You mean YOUR brother-in-law who brought along YOUR niece/nephew? You sound like the SIL from hell. |
Not a good time at the host's expense. |
| So he’s not a guest, he’s a short term roommate and family. Set up house rules/cleaning expectations/cooking schedule. Don’t let things fester for so long that you go ballistic about a napkin. It makes you seem completely unstable and bitchy. You acted like you had a dinner guest who lefts napkin behind. The full story would have been helpful. |
I don't consider him my BIL. He was DH's dad's lovechild who turned up three years ago thanks to Ancestry.com. DH has another brother who is #goals thanks to my MIL. |
Your next my dear. |
Totally OT, but does anyone actually use these? We do NOT have an open floor plan and it takes my 7 year old forever to clear the table (her job). I know you were kidding PP but I actually might get one o fthese... |
| *You’re |
O.k. the napkin was an oversight. Your husband simply forgot to clear it. I think you are being a bit ridiculous. If your husband is willingly picking up after this guy, that is totally your husband's business and certainly he is allowed to do that. If he forgot the damn napkin, so what? Either tell your dh that he forgot the napkin or pick it up and toss it in the trash. Going to that guy's room, knocking on his door and demanding that he come out and clear off the napkin was an overreaction on your part. You seriously need to chill out. |
The napkin was the last straw. Because he just left the table in front of me. Since he's been here, the floor has become extra dirty and the entire kitchen looks like the Tasmanian Devil went through it. |
I don't touch other people's napkins for hygiene reasons. |
It’s a f*cking napkin |
Exactly! You should have set ground rules from the get go. You have been using the passive aggressive route until you explode over a napkin. Leave the house and reassess when you get home. |
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If he's spilling juice on your kitchen floor and otherwise making messes in your kitchen w/o cleaning them up that would be annoying. And that would be a legitimate complaint.
Point the messes out to your husband and ask that he either pick them up himself or he can ask his friend to pick them up. Blowing up over the napkin being left on the table only makes you sound sort of crazy. Talk to your husband before you let yourself get that annoyed. |
Seriously, someone has to set ground rules for an adult? The person is old enough to be a decent human being. |
| Managing resentment. Op, no reason to spend so much time with anyone that the end result is being annoyed by them. That does no one any good. In smaller doses, these things would not bother you. Find the balance, but err on the side of it being a let-down, because you'll miss them, when they leave. Shorter time together. If you aren't a good version of yourself when you have guests, nothing else will matter. |