Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the situation: at the Easter brunch table, there were 10 of us, and a couple who is getting married later this year; a relative asked the couple if they will have children right away. This relative is related to one person of the couple but hardly sees the person on an on-going basis, maybe once a year if that; this relative met the other person of this couple only once before. I think the question is quite rude. WDYT?
I think you must be relatively young. In previous generations this was a fairly normal question, which you just answered either truthfully or with something vague. The asker is making conversation and likely DGAF one way or the other.
So many things have become "rude" that once upon a time were just considered small talk.
Small talk is for strangers, amongst family people can be more straightforward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the situation: at the Easter brunch table, there were 10 of us, and a couple who is getting married later this year; a relative asked the couple if they will have children right away. This relative is related to one person of the couple but hardly sees the person on an on-going basis, maybe once a year if that; this relative met the other person of this couple only once before. I think the question is quite rude. WDYT?
I think you must be relatively young. In previous generations this was a fairly normal question, which you just answered either truthfully or with something vague. The asker is making conversation and likely DGAF one way or the other.
So many things have become "rude" that once upon a time were just considered small talk.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure it's rude, but it falls into a "this is not your business" category. If I were the couple I'd answer the question with a question: "Why would you like to know?"
When I was deep into infertility I had a distant uncle drunkenly grill me at dinner, in front of a table full of people, about when I was having kids. I told him he'd be the first to know, with a big smile on my face. He got all flustered like "well I doubt that's true" and stammered away. But I was always glad I'd been able to shut him down about something that was deeply painful for me.
Anonymous wrote:This is the situation: at the Easter brunch table, there were 10 of us, and a couple who is getting married later this year; a relative asked the couple if they will have children right away. This relative is related to one person of the couple but hardly sees the person on an on-going basis, maybe once a year if that; this relative met the other person of this couple only once before. I think the question is quite rude. WDYT?