Anonymous wrote:If it’s a visit during “regular times” with work and school and activities, they can either fall in line or work around you.
If it’s during holidays and you don’t have work/school/tons of activities, you can adjust things like Christmas dinner or Thanksgiving dinner to a time that works better for them, or that is a compromise.
When you have flexibility, be flexible. When you don’t, make it clear that you’re doing X at Y o’clock and they are free to do something else if that works better for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I struggle often with the fact that when my ILs stay they have such different preferences than us. Eg the time they want to eat dinner vs us (we eat much later than them bc of what time we finish work and just our rhythm)
Do you all do what your ILs want to do because they are the guests or compromise and feel bad or how do you think about it? We typically compromise but i find that even the compromise makes me sort of have to twist myself into a pretzel.
would love to hear how others think about it.
Your house, your preference. I'm an inlaw/parent and can always eat a snack. Are they just visiting or also working during a visit?
We have 1 adult DC where the household has some unusual strict rules and procedures. Would stay in a hotel and another would stay at their house.
They're just visiting but they visit quite a bit and on weekends often (like 1 in 5 or 6 weekends they come to stay). I work crazy hard during the week, friday nights the kids have sports and saturday nights I look forward to being the one night where I get to kind of relax and have a nice dinner not at 5.30pm. I also grew up in spain where no one would ever eat dinner at 5.30pm so it feels especially jolting and makes me not want them to come.
Well, you’re not in Spain, Hilaria.
This is a stupid response. There’s no set time “Americans” eat dinner.
The real question is why isn’t your husband taking a lead in this and handling his parents? It sounds like that’s what needs to happen and he needs to cook for his family. OP can hang out with a glass of wine and eat when she wants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I struggle often with the fact that when my ILs stay they have such different preferences than us. Eg the time they want to eat dinner vs us (we eat much later than them bc of what time we finish work and just our rhythm)
Do you all do what your ILs want to do because they are the guests or compromise and feel bad or how do you think about it? We typically compromise but i find that even the compromise makes me sort of have to twist myself into a pretzel.
would love to hear how others think about it.
Your house, your preference. I'm an inlaw/parent and can always eat a snack. Are they just visiting or also working during a visit?
We have 1 adult DC where the household has some unusual strict rules and procedures. Would stay in a hotel and another would stay at their house.
They're just visiting but they visit quite a bit and on weekends often (like 1 in 5 or 6 weekends they come to stay). I work crazy hard during the week, friday nights the kids have sports and saturday nights I look forward to being the one night where I get to kind of relax and have a nice dinner not at 5.30pm. I also grew up in spain where no one would ever eat dinner at 5.30pm so it feels especially jolting and makes me not want them to come.
Well, you’re not in Spain, Hilaria.
Anonymous wrote:We try to compromise when we have family staying with us. We are certainly not eating at my parents regularly scheduled dinner time, 4pm because we are not even home from work/school yet, but we also do not eat at our preferred time of 6:30/6:45. If I'm cooking I try to make sure we eat around 5:45/6 which is the absolute earliest we can do with our schedule and does involve me basically walking into the house, washing up and starting dinner immediately. If one of them cooks we might eat around 5:15.
Anonymous wrote:If it’s a visit during “regular times” with work and school and activities, they can either fall in line or work around you.
If it’s during holidays and you don’t have work/school/tons of activities, you can adjust things like Christmas dinner or Thanksgiving dinner to a time that works better for them, or that is a compromise.
When you have flexibility, be flexible. When you don’t, make it clear that you’re doing X at Y o’clock and they are free to do something else if that works better for them.