Anonymous wrote:Honestly this sounds kind of like my SIL. I can’t say that I’ve known her to do this exact thing, and certainly not with the diapers, but I could see her doing the towel or glove thing. I don’t think she intentionally rude, or even flaky, I think some things just don’t register for her. She also sees stuff as not a big deal, so if she had an extra towel she’d lend it out and not be concerned if it never came back. I don’t know if she’d even notice. It’s funny, she’s an engineer and extremely detail oriented about some things, but other stuff just... doesn’t register.
Drives me crazy though.
Anonymous wrote:I honestly have never had any experience with this. It sounds truly bizarre. Plenty of my friends are disorganized and tired, but they don’t steal my stuff.
Anonymous wrote:
I would honestly stop providing the extras.
It sounds like this happens with one family? Next time they forget, let natural consequences take care of it. If they need to cancel the outing after they get there, then that’s that. Not your problem. If it happens again, then stop making complicated plans with this family. Only meet up at restaurants or places where no preparation is needed. If they “forget” their wallet, then you know you’re being taken advantage of...
Somehow, they manage to remember the towels when they vacation alone....
Anonymous wrote:I do need to step back. Thank you for the advice.
My problem solving skills aren’t as weak as they sound. I’m on the west coast in an area where our closest pumpkin patch and ski are both kind of mom-and-pop and don’t have gift shops, or else I’d have hustled everyone to on! But I promise I don’t step in immediately. Ultimately the kids are 2-6 so a tiny bit young to pack their own stuff or tough it out.
I held back on explaining the rest of the mitten thing because I didn’t want to sound petty. After we saw them in use, I asked if they could bring them by when they had a chance and the mom said she had already left them at our place. So I guess could have said “no you didn’t we saw them on Larlo” but I let it go. Not quite ready for Mittengate to take down our friendship.
Anonymous wrote:You’re right, I do need to just stop helping and/or socializing in this context. Ugh. It’s really difficult and awkward to drive 2 hours to go ski, meet up with people who drove up separately, and have them saying “oops, we don’t have gloves” and not let them borrow the extra pair (which I keep for the afternoon once my son soaks his mittens in the morning) that they can literally see in the trunk. Once at the pumpkin patch I tried to not get involved with helping while the couple argued with each other about who packed what, told their kids they’d have to go home, kids were crying, etc. I finally dig up an old sweatshirt because the alternative seemed heartless.
And to the PP who mentioned her SIL, you just reminded me that mine does this, too. She’s less of a mystery: her excuse is that since she’s a doctor and helps other people, everyone else should help her. She’s so transparent about her rudeness that it doesn’t bug me in the same way!