Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As parents get older they tend to get details wrong, I've noticed. They'll use a job title that is wrong, get the company name wrong, overstate a role because they don't actually know how the kid's company is structured, and so on. Same with kids sports.
This was definitely a deliberate lie. My friend didn't forget where her son lived or with whom he lived.
I don't care about that, but I do care that she lied. It's weird.
I don’t think PP was responding to your earlier post, but you seem strangely vested in your friend’s adult son’s life and on tattling here. Maybe she lied because she realized you’re gossipy like that?
No, she was trying to wrangle an invite to a family event.
I'm asking on here because this is an anonymous site. Gossiping would be asking people that she knows or outing her. This could be anyone. That is why I didn't give personal details.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well both my kids families moved states entirely this summer so we had to say something about their move and new jobs.
Plus we watched the various grandkids for a few weeks whilst the moving trucks did their thing and parents unpacked.
It was fun but exhausting and we didn’t see our friends for a month really:
Did you read the question?
Anonymous wrote:My FIL used to put so much BS about DH and BIL in his nightmare Christmas letter that DH finally told him not to mention us at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol, no. I don’t really talk about my adult kid’s accomplishments. It’s their lives to talk about, not mine.
If someone asks, what do you tell?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As parents get older they tend to get details wrong, I've noticed. They'll use a job title that is wrong, get the company name wrong, overstate a role because they don't actually know how the kid's company is structured, and so on. Same with kids sports.
I think this is very true. My father used to always tell people that I was in computers/a programmer. No idea why that seemed to be stuck in his head. I'm an engineer and I work in aerospace/defense. I don't think it mattered that much one way or the other.
Anonymous wrote:As parents get older they tend to get details wrong, I've noticed. They'll use a job title that is wrong, get the company name wrong, overstate a role because they don't actually know how the kid's company is structured, and so on. Same with kids sports.
Anonymous wrote:Well both my kids families moved states entirely this summer so we had to say something about their move and new jobs.
Plus we watched the various grandkids for a few weeks whilst the moving trucks did their thing and parents unpacked.
It was fun but exhausting and we didn’t see our friends for a month really:
Anonymous wrote:OP here: a friend recently told me a story about her adult son that was verifiably not true.
I didn't let on that I knew she wasn't telling the truth, but her son has a social media account and knows my adult son. She didn't know that her son had shared publicly some personal information or, even if she did, she must have thought that I wouldn't know. I wasn't checking up on her, but when people post on social media, it's difficult to ignore what gets circled around in people's feeds.
I won't out the story she shared, the truth, or why it was obvious that she was lying. I just can't help but see her differently knowing that she would do this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As parents get older they tend to get details wrong, I've noticed. They'll use a job title that is wrong, get the company name wrong, overstate a role because they don't actually know how the kid's company is structured, and so on. Same with kids sports.
This was definitely a deliberate lie. My friend didn't forget where her son lived or with whom he lived.
I don't care about that, but I do care that she lied. It's weird.
I don’t think PP was responding to your earlier post, but you seem strangely vested in your friend’s adult son’s life and on tattling here. Maybe she lied because she realized you’re gossipy like that?
Anonymous wrote:Lol, no. I don’t really talk about my adult kid’s accomplishments. It’s their lives to talk about, not mine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As parents get older they tend to get details wrong, I've noticed. They'll use a job title that is wrong, get the company name wrong, overstate a role because they don't actually know how the kid's company is structured, and so on. Same with kids sports.
This was definitely a deliberate lie. My friend didn't forget where her son lived or with whom he lived.
I don't care about that, but I do care that she lied. It's weird.