Anonymous wrote: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.
I agree. If I invited a family for one day, I would have fed them all day. And I would have offered a bed before they needed to claim one on their own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids eat afternoon snacks. They don't go from lunch to dinner without a snack.
That’s not ops responsibility.
Anonymous wrote:I was fully prepared to be outraged. I’m not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wasn't raised in a barn or a trailer park, but I did go on my fair share of joint vacations with other families and have done so with my own kids. Sharing food is really part of that experience. You are sharing a home, it would be super weird to have three separate sets of food for three families for such a short period of time (unless someone has a severe allergy or something like that) In fact, it is one of the pleasures of a trip like this. You or your child may discover a new snack or way of preparing snacks that she really likes.
I think OP has two separate issues: sharing food and boundary crossing. I don't really get the former in a group setting but I can understand the latter. It is definitely rude for a kid or a parent to help themselves to stuff or go in your bedroom without asking, but in a group environment , I'd let that go and move on.
Its your vacation too, why let little things ruin it?
Yeah, the separate foods in a rental house is really weird to me. We've been going to the beach annually with three other families for about 10 years. We just buy a huge amount of food and beverages, and the cost of everything gets sorted out and split after the week.
And one of the best parts is that you don't need to make every single meal for your own family during vacation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
- Regarding the daughter watching TV on "your" bed -- Yes it would have been better if they'd asked first. But it's weird that you are this put out. It's not even your actual bed, it's a rental house. And it's a child, who was tired or needed a break. It's weird you are begrudging her that. You weren't using it.
It is actually my bed. I slept in that bed.
So if you are invited to someone’s house and feel tired you can sneak into host’s bedroom, make yourself comfortable on their bed and watch TV? Is this how you are raising your kids?
And where is this OK? What universe? In your trailer park?
Good hosts will notice when a young kid looks tired or cranky, and would offer them a place to get some quiet time and maybe a chance to nap.
A lot of people on this thread seem wholly incapable of hosting guests. Maybe you shouldn't invite people over, if hospitality is so alien to you?
You keep making this sound as if the kid was a 3 year old. Not the case. You keep rewording things to make op sound worse. Are you a repugnican?
You seem really angry over what was basically a minor faux pas, if that.
Other people sometimes don't do exactly what you want them to do. Such is life.
There is nothing about my post that is angry. I would definitely say that about you. Op was venting and is po'd. You can't have that because you need to show us you are a superior person. Here's your cookie. We see you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wasn't raised in a barn or a trailer park, but I did go on my fair share of joint vacations with other families and have done so with my own kids. Sharing food is really part of that experience. You are sharing a home, it would be super weird to have three separate sets of food for three families for such a short period of time (unless someone has a severe allergy or something like that) In fact, it is one of the pleasures of a trip like this. You or your child may discover a new snack or way of preparing snacks that she really likes.
I think OP has two separate issues: sharing food and boundary crossing. I don't really get the former in a group setting but I can understand the latter. It is definitely rude for a kid or a parent to help themselves to stuff or go in your bedroom without asking, but in a group environment , I'd let that go and move on.
Its your vacation too, why let little things ruin it?
Yeah, the separate foods in a rental house is really weird to me. We've been going to the beach annually with three other families for about 10 years. We just buy a huge amount of food and beverages, and the cost of everything gets sorted out and split after the week.
And one of the best parts is that you don't need to make every single meal for your own family during vacation.
That's how reasonable people handle it, but I sense (and I don't remember if I already posted this or just thought it in my head) that OP has very different food habits than most people on vacation and that she wants to cook and eat 3 square sit-down meals a day, with her family and her family only, while others are more casual and are happy to grab yogurt and a banana whenever they wake up or send a dad out for donuts in the AM, and fix a quick sandwich or grab a burger at the beach shack for lunch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
- Regarding the daughter watching TV on "your" bed -- Yes it would have been better if they'd asked first. But it's weird that you are this put out. It's not even your actual bed, it's a rental house. And it's a child, who was tired or needed a break. It's weird you are begrudging her that. You weren't using it.
It is actually my bed. I slept in that bed.
So if you are invited to someone’s house and feel tired you can sneak into host’s bedroom, make yourself comfortable on their bed and watch TV? Is this how you are raising your kids?
And where is this OK? What universe? In your trailer park?
Good hosts will notice when a young kid looks tired or cranky, and would offer them a place to get some quiet time and maybe a chance to nap.
A lot of people on this thread seem wholly incapable of hosting guests. Maybe you shouldn't invite people over, if hospitality is so alien to you?
You keep making this sound as if the kid was a 3 year old. Not the case. You keep rewording things to make op sound worse. Are you a repugnican?
You seem really angry over what was basically a minor faux pas, if that.
Other people sometimes don't do exactly what you want them to do. Such is life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wasn't raised in a barn or a trailer park, but I did go on my fair share of joint vacations with other families and have done so with my own kids. Sharing food is really part of that experience. You are sharing a home, it would be super weird to have three separate sets of food for three families for such a short period of time (unless someone has a severe allergy or something like that) In fact, it is one of the pleasures of a trip like this. You or your child may discover a new snack or way of preparing snacks that she really likes.
I think OP has two separate issues: sharing food and boundary crossing. I don't really get the former in a group setting but I can understand the latter. It is definitely rude for a kid or a parent to help themselves to stuff or go in your bedroom without asking, but in a group environment , I'd let that go and move on.
Its your vacation too, why let little things ruin it?
Yeah, the separate foods in a rental house is really weird to me. We've been going to the beach annually with three other families for about 10 years. We just buy a huge amount of food and beverages, and the cost of everything gets sorted out and split after the week.
And one of the best parts is that you don't need to make every single meal for your own family during vacation.
Anonymous wrote:I wasn't raised in a barn or a trailer park, but I did go on my fair share of joint vacations with other families and have done so with my own kids. Sharing food is really part of that experience. You are sharing a home, it would be super weird to have three separate sets of food for three families for such a short period of time (unless someone has a severe allergy or something like that) In fact, it is one of the pleasures of a trip like this. You or your child may discover a new snack or way of preparing snacks that she really likes.
I think OP has two separate issues: sharing food and boundary crossing. I don't really get the former in a group setting but I can understand the latter. It is definitely rude for a kid or a parent to help themselves to stuff or go in your bedroom without asking, but in a group environment , I'd let that go and move on.
Its your vacation too, why let little things ruin it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
- Regarding the daughter watching TV on "your" bed -- Yes it would have been better if they'd asked first. But it's weird that you are this put out. It's not even your actual bed, it's a rental house. And it's a child, who was tired or needed a break. It's weird you are begrudging her that. You weren't using it.
It is actually my bed. I slept in that bed.
So if you are invited to someone’s house and feel tired you can sneak into host’s bedroom, make yourself comfortable on their bed and watch TV? Is this how you are raising your kids?
And where is this OK? What universe? In your trailer park?
Good hosts will notice when a young kid looks tired or cranky, and would offer them a place to get some quiet time and maybe a chance to nap.
A lot of people on this thread seem wholly incapable of hosting guests. Maybe you shouldn't invite people over, if hospitality is so alien to you?
You keep making this sound as if the kid was a 3 year old. Not the case. You keep rewording things to make op sound worse. Are you a repugnican?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Well, we all know DCUM is in full support of the weird (mostly) Gen Y/Z obsession with their kids needing to cram something in their mouths every 60-90 minutes between meals, lest they wither and die on the vine.![]()
Their kids probably weigh 200 lb from all the sandwiches and muffins these women shove in them every two hours.
As a new parent the emphasis on snacks for everything shocked me. When my kids started soccer at age 3 I could not understand why we had to provide juice and snacks after matches - not practice, but matches which seemed to be shorter. It was such an important thing to parents, they would get pissed if the snacks weren't "good" enough. The fields were filled with trash from the kids snacks. If you walk around the fields at any public school you'll see it. The whole match start to finish was less than 2 hours. No kid was dying or so depleted to need this. It is insane.
I felt the same about gd goody bags filled with plastic crap for every event in school. Why do parents not question this idiocy and refuse?
What soccer league is this? My oldest is 8 and has done soccer in different leagues, etc since he was 3 and not once have we been asked to bring snacks.
I usually bring something for him if a game or practice is pushing up against a normal snack or meal time (my kids get an afternoon snack at a somewhat set time). If the game or practice is around a snack or meal time it is disingenuous to say "oh no kid is dying by not having a snack over the course of two hours." If he didn't eat for three or four hours before the game when he normally would then the fact that the game itself is two hours is not relevant
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
- Regarding the daughter watching TV on "your" bed -- Yes it would have been better if they'd asked first. But it's weird that you are this put out. It's not even your actual bed, it's a rental house. And it's a child, who was tired or needed a break. It's weird you are begrudging her that. You weren't using it.
It is actually my bed. I slept in that bed.
So if you are invited to someone’s house and feel tired you can sneak into host’s bedroom, make yourself comfortable on their bed and watch TV? Is this how you are raising your kids?
And where is this OK? What universe? In your trailer park?
Good hosts will notice when a young kid looks tired or cranky, and would offer them a place to get some quiet time and maybe a chance to nap.
A lot of people on this thread seem wholly incapable of hosting guests. Maybe you shouldn't invite people over, if hospitality is so alien to you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Well, we all know DCUM is in full support of the weird (mostly) Gen Y/Z obsession with their kids needing to cram something in their mouths every 60-90 minutes between meals, lest they wither and die on the vine.![]()
Their kids probably weigh 200 lb from all the sandwiches and muffins these women shove in them every two hours.
As a new parent the emphasis on snacks for everything shocked me. When my kids started soccer at age 3 I could not understand why we had to provide juice and snacks after matches - not practice, but matches which seemed to be shorter. It was such an important thing to parents, they would get pissed if the snacks weren't "good" enough. The fields were filled with trash from the kids snacks. If you walk around the fields at any public school you'll see it. The whole match start to finish was less than 2 hours. No kid was dying or so depleted to need this. It is insane.
I felt the same about gd goody bags filled with plastic crap for every event in school. Why do parents not question this idiocy and refuse?
You don't think kids (who are calorie furnaces by virtue of growing in the first place) would benefit from a snack after 2 hours of physical activity? wtf?