Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the story was reversed would you be as surprised.
If it was a white boy going to a black girls house and the black parents only had black friends. If the blavk parents were surprised how nice the white boy was ... Would it be different?
Is there some advice here or answer to the OPs question? What if OP was Asian or Indian or vice versa? You are not helpful AT ALL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:as a parent, I would want to meet my kids' BF/G. Why wouldn't you? Doesn't matter if it's serious or not. If they are "dating" then as a parent, you want to know who your kid is getting involved with.
Meet- Maybe. Have them over for dinner- No.
I'm curious, when you started dating (middle school, high school, college) when did your parents meet your bf/gf's parents? I'm guessing that most people's parents get together for dinner when it is serious, long term, and headed towards marriage. I think its important to find out about the kid and try to get a sense of their family. But a formal dinner get-together rapidly approaches helicoptering to me.
Wow. Family meeting family is now helicoptering.
Read much? Family meeting family is very different than having them over for dinner. Are you saying that your parents required a sit-down dinner with your first boyfriend's parents? Or are you watching your child more closely than your parents? I think its a great idea to know who your kid is dating and should meet their parents. Say "hi" at a school event, have the kids introduce you and shake their hand. But insist they come over for dinner? Sheesh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:as a parent, I would want to meet my kids' BF/G. Why wouldn't you? Doesn't matter if it's serious or not. If they are "dating" then as a parent, you want to know who your kid is getting involved with.
Meet- Maybe. Have them over for dinner- No.
I'm curious, when you started dating (middle school, high school, college) when did your parents meet your bf/gf's parents? I'm guessing that most people's parents get together for dinner when it is serious, long term, and headed towards marriage. I think its important to find out about the kid and try to get a sense of their family. But a formal dinner get-together rapidly approaches helicoptering to me.
Wow. Family meeting family is now helicoptering.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:as a parent, I would want to meet my kids' BF/G. Why wouldn't you? Doesn't matter if it's serious or not. If they are "dating" then as a parent, you want to know who your kid is getting involved with.
Meet- Maybe. Have them over for dinner- No.
I'm curious, when you started dating (middle school, high school, college) when did your parents meet your bf/gf's parents? I'm guessing that most people's parents get together for dinner when it is serious, long term, and headed towards marriage. I think its important to find out about the kid and try to get a sense of their family. But a formal dinner get-together rapidly approaches helicoptering to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why on earth are you eating dinner with parents of a 16yr old casually dating. That is weird. I would just never see them again and let the kids go out. No big deal.
Bingo! Seriously.... It's VERY weird. To invite the bf over for dinner is one thing but his parents too? They are 16... Not 32. Also, I'm biracial and you have to shake stuff like this off. You can't change peoples views. I think they felt awkward too and that's fine.
I don't think it's weird. If the kids are dating, or friends, it's helpful for the parents to know each other a little. That way they can check stories and get on the same page for decisions. "Did you tell Johnny that a hotel room for prom night was acceptable? No? Good. I'm telling Susie the same thing."
Anonymous wrote:as a parent, I would want to meet my kids' BF/G. Why wouldn't you? Doesn't matter if it's serious or not. If they are "dating" then as a parent, you want to know who your kid is getting involved with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I call troll on this. No way a 16 year old boy invites the parents of the girl he just "recently" started dating over FOR DINNER. No way.
Not the OP, but it sort of happened with us. Our DD's BF's mother (single parent) took us out to dinner when our kids started dating.
as a parent, I would want to meet my kids' BF/G. Why wouldn't you? Doesn't matter if it's serious or not. If they are "dating" then as a parent, you want to know who your kid is getting involved with.
Yes, of course you want to meet the parent. But go back and read the original post. It goes from being introduced to parents to leaving bf's parents' house after dinner in the same sentence. Sixteen year old boys do not invite parents over for dinner. Their parents do. And if they are racist, as in using terms like "colored people," they are not inviting the parents of a biracial girl over for dinner.
And while we're at it, no "strong black woman" needs to come to DCUM to ask if her daughter's boyfriend's parents are racist. She's been black all her life. She knows racism pretty well.
Troll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I call troll on this. No way a 16 year old boy invites the parents of the girl he just "recently" started dating over FOR DINNER. No way.
Totally agree, PP. I call troll on this, too. I mean really, OP, "coloreds."
Have not heard that word in decades!
Great troll! Points to you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I call troll on this. No way a 16 year old boy invites the parents of the girl he just "recently" started dating over FOR DINNER. No way.
Totally agree, PP. I call troll on this, too. I mean really, OP, "coloreds."
Anonymous wrote:I call troll on this. No way a 16 year old boy invites the parents of the girl he just "recently" started dating over FOR DINNER. No way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I call troll on this. No way a 16 year old boy invites the parents of the girl he just "recently" started dating over FOR DINNER. No way.
Not the OP, but it sort of happened with us. Our DD's BF's mother (single parent) took us out to dinner when our kids started dating.
as a parent, I would want to meet my kids' BF/G. Why wouldn't you? Doesn't matter if it's serious or not. If they are "dating" then as a parent, you want to know who your kid is getting involved with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I call troll on this. No way a 16 year old boy invites the parents of the girl he just "recently" started dating over FOR DINNER. No way.
Not the OP, but it sort of happened with us. Our DD's BF's mother (single parent) took us out to dinner when our kids started dating.
Anonymous wrote:I call troll on this. No way a 16 year old boy invites the parents of the girl he just "recently" started dating over FOR DINNER. No way.