|
Let your son and his friends figure out meals. If you are feeling gracious, give them $$ for a grocery run.
Don’t overload yourself trying to please their palates. |
Teen boys, especially the 18-25 crowd will literally eat large volumes of nearly anything. I can imagine them saying they don’t eat simple carbohydrates and want sweet potatoes and quinoa instead |
These are teen boys. It’s fine to eat carbs, even if you normally watch, for a couple days. Because you are staying as a guest. You can’t except someone’s mom to be making you customized low carb meals. That is significant more time consuming that ordering a pizza, making a big lasagna, BBQ pulled pork/chicken sandwiches, and stuff that feeds a crowd. This isn’t the school cafeteria. |
|
My just-graduated DS is living with us for a year before he moves and he's had at least 2 to 3 weekends a year for the past couple of years where we have a household of boys. I buy breakfast food, set up beds, and nothing else! They usually go out, or I'll tell my DS to order something. If it's nice out, DS will grill. So many boys grilling these days. They also will go to the grocery store and liquor store on their own.
On one occasion I had 4 of them at home while DS was at work, and I said "here are the car keys so you can go grab lunch," which they did. Don't sweat it! --Fellow introvert |
| Beef. |
It doesn't make you inferior, but is there something positive you can grab on to? For you own sake? I'm the pp and an introvert (and in the throes of perimenopausal irritability) and I love meeting my boys' friends because there's history among them and it's the people my kids choose to spend time with. I said 4 were at the house, all working on laptops, but mostly talking. Every time I said something casual, then and throughout the weekend, they would really engage. I had met 3, and the 4th and I had a long conversation one morning while everyone else was sleeping. It makes me feel closer to my boys, and their friends are generally sweethearts I love cheering on. It's nice to interact with people who aren't my age because I do that every day. |
I think I'll never not find it awkward and unpleasant. My ds does grill sometimes but weather not cooperating with that now where we are. My mom was a perfect hostess who did not work and excelled at all domestic things, so I think I put a lot of pressure on myself to entertain properly. It's like I can't really let go of the fact that hosting = meals and drinks and total comfort and entertainment. And no matter what I do I fall way short of the standard I have in my head. |
It's college boys. The bar is never lower. |
I'm the first, pp. Agreed! Stop comparing yourself to your mom, your way is just as valid as hers. I don't even cook, and I don't care. So, does that make me less than other moms who do? Absolutely not. What if you could enjoy it 10%? As a pp said, your DS is bringing them home because he feels it's a safe and welcoming space -- so relish that! |
But this isn't "someone's mom", it's his mom. If my kid comes home from college, which is what this seems to be, I'm going to make things he likes for that first night. If he's not a pasta fan, then I won't make pasta that night. Later in the vacation, sure we'll be back to me making one meal and he can eat it or fix himself something. That doesn't mean that I won't serve a carb with the meal, because many people like carbs. But I wouldn't do something like baked ziti where it's impossible to separate the protein from the pasta, if I knew my kid didn't like pasta. Baked sweet potatoes with toppings like sour cream, roasted broccoli, and rotisserie chickens or cooked chicken thighs might be a good meal since he likes sweet potatoes. Or a big pot of chili, with cornbread, and tossed salad. Pasta with marinara, and sheet pan sausage and peppers, and caesar salad. Burgers or steaks (depends on your budget), with sweet potato fries, and steamed veggies. |
Not really? My ds had a lovely girlfriend in high school and she was over so frequently it ended up not feeling like work. Same with a couple friends for both of my kids: they'll stop to say hi sometimes even if they are in the neighborhood, it just feels comfortable and normal. But meeting people I'll likely never see again staying in my house suddenly? No, I don't like that and they could be the nicest people on earth and I'd still mind it. I don't want to make small talk, it's excruciating to me. |
Honestly I don't think that's why: It's more like crap I'm stuck with this mom and she sucks but my friend needs a place to crash. In fact ds is mad at me now because he was unclear with me about plans and I asked and he could tell I am stressed (I am in office working and really went minimal contact because I know it's obvious I am stressed!!) and he said I was "making him feel bad" and to "stop stressing out". Yet again he has been zero help and has not set up for them. I am just sick of it all and wish I could just leave for the evening. |
Honestly your kid sounds like kind of a jerk. |
You think a bunch of college boys are going to judge you on your hostessing? And if they did, you’d actually care? I think you could do with some therapy or maybe an edible or ten. |
Kid sounds like he has an uptight, neurotic mother who is blaming him for forcing her to put on a show for his friends when he literally just asked if they could crash for a few days. OP needs to chill TF out. |