Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read a few pages of the bacon thread and now I'm kind of getting the vibe OP is an almond mom, who has her very specific foods (organic, lower calorie, or whatever) and wants to bring just enough for her family, so that she can carefully monitor how much everyone eats and create a scarcity around the food. And God forbid if they run out of their food, and have to eat the regular people food like whole milk. It's that sense of control and that idea of "OMG, those other kids ate *so* much." If these two kids ate all of the snacks for the entire weekend in a matter of hours plus were served dinner, I'm guessing the snacks weren't that abundant in the first place.
I agree. She brought an apple and a bag of carrots for the weekend.
I don't think OP is an almond mom (she was frying bacon in that thread while the other family made oatmeal), but I do think she is very rigid about food and what counts as a "proper meal" i.e. people can't just grab cereal or make a sandwich with communal groceries on vacation; every meal has to be a home-cooked, sit-down production or you are lazy if you send your kids to grab a slice of pizza at the boardwalk, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP-
How did it come to pass that this third family got invited? Do you like them? I am sympathetic to you but that’s how I’d feel towards someone I really didn’t like and invited out of obligation. Someone I did like and was close with, I would feel more generous.
While I do like the parents, I think they have failed to instil manners in their kids.
I can’t stand badly mannered and entitled kids at my house -
- they destroy things
- take our stuff without permission
- grab food with their hands out of bowls and platters
- rummage through cabinets, pantry and fridge and will eat whatever they find that suits them
- leave greasy fingerprints in doors, walls and everywhere they go
- they are unable to carry a conversation
I have several friends with kids like these and then I have friends with very well mannered kids who are a joy to have around and converse with.
In addition to this, this particular family likes to mooch off of other people.
You know all this and invited them anyway? Looks like the joke is on you.
None of this is true. This lady is just crazy and miserable! I’d love to hear the other side of this story.
It's probably something along the lines of: the kids ate one granola bar apiece, all the kids were playing on the floats together, and OP was so drunk, loud and obnoxious, the daughter wanted to get away from the noise for a bit and went to another room. It's weird that OP is so territorial about a rented place she was just staying in for the weekend. Who cares if someone opened a cabinet?
You have no manners and are proud of it. We get it.
Anonymous wrote:Kids eat afternoon snacks. They don't go from lunch to dinner without a snack.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read a few pages of the bacon thread and now I'm kind of getting the vibe OP is an almond mom, who has her very specific foods (organic, lower calorie, or whatever) and wants to bring just enough for her family, so that she can carefully monitor how much everyone eats and create a scarcity around the food. And God forbid if they run out of their food, and have to eat the regular people food like whole milk. It's that sense of control and that idea of "OMG, those other kids ate *so* much." If these two kids ate all of the snacks for the entire weekend in a matter of hours plus were served dinner, I'm guessing the snacks weren't that abundant in the first place.
I agree. She brought an apple and a bag of carrots for the weekend.
Anonymous wrote:Read a few pages of the bacon thread and now I'm kind of getting the vibe OP is an almond mom, who has her very specific foods (organic, lower calorie, or whatever) and wants to bring just enough for her family, so that she can carefully monitor how much everyone eats and create a scarcity around the food. And God forbid if they run out of their food, and have to eat the regular people food like whole milk. It's that sense of control and that idea of "OMG, those other kids ate *so* much." If these two kids ate all of the snacks for the entire weekend in a matter of hours plus were served dinner, I'm guessing the snacks weren't that abundant in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Who invites someone to their house and doesn't have plenty of food and snacks for them? Sounds like you couldn't afford this rental. If you were scraping by you should not have invited them to come.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Admittedly, we rarely travel with other families who aren’t related to us, but we always load up on food (a mix of healthy and junk) and the goal is for everyone to help themselves.
I can’t imagine baking muffins and only giving them to my kids while others watch.
Let me clarify. You are saying that when your family lets say of 3 travels, you make breakfast and lunch for 10 people very day to share everything?
This sounds like bs.
We do what pp does; we all get get groceries for the house and people make their own breakfast/lunch/snacks and generally we take turns making dinner (each family does 1 night or something like that).
Anyway, it sounds like op really dislikes these kids and that the family was not being considerate. That said, why on earth would you be so strict about snacks? Is it a money issue? It doesn’t seem like a big deal to share snacks with hungry guests and it’s so rude and strange to insist guests byo snacks so they don’t touch yours. How was this even communicated?
She said their kids ate ALL of the snacks they had. That is rude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: And toys aren't so much shared as taken and tolerated at public pools because they become fair game when the toy owner leaves them unattended and wanders off.
That’s exactly the problem.
It’s people like you who teaches your kids it’s OK to take other people’s things when they leave them unattended or look away.
How is this OK? Why do you feel entitled to others’ personal items?
We were brought up to ask permission before using others’ stuff.
You were obviously raised in a barn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did you invite this family? Were you trying to impress them that you could afford this vacation home? They probably thought if you could afford to rent this house, you surely could afford to buy enough drinks and snacks. They’re probably at home talking about you just as much as you’re talking about them!
My guess is that OP doesn't particularly like this family, but the family they were sharing the rental with wanted to invite them.
Anonymous wrote:Why did you invite this family? Were you trying to impress them that you could afford this vacation home? They probably thought if you could afford to rent this house, you surely could afford to buy enough drinks and snacks. They’re probably at home talking about you just as much as you’re talking about them!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: And toys aren't so much shared as taken and tolerated at public pools because they become fair game when the toy owner leaves them unattended and wanders off.
That’s exactly the problem.
It’s people like you who teaches your kids it’s OK to take other people’s things when they leave them unattended or look away.
How is this OK? Why do you feel entitled to others’ personal items?
We were brought up to ask permission before using others’ stuff.
You were obviously raised in a barn.