Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So let me get this straight. OP invite a family over to their weekend rental and gets mad when the other family’s teenagers grab the floaties? Did her teenager not use the floaties too? She is really complaining about this?
They took our floaties that we brought from home, not the ones from the rental.
I don’t mind sharing stuff with kids who are well mannered. But there are plenty of kids who, if you share the snacks with them, they will eat ALL the snacks. They won’t use their own sunscreen, but your forty dollar one from a French pharmacy. They will seat take the chairs that you brought from home, your floaties, and just take over your stuff because their parents raised them as entitled to everything around them.
I remember on our first trip with another family I shared breakfast with their kids and on day 1 they literally ate all our breakfast we brought for the weekend and we had nothing left.
On another trip another family brought a platter of cookies to share with everyone and my friend’s son literally ate ALL of them in a matter of hour and there were none left.
The problem is inconsiderate parents who raise inconsiderate kids.
Anonymous wrote:OP, lately of BYOSnacks fame, and previously known for her obsession with vacation bacon, has earned herself the title of:
The Baconator
Welcome to the DCUM Hall of Fame, The Baconator. You’ve earned your place next to Burger King Lady, Bobcat Girl, Boring Water, Lightly Fried Tuna, and Burgundy Washcloth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So let me get this straight. OP invite a family over to their weekend rental and gets mad when the other family’s teenagers grab the floaties? Did her teenager not use the floaties too? She is really complaining about this?
They took our floaties that we brought from home, not the ones from the rental.
I don’t mind sharing stuff with kids who are well mannered. But there are plenty of kids who, if you share the snacks with them, they will eat ALL the snacks. They won’t use their own sunscreen, but your forty dollar one from a French pharmacy. They will seat take the chairs that you brought from home, your floaties, and just take over your stuff because their parents raised them as entitled to everything around them.
I remember on our first trip with another family I shared breakfast with their kids and on day 1 they literally ate all our breakfast we brought for the weekend and we had nothing left.
On another trip another family brought a platter of cookies to share with everyone and my friend’s son literally ate ALL of them in a matter of hour and there were none left.
The problem is inconsiderate parents who raise inconsiderate kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So let me get this straight. OP invite a family over to their weekend rental and gets mad when the other family’s teenagers grab the floaties? Did her teenager not use the floaties too? She is really complaining about this?
They took our floaties that we brought from home, not the ones from the rental.
I don’t mind sharing stuff with kids who are well mannered. But there are plenty of kids who, if you share the snacks with them, they will eat ALL the snacks. They won’t use their own sunscreen, but your forty dollar one from a French pharmacy. They will seat take the chairs that you brought from home, your floaties, and just take over your stuff because their parents raised them as entitled to everything around them.
I remember on our first trip with another family I shared breakfast with their kids and on day 1 they literally ate all our breakfast we brought for the weekend and we had nothing left.
On another trip another family brought a platter of cookies to share with everyone and my friend’s son literally ate ALL of them in a matter of hour and there were none left.
The problem is inconsiderate parents who raise inconsiderate kids.
Some people treat a group communal house like their own home and assume things are for sharing (especially the kids). Maybe the parents should speak up, but it’s weird to fix breakfast and not expect everyone to want to share it. Don’t bring all of your nicest things if you don’t want other people using them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So let me get this straight. OP invite a family over to their weekend rental and gets mad when the other family’s teenagers grab the floaties? Did her teenager not use the floaties too? She is really complaining about this?
They took our floaties that we brought from home, not the ones from the rental.
I don’t mind sharing stuff with kids who are well mannered. But there are plenty of kids who, if you share the snacks with them, they will eat ALL the snacks. They won’t use their own sunscreen, but your forty dollar one from a French pharmacy. They will seat take the chairs that you brought from home, your floaties, and just take over your stuff because their parents raised them as entitled to everything around them.
I remember on our first trip with another family I shared breakfast with their kids and on day 1 they literally ate all our breakfast we brought for the weekend and we had nothing left.
On another trip another family brought a platter of cookies to share with everyone and my friend’s son literally ate ALL of them in a matter of hour and there were none left.
The problem is inconsiderate parents who raise inconsiderate kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So let me get this straight. OP invite a family over to their weekend rental and gets mad when the other family’s teenagers grab the floaties? Did her teenager not use the floaties too? She is really complaining about this?
They took our floaties that we brought from home, not the ones from the rental.
I don’t mind sharing stuff with kids who are well mannered. But there are plenty of kids who, if you share the snacks with them, they will eat ALL the snacks. They won’t use their own sunscreen, but your forty dollar one from a French pharmacy. They will seat take the chairs that you brought from home, your floaties, and just take over your stuff because their parents raised them as entitled to everything around them.
I remember on our first trip with another family I shared breakfast with their kids and on day 1 they literally ate all our breakfast we brought for the weekend and we had nothing left.
On another trip another family brought a platter of cookies to share with everyone and my friend’s son literally ate ALL of them in a matter of hour and there were none left.
The problem is inconsiderate parents who raise inconsiderate kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Is this really that rude?
I can imagine doing this if my kids were bored. Letting them go watch TV in one of the bedrooms.
Were you raised in a barn?
I can’t imagine being invited to someone’s property and then sneaking in master bedroom and propping myself on their bed to watch TV.
Do you feel your kids are entitled to everything? They can’t handle a couple of hours not being entertained? You are what’s wrong with our society.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get why you invited a family over for dinner, specifically told them to come after lunch so you don't have to feed them, specifically told them to bring snacks so you don't have to feed them snacks....that's a weird flex.
They were rude to not ask, yes, but you are not a gracious host. At all. If guests are coming after lunch you could easily have put out a spread of snacks and drinks.
Anonymous wrote:
So let me get this straight. OP invite a family over to their weekend rental and gets mad when the other family’s teenagers grab the floaties? Did her teenager not use the floaties too? She is really complaining about this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Another question: do you belong to a country club or neighborhood pool? Do you sit in a corner and avoid interacting with others? It’s normal for little kids to play together and share toys rather than play alone.
For 100th time, these are adults and teenagers. They don’t “play together”.
And no, at our neighbourhood pool people don’t share floaties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ICYMI: pool toys are for everyone. They are universally known to be communal property.
Didn’t you teach your kids that when they were little? Anytime we went to the neighborhood pool I brought extra toys and reminded my little ones that anything we brought to the pool would be shared.
As an adult hosting guests at a vacation home, you let the other kid use the item for 15 minutes and then you let the other parent know that your Larla shared her floaties with Johnny and now she would like to have a turn.
Adulting really isn’t hard…
First of all, these are not little kids. These are teenagers and they don’t take turns.
Secondly, not in our pool. Who told you others’ pool toys are yours to take?
You have no concept of personal boundaries, do you?
Anonymous wrote:
Another question: do you belong to a country club or neighborhood pool? Do you sit in a corner and avoid interacting with others? It’s normal for little kids to play together and share toys rather than play alone.