Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you’re resentful because you don’t have children. Are you jealous of your sisters for that? Do you resent them for that? Or did you make the decision not to have children entirely freely and on your own accord?
Anonymous wrote:OP, are you on the spectrum? Usually when one declines and invite like this, you need to say that you have a conflict. If you say “no” and you’re staying home alone, you have to kind of fudge it or there will be hurt feelings.
If this is what’s going on, your sisters are probably just trying to make sure you stay connected to the family and get out for social stuff periodically. So you could offer an alternative, like “could we do something the following weekend instead?”
Anonymous wrote:Who cares if they are guilt tripping you? Let them. You don't have a father living and don't have kids. Father's day is not for you to celebrate anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Time to lose the nice, OP.
"Larlas, are you aware that I am not married and do not have children? Why on earth are you forcing me into a celebration of your husbands? You are not being sensitive. Stop being selfish."
And if they call you names or whatever, don't respond and don't go.
You sound very bitter.
We have children who have children and children who don’t. We have children who don’t have children because they chose not to, and we have children who don’t have children partly at least because the decision was not entirely theirs.
Everyone always invites everyone else to any, shall we say, beyond the nuclear family event regardless of marital or child status. Everyone recognizes that everyone merits an invitation regardless, and beyond that the nieces and nephews love the childless aunts and uncles regardless - and vice versa.
Why can’t you just treat the event as a good excuse for an extended family get together? Why does it have to be so loaded?
Hi Smug Grandma,
Because OP feels her sisters won't take no for an answer, and that they're generally pushy and tone-deaf. Therefore OP needs to be crystal clear, and if she ruffles feathers in order to get her point across, that's fine.
You seem to not understand that it's OK for relatives to push back firmly against other relatives. I'm sure you do it without thinking in your life, but somehow you think OP isn't allowed to? Get over yourself.