they arrive, but if they complain about any messes while they’re at your house, point them to the vacuum or mop. Order more takeout, too. If they are going to travel to your DH’s graduation, you should offer them a place to stay, or don’t invite them. I doubt your DH would care whether they showed up or not. Make things easier for yourself since your parents aren’t going to do that for you. You should also consider building some walls to make a proper office for yourself in the basement. That setup isn’t conducive for what you need. |
Do we have the same ILs? Your story sounds so much like my experience. |
|
I can't imagine having a whole open basement/kitchen/bathroom space and then asking my parents to stay at Airbnb. There would have to be some serious boundary/pesronal issues for me not to open my home to my family; more serious than minor annoyances you've mentioned here. Which it seems like can be resolved with some communication. And on top of that you want them to pay for the Airbnb.
I know this isn't what you want to hear, but i think you're wrong for this and I don't blame your mother for being put off. Well, at least she's not giving you a hard time about it. Sounds like she thinks you're wrong too, but mostly just keeping her mouth shut about it. |
Holy crap. They came to babysit your son because you were in a bind, and you think you were doing them a favor by paying for the AirBnB you made them stay in? |
But they were there to help OP out! They didn't want to stay in an AirBnB, and they were providing childcare that she needed. |
What on earth is so difficult for them to understand that it’s a: Small space Work from home professional job Kids at home for school They don’t help out |
And now she knows she can pay a sitter $20/hr instead |
I wish, because then we’d live in the same area and could split the duties of hosting them. Having people in your home who expect to be guests for weeks on end is exhausting enough when life is normal. We haven’t had my parents visit since the pandemic either (and they are generally easy, helpful visitors) so this is not even unique to my ILs, we just can’t have people in our home while we wfh. Though I’m sorry to hear there are more out there like mine, it’s draining. |
| Stop taking inviting them to events when you don’t want house guests. I agree hosting high maintenance guests for a week around every event would suck. They don’t need to be included in everything. If they try to invite themselves, just tell them no you aren’t in a position to host anyone that week. They can offer themselves to get an Airbnb but it’s on them to offer, find it and pay for it. |
| I have many friends who pay for their parents and want them comfortable. OP, sounds like you don’t want them. Go the extra mile and ask them to donate your share of the inheritance they are leaving. Or are you wanting that? |
Sitters also need to be fed and paid OT. |
| OP, you are entitled to decide that your parents will not stay with you. I am probably your parents age. Do not think -- that you are doing them a favor by having them stay in an AirBnb. That may NOT be their style. There are a lot of unknowns for AirBnb. A hotel would be a better idea. I have stayed in many AirBnb and will continue to stay at them BUT I would not wish decide this for others. |