Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re joking but that’s exactly how we have hosted family many times. Not wanting to burn vacation days and thousands of dollars is fair. Banning grandma and grandpa from a living room air mattress is not.
Nope, this would never work for me. If we really don’t have space (and sun sit mattress in our family room is not the space), they can stay in a hotel. It’s my house, of course it’s ok to decide who sleeps there.
That's fine in a vacuum but it's part of a bigger negotiation about how often everyone will be traveling. If the goal is to travel infrequently (that's my goal) you only have so many negotiating chips.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you're making a problem where one doesn't exist.
Nothing has happened.
It's important to realize this. You are building-up your anxiety That will not help you cope/may decisions going forward.
Anonymous wrote:News Flash: Having to visit San Diego once a year is.... not a hardship. Don't go at Christmas, though - it can be pretty rainy. But having a free place to stay while you go to Sea World, the beach, the SD zoo/Safari Park, Legoland, and then a day trip to Disney if you want? Not too shabby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re joking but that’s exactly how we have hosted family many times. Not wanting to burn vacation days and thousands of dollars is fair. Banning grandma and grandpa from a living room air mattress is not.
Nope, this would never work for me. If we really don’t have space (and sun sit mattress in our family room is not the space), they can stay in a hotel. It’s my house, of course it’s ok to decide who sleeps there.
That's fine in a vacuum but it's part of a bigger negotiation about how often everyone will be traveling. If the goal is to travel infrequently (that's my goal) you only have so many negotiating chips.
It’s an odd way to look at it. You are allowed to say no that doesn’t work for me. I would much rather have shorter quality visits than cramming a bunch of people into a too small place. The kids don’t sleep well, everyone ends up crabby and resentful.
I can't imagine being crabby and resentful about having to be flexible about sleeping arrangements but I guess if you already know you and your family are easily made unpleasant by inconvenience you should act on that information. My family is made of pleasant and easygoing people, including the kids, so I have a different perspective.
Anonymous wrote:My family is California and we are here. Pre-Covid, we went out once a year, but they come here a few times a year. It is easier for them to fly and visit us than for us to take the kids out there (time away from school/activities/work plus jet lag, harder to do long flight when kids were younger). The one nice thing about San Diego, is there are a lot of things to do there and vacations you can take throughout California. So I would plan trips when you have more time and combine it with family time- go up to LA or Santa Barbara, or out to Arizona for example. Your kids are even a good age for a drive up the coast to San Francisco. So you could go out for 10 days one summer and spend half with ILs and then drive up North and fly out from LA or San Fran. Disneyland is also fun and much easier than Disneyworld. Or leave the kids for a couple nights with the ILs and you and DH go for a night or two away.
As for Holidays, you will have to see how that works out. You should pick the one time a year that works best for going to CA, and if it's Christmas fine, but if it's summer then you just need to tell them that and have them come to you for Christmas or alternate years. You will see them less frequently, but when you do see them it will be a lot all at once.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I can't imagine being crabby and resentful about having to be flexible about sleeping arrangements but I guess if you already know you and your family are easily made unpleasant by inconvenience you should act on that information. My family is made of pleasant and easygoing people, including the kids, so I have a different perspective.
So we see
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re joking but that’s exactly how we have hosted family many times. Not wanting to burn vacation days and thousands of dollars is fair. Banning grandma and grandpa from a living room air mattress is not.
Nope, this would never work for me. If we really don’t have space (and sun sit mattress in our family room is not the space), they can stay in a hotel. It’s my house, of course it’s ok to decide who sleeps there.
That's fine in a vacuum but it's part of a bigger negotiation about how often everyone will be traveling. If the goal is to travel infrequently (that's my goal) you only have so many negotiating chips.
It’s an odd way to look at it. You are allowed to say no that doesn’t work for me. I would much rather have shorter quality visits than cramming a bunch of people into a too small place. The kids don’t sleep well, everyone ends up crabby and resentful.
I can't imagine being crabby and resentful about having to be flexible about sleeping arrangements but I guess if you already know you and your family are easily made unpleasant by inconvenience you should act on that information. My family is made of pleasant and easygoing people, including the kids, so I have a different perspective.