Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the parents' fault. If that happened, I would say to my daughter, ok the adults are going to hang for a bit, could you either chill with the kids or maybe play on your phone for a while? There is nothing the host can do about the rude guests. If the child is not a family member of BOTH the host and the guest (so niece or cousin), this is rude. I would prob shoo my teens away even if family if I got the sense my SIL wanted to chat about stuff she didn't want them to hear.
Absolutely. This is simple and common sense. Dad should have been emotionally tuned in to when his daughter might have overstayed her welcome at the adults' table and gently nudged her along.
I think this is a horrible thing to say in this scenario, especially when the Dad is not with this teen most of the time. He has her for the weekend and is shoo-ing her away?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the parents' fault. If that happened, I would say to my daughter, ok the adults are going to hang for a bit, could you either chill with the kids or maybe play on your phone for a while? There is nothing the host can do about the rude guests. If the child is not a family member of BOTH the host and the guest (so niece or cousin), this is rude. I would prob shoo my teens away even if family if I got the sense my SIL wanted to chat about stuff she didn't want them to hear.
Absolutely. This is simple and common sense. Dad should have been emotionally tuned in to when his daughter might have overstayed her welcome at the adults' table and gently nudged her along.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the parents' fault. If that happened, I would say to my daughter, ok the adults are going to hang for a bit, could you either chill with the kids or maybe play on your phone for a while? There is nothing the host can do about the rude guests. If the child is not a family member of BOTH the host and the guest (so niece or cousin), this is rude. I would prob shoo my teens away even if family if I got the sense my SIL wanted to chat about stuff she didn't want them to hear.
Absolutely. This is simple and common sense. Dad should have been emotionally tuned in to when his daughter might have overstayed her welcome at the adults' table and gently nudged her along.
I think this is a horrible thing to say in this scenario, especially when the Dad is not with this teen most of the time. He has her for the weekend and is shoo-ing her away?
Then dad can decline the invite to spend time with his daughter if she can't be away from him for 2 hours or so without him feeling like a horrible parent.
And again, I don't see how that's a big deal. This is a 15 year old girl. Not a 5 year old. She should be able to entertain herself for a few hours no sweat.
Anonymous wrote:I hate when we hang out with families like this. I do not want to spend my Saturday night having to be polite to the stupid stuff your 15 year old says. I want adult time. Tell your teen to find something to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the parents' fault. If that happened, I would say to my daughter, ok the adults are going to hang for a bit, could you either chill with the kids or maybe play on your phone for a while? There is nothing the host can do about the rude guests. If the child is not a family member of BOTH the host and the guest (so niece or cousin), this is rude. I would prob shoo my teens away even if family if I got the sense my SIL wanted to chat about stuff she didn't want them to hear.
Absolutely. This is simple and common sense. Dad should have been emotionally tuned in to when his daughter might have overstayed her welcome at the adults' table and gently nudged her along.
I think this is a horrible thing to say in this scenario, especially when the Dad is not with this teen most of the time. He has her for the weekend and is shoo-ing her away?
Then dad can decline the invite to spend time with his daughter if she can't be away from him for 2 hours or so without him feeling like a horrible parent.
And again, I don't see how that's a big deal. This is a 15 year old girl. Not a 5 year old. She should be able to entertain herself for a few hours no sweat.
So, when you get divorced and your x-DH has your teen daughter of the weekend...
will you come on to DCUM and complain about X-DH and his new GF or wife taking your DD to some strangers home for dinner, casting her off to the kiddies table and then banishing her FOR JUST 2 HOURS to play with little kids or on her phone?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the parents' fault. If that happened, I would say to my daughter, ok the adults are going to hang for a bit, could you either chill with the kids or maybe play on your phone for a while? There is nothing the host can do about the rude guests. If the child is not a family member of BOTH the host and the guest (so niece or cousin), this is rude. I would prob shoo my teens away even if family if I got the sense my SIL wanted to chat about stuff she didn't want them to hear.
Absolutely. This is simple and common sense. Dad should have been emotionally tuned in to when his daughter might have overstayed her welcome at the adults' table and gently nudged her along.
I think this is a horrible thing to say in this scenario, especially when the Dad is not with this teen most of the time. He has her for the weekend and is shoo-ing her away?
Then dad can decline the invite to spend time with his daughter if she can't be away from him for 2 hours or so without him feeling like a horrible parent.
And again, I don't see how that's a big deal. This is a 15 year old girl. Not a 5 year old. She should be able to entertain herself for a few hours no sweat.
No, I would not complain about that, but how my ex partner spends their time with our child on their weekends is none of my business.
So, when you get divorced and your x-DH has your teen daughter of the weekend...
will you come on to DCUM and complain about X-DH and his new GF or wife taking your DD to some strangers home for dinner, casting her off to the kiddies table and then banishing her FOR JUST 2 HOURS to play with little kids or on her phone?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the parents' fault. If that happened, I would say to my daughter, ok the adults are going to hang for a bit, could you either chill with the kids or maybe play on your phone for a while? There is nothing the host can do about the rude guests. If the child is not a family member of BOTH the host and the guest (so niece or cousin), this is rude. I would prob shoo my teens away even if family if I got the sense my SIL wanted to chat about stuff she didn't want them to hear.
Absolutely. This is simple and common sense. Dad should have been emotionally tuned in to when his daughter might have overstayed her welcome at the adults' table and gently nudged her along.
I think this is a horrible thing to say in this scenario, especially when the Dad is not with this teen most of the time. He has her for the weekend and is shoo-ing her away?
Then dad can decline the invite to spend time with his daughter if she can't be away from him for 2 hours or so without him feeling like a horrible parent.
And again, I don't see how that's a big deal. This is a 15 year old girl. Not a 5 year old. She should be able to entertain herself for a few hours no sweat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the parents' fault. If that happened, I would say to my daughter, ok the adults are going to hang for a bit, could you either chill with the kids or maybe play on your phone for a while? There is nothing the host can do about the rude guests. If the child is not a family member of BOTH the host and the guest (so niece or cousin), this is rude. I would prob shoo my teens away even if family if I got the sense my SIL wanted to chat about stuff she didn't want them to hear.
Absolutely. This is simple and common sense. Dad should have been emotionally tuned in to when his daughter might have overstayed her welcome at the adults' table and gently nudged her along.
I think this is a horrible thing to say in this scenario, especially when the Dad is not with this teen most of the time. He has her for the weekend and is shoo-ing her away?
Then dad can decline the invite to spend time with his daughter if she can't be away from him for 2 hours or so without him feeling like a horrible parent.
And again, I don't see how that's a big deal. This is a 15 year old girl. Not a 5 year old. She should be able to entertain herself for a few hours no sweat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What on earth did you expect to talk about that you couldn't broach in front of a 15 year old? Your swinging proposition? Your binges? Your new sex tape?
Teens are developmentally ready to talk with adults. I have an 18 year old in college and a 13 year old - they can talk and opine about current events, and they're mature enough to hear about personal struggles (sanitized for the 13 year old). When he was 15, my son would often hang out with the adults, because we have a social circle where he has always been the oldest. So unless his friends were there, he would gravitate towards us, listen nonchalantly and interject perfectly appropriate comments or questions.
Well, to me it’s sort of similar to hanging out with a friend and a person I don’t know. Or a friend and someone who’s close to someone else I know. I might want to share details about my child or some issue my family is dealing with, and wouldn’t in this case. Or sometimes, our group can be jokey-snarky about parenting responsibilities, but I’m not doing that with a child present. I don’t want to hang out with a random 15 year old. I’m surprised they came. Maybe because it was on the Dad’s weekend and they didn’t want to leave her alone? Maybe you can plan for days you know she will be gone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate when we hang out with families like this. I do not want to spend my Saturday night having to be polite to the stupid stuff your 15 year old says. I want adult time. Tell your teen to find something to do.
There is much to love about American culture, but this statement features the flaws and failings America society.
I grew up in an immigrant community with multigenerational gatherings of family friends. I had the exact same reaction as PP.
Wanting a teen to just be on their phone all night seems so sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the parents' fault. If that happened, I would say to my daughter, ok the adults are going to hang for a bit, could you either chill with the kids or maybe play on your phone for a while? There is nothing the host can do about the rude guests. If the child is not a family member of BOTH the host and the guest (so niece or cousin), this is rude. I would prob shoo my teens away even if family if I got the sense my SIL wanted to chat about stuff she didn't want them to hear.
Absolutely. This is simple and common sense. Dad should have been emotionally tuned in to when his daughter might have overstayed her welcome at the adults' table and gently nudged her along.
I think this is a horrible thing to say in this scenario, especially when the Dad is not with this teen most of the time. He has her for the weekend and is shoo-ing her away?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the parents' fault. If that happened, I would say to my daughter, ok the adults are going to hang for a bit, could you either chill with the kids or maybe play on your phone for a while? There is nothing the host can do about the rude guests. If the child is not a family member of BOTH the host and the guest (so niece or cousin), this is rude. I would prob shoo my teens away even if family if I got the sense my SIL wanted to chat about stuff she didn't want them to hear.
Absolutely. This is simple and common sense. Dad should have been emotionally tuned in to when his daughter might have overstayed her welcome at the adults' table and gently nudged her along.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate when we hang out with families like this. I do not want to spend my Saturday night having to be polite to the stupid stuff your 15 year old says. I want adult time. Tell your teen to find something to do.
There is much to love about American culture, but this statement features the flaws and failings America society.
Anonymous wrote:It's the parents' fault. If that happened, I would say to my daughter, ok the adults are going to hang for a bit, could you either chill with the kids or maybe play on your phone for a while? There is nothing the host can do about the rude guests. If the child is not a family member of BOTH the host and the guest (so niece or cousin), this is rude. I would prob shoo my teens away even if family if I got the sense my SIL wanted to chat about stuff she didn't want them to hear.