+1 Hosting is rough. You run out of breakfast material or lunch material. Once we ran out of pancake mix since we were making pancakes for 8 each day. Then we had to run to a local grocery store to supplement. Once you clear the plates and run the dishwasher, it’s time to begin thinking about the next meal. It’s constant prepping, planning, serving, wiping surfaces, vacuuming, switching out hand towels, serving drinks, etc. By the 5th or 6th day, we are exhausted with hosting. Some people like coffee, some don’t, some like tea, some like water with ice, some with no ice, kid restrictions with texture and allergies, teens turned vegan, etc. The chopping of salad fixings, the fruit trays, the vege dip and trays, the seating arrangements, etc. It’s a lot to host and to repeat it day after day after day… plus, servicing the bathroom surfaces, soaps, fresh towels for everyone, just constant workload for a week or two depending on the length of stay.Anonymous wrote:Visiting is easier. They do all the cleaning and cooking. Hosting is difficult because you have to clean and cook before they arrive and all during. You are responsible for providing breakfast, lunch, and dinner day after day. You have to keep wiping down and sweeping everything. It’s constant cooking the next meal for everyone. It’s not relaxing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hosting, obviously. My house is tiny and cluttered because we're 4 people in 1200 sq ft. My family lives abroad, and it's a long flight to see them, but it's still easier than trying to tidy up when you don't actually have the space for it.
Everyone's circumstances are different.
Same here at 1500 sq feet. Our families and friends are used to having a lot more space to spread out, take quiet afternoon naps, get away from kid noise. We can't offer that.
For example, we hosted one family of friends who brought only one of their kids who was toddler aged, and planned to just give them our master bedroom, but they all needed to sleep in different rooms due to snoring/preference. So the kid slept in our kids' room (with our kids), the dad slept by himself in our bedroom, and the mom slept on the living room couch while we slept on the foldout in the family room. They are nice people who didn't complain but it's just a standard of personal space and privacy we can't provide and frankly don't really want to again.
Also hosting people with different food restrictions and dietary issues can be stressful in its own right.
Anonymous wrote:Visiting is easier. They do all the cleaning and cooking. Hosting is difficult because you have to clean and cook before they arrive and all during. You are responsible for providing breakfast, lunch, and dinner day after day. You have to keep wiping down and sweeping everything. It’s constant cooking the next meal for everyone. It’s not relaxing.
Anonymous wrote:Hosting, obviously. My house is tiny and cluttered because we're 4 people in 1200 sq ft. My family lives abroad, and it's a long flight to see them, but it's still easier than trying to tidy up when you don't actually have the space for it.
Everyone's circumstances are different.