Anonymous wrote:The sound of a parent reading is way better than the sound of someone’s one-sided work call or someone watching loud video news in a foreign language that I don’t speak or understand.
But maybe just assume she had a migraine and was having a spectacularly sucky day. She was being passive aggressive and rude.
I don’t think reading a book is wrong unless you misperceived how loud you were or were being really performative- my two pet peeves that I’m stuck with in my family. My DH doesn’t know how to speak softly and his attempts to whisper are actually louder than his normal voice. And my SIL is a performative parent and it is tedious to be in her presence when she’s “on”. Maybe you accidentally did one of those?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The sound of a parent reading is way better than the sound of someone’s one-sided work call or someone watching loud video news in a foreign language that I don’t speak or understand.
But maybe just assume she had a migraine and was having a spectacularly sucky day. She was being passive aggressive and rude.
I don’t think reading a book is wrong unless you misperceived how loud you were or were being really performative- my two pet peeves that I’m stuck with in my family. My DH doesn’t know how to speak softly and his attempts to whisper are actually louder than his normal voice. And my SIL is a performative parent and it is tedious to be in her presence when she’s “on”. Maybe you accidentally did one of those?
I know exactly what you mean!! Maybe I was giving that vibe! I was reading kind of slowly and asking him questions between the pages. It was because was sitting nicely and he usually gets really whiny in these situations so I was trying to keep him captive.
This was what aggravate her. Read a story, fine. Hold a seminar in between every page turn? Bonkers annoying. I’m sure your questions had that granola parent sing-song voice. I know it because we did it too. But in doctors offices we always brought crayons and paper.
Anonymous wrote:Recently I was in a waiting room at a pediatric office (a specialist) with my son. It is a large waiting room with about 20 chairs. I had my 4 year old with me and he brought me a book from the book pile they have there. I started reading it to him quietly - not whispering, but definitely below normal speaking voice. The other parent in the waiting area immediately made a big sigh and a huge show of putting in ear plugs (not ear buds, actual ear plugs.) She also loudly told her child couple times “I can’t hear you, it’s too loud in here” while glaring at me. That’s odd, right? I feel like I know the answer to my own question and this was not a normal reaction, but she was so over the top that it made me question myself![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The sound of a parent reading is way better than the sound of someone’s one-sided work call or someone watching loud video news in a foreign language that I don’t speak or understand.
But maybe just assume she had a migraine and was having a spectacularly sucky day. She was being passive aggressive and rude.
I don’t think reading a book is wrong unless you misperceived how loud you were or were being really performative- my two pet peeves that I’m stuck with in my family. My DH doesn’t know how to speak softly and his attempts to whisper are actually louder than his normal voice. And my SIL is a performative parent and it is tedious to be in her presence when she’s “on”. Maybe you accidentally did one of those?
I know exactly what you mean!! Maybe I was giving that vibe! I was reading kind of slowly and asking him questions between the pages. It was because was sitting nicely and he usually gets really whiny in these situations so I was trying to keep him captive.
Anonymous wrote:The sound of a parent reading is way better than the sound of someone’s one-sided work call or someone watching loud video news in a foreign language that I don’t speak or understand.
But maybe just assume she had a migraine and was having a spectacularly sucky day. She was being passive aggressive and rude.
I don’t think reading a book is wrong unless you misperceived how loud you were or were being really performative- my two pet peeves that I’m stuck with in my family. My DH doesn’t know how to speak softly and his attempts to whisper are actually louder than his normal voice. And my SIL is a performative parent and it is tedious to be in her presence when she’s “on”. Maybe you accidentally did one of those?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It wasn’t you. She was an ass.
Plus 1
Anonymous wrote:It wasn’t you. She was an ass.