| Showing up 15-30 minutes late to a big party or some other event with more flexible timing should be generally ok. Showing up 15-30 minutes late to dinner with someone else is incredibly obnoxious. There is no "culture" where this would be considered ok. |
Wow so you'd not only require your spouse to be late because of you, you'd throw away your marriage over this? This is the kind of bizarre behavior that makes on-time people think always-late people are controlling narcissists. |
| I thought OP was Spouse A because of the “dithering” comment |
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"Spouse B is less punctual and feels that being 15-30 minutes late is not that big of a deal."
I have not read anything more than OP's post, so I am sure this has been said already, but I want to lend my voice to reiterating that the above is one of most incredibly rude habits/mindsets one can have. Spouse A was not out of line at all, and it's a wonder that s/he lasted as long as s/he did. |
Lol, my ex-military repeats over and over again "If you’re early, you’re on time. If you’re on time, you’re late. If you’re late, you’re f-ed". He at least articulates that he wants us to be early everywhere. I'm fine with being on time. He considers this late and loves to put me down because I'm "always late". I am not. I am also getting the kids ready while he sits in the car huffing and puffing. And we still make it where we are going on time because I'm not actually late. But actually being 30 minutes late to anything is unacceptable and I would leave them behind too. |
No one has said B mocked A with the work friends. I think you can simply say "something came up and running behind" and it could be anything - work, kids, babysitter is running late, etc. |
Wow, I thought it was strange an earlier pp said this B side was narcissistic behavior, not chill. (I fall on the A side.) But, dang, there is A LOT to unpack with your comment….honoring commitment shows he’s not committed to you. You definitely prove pp’s point it its a test or gotcha. |
| Doing it was fine. All the "dramatics" are not necessary. |
Lol, OP said it's partially cultural. You must not have ever showed for a posada "on time" and sat around awkwardly as the first guest for over an hour while the hosts cook and disappear to go get ready. |
There is not one monolithic American culture. |
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threatens, frustration, dithering, furious, embarrass ... language is too strong.
Each spouse can come/go as they like. They should just do it, drama free I have friends, a couple, who drive to the airport separately. One likes to cut-it-close re:arrival. One gets stressed. So they drive 2 cars. If the late one misses the flight, the other still gets to go. NO DRAMA |
Surely you can see that won't work for dinner reservations? |
| Being on time is very important. Being constantly late is rude. |
I posted earlier that my husband is often late. He’s a surgeon and sometimes cases go late. It’s fine for dinner reservations. I just order his food when everyone orders, and he shows up when he shows up. |
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It all depends on context IMO (and in this case, it is rude to be 30min late- no question).
Sometimes it is actually rude to be early (which I had to explain to my DH years ago…he would want us to arrive 20-30min early to a casual party, catching the host off guard lol). Also totally depends who you are meeting and where - meeting with work colleagues vs a parent teacher conference vs coffee with your sister vs drinks with a large group of friends. Obviously the first two situations require punctuality while the latter two 15-30min probably is not a huge deal. |