White lies are stupid and they only cause more problems. OP doesn't have to scream no! into the phone and then slam down the receiver (remember the good old days when you could do that?!?). She can just say no. |
+1000 |
“F no.” |
| I make it clear the answer is always no. I would calmly say no, that doesn't work for us and we do not want to be asked in the future to host people who aren't family or our personal friends.You will learn a lot about the askers by how they respond to this. |
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In similar situations, I have offered the following excuses, which sometimes were true:
- I have a work deadline and can't spare the time or energy - I have had houseguests for the last x days or week and really can't handle any in the near future - I am expecting family or friends as houseguests the following week and need to prep the space and save my time, energy, etc. - I am feeling run down or have minor health issue xyz I've only been asked once in my life to host a friend of a friend, but I have had friends ask too often. I wanted to let them down gently. (Fwiw, I would say a plain, direct no with no follow up excuses if you never want to be asked to host a friend of a family or a friend of a friend. If it were me, I'd probably just explain like at least one previous pp that I don't "do" such houseguests and would probably add that while I'd love to see family member x who I'd love to see so much that I'd go through any amount of trouble to squeeze them in, it's too disruptive to do this for someone I don't know. If your space isn't huge and you work at home, anyone reasonable would understand. Doubly so if you live in a popular location. Anyone who is pushy after that would get from me a harsh no, as well as time out from their own visits, because I do not like people who push boundaries.) |
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Sorry, I'm the most recent pp, who just wrote a novel, lol
You could also just say more vaguely, this is not a good time for me. It's a great, all-purpose weak excuse! |
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Nope, white lies and “nuance” responses to an inappropriate request that you will not say yes to in the future is likely to yield future problems. People who are rude, entitled, and/or clueless enough to make a request like this do not pick up on nuance. They only see an opening. They will either try to help you solve the white lie to get to “yes” or make the same request in the future.
No or no we would not be willing to do this is a far kinder response and likely to yield a better future relationship. If the other person throws a fit then the reality is that your relationship only goes as far as you can transactionally provide things to them, which is a toxic relationship. |
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I haven’t read everything so this may already have been said.
The think you said you have a family. I’d say no because while you’re fine hosting people you know, it isn’t a safe practice in general To start hosting people you do NOt know. If you make an exception for one person’s friend then you have to make an exception for every in’s friends. It isn’t safe with kids. It isn’t about this one particular guest, obviously. |
| I don’t understand why you cannot just laugh and say “no, I’m not interested in hosting someone I don’t (or barely) know.” This would be so ludicrous to me. |
I dont believe this for 2 seconds. Hilarious. |
What an insane and rude response. You offer people to stay at homes you don't own? How impressiveley rude and crass. |
The rude people who ask never accept no and they stay mad about it because they are entitled. |
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I had to sell my place. I had so many people that were friends of my sister and brother in law that wanted to stay there. I did not know these people.
I sold and I'm still sad about it. |
You know us so well Op! Because that is the only and correct answer. |
This can't be real. You sold your home because people asked to stay with you? It was easier to sell it and move somewhere you didn't want to live than it was to say no, you don't want to host? |