Anonymous wrote:It’s too much to ask for your room to be unoccupied the time you aren’t there. I would just eat whatever they have around for breakfast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a reasonable compromise would be to tell your sibling:
“You paid to arrive at a clean house with clean sheets on your bed and a clean bathroom. I also paid to arrive to clean sheets on my bed and a clean bathroom. If that doesn’t happen when I arrive, you will be refunding me partially for the room if your kids are responsible for messing up my bedroom and bathroom. If they do sleep in there, they will wash the sheets. If they do use the bathroom, they will clean it. Just as you would accept a partial refund if your rooms and bathrooms were dirty on arrival, so will I.”
Whoo, is this how people really talk to their family? I agree they shouldn’t use the room, but this script would start WWIII in my family.
In MY family, a reasonable request to keep teenagers out of my family’s room would be respected and enforced.
But if my family acted like OP’s and did whatever, they would be either cleaning fully or compensating me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you driving to this location? If so, bring some bagels, at least for day 1. The teens will never clean up after themselves. That need to stay in the own room.
No, flying cross country, arriving late on Wednesday night. We will have a car, but no idea if we could even get out to
Shop until Friday… when it’s kind of a moot point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a reasonable compromise would be to tell your sibling:
“You paid to arrive at a clean house with clean sheets on your bed and a clean bathroom. I also paid to arrive to clean sheets on my bed and a clean bathroom. If that doesn’t happen when I arrive, you will be refunding me partially for the room if your kids are responsible for messing up my bedroom and bathroom. If they do sleep in there, they will wash the sheets. If they do use the bathroom, they will clean it. Just as you would accept a partial refund if your rooms and bathrooms were dirty on arrival, so will I.”
Whoo, is this how people really talk to their family? I agree they shouldn’t use the room, but this script would start WWIII in my family.
NP here. In my family, my siblings are insanely unreasonable and major takers so I would have to be very direct and specific with them using language like this otherwise they still convince themselves it’s ok. I don’t vacation with them anymore and I would never share a house with them because they’d be helping themselves to anything because “family”.
Anonymous wrote:NTA for either request.
1. Emphasize that you want a 100% clean room and bathroom. Don’t make it about money or refunds, but about your own comfort
2. If you are paying for all of Thanksgiving dinner it is reasonable to enjoy their order of breakfast food. Ask them to order enough for your family Thu-Sat
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a reasonable compromise would be to tell your sibling:
“You paid to arrive at a clean house with clean sheets on your bed and a clean bathroom. I also paid to arrive to clean sheets on my bed and a clean bathroom. If that doesn’t happen when I arrive, you will be refunding me partially for the room if your kids are responsible for messing up my bedroom and bathroom. If they do sleep in there, they will wash the sheets. If they do use the bathroom, they will clean it. Just as you would accept a partial refund if your rooms and bathrooms were dirty on arrival, so will I.”
Whoo, is this how people really talk to their family? I agree they shouldn’t use the room, but this script would start WWIII in my family.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
I can’t know I have the highest net worth, but I have the highest paying job by a long shot and make enough that avoiding drama by offering a per family split rather than per bedroom was not a real sacrifice for us.
As far as breakfast, here was thought process, understanding I’ve decided to let this one go. My kids (it’s me and two teens) generally do a carb (oatmeal, bagel, cereal) and some coffee for breakfast. I don’t expect there to be no food, but the
Other folks are big eggs, bacon, hefty breakfast people, and if I asked for what we really wanted - a can of Quaker Oats and a few bagels and cream cheese - it would also most certainly get used in the mix by Thursday morning. But I’m sure there will be something we can eat, so, again, letting this one go. (Unless bagels fit in my carry on)
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
I can’t know I have the highest net worth, but I have the highest paying job by a long shot and make enough that avoiding drama by offering a per family split rather than per bedroom was not a real sacrifice for us.
As far as breakfast, here was thought process, understanding I’ve decided to let this one go. My kids (it’s me and two teens) generally do a carb (oatmeal, bagel, cereal) and some coffee for breakfast. I don’t expect there to be no food, but the
Other folks are big eggs, bacon, hefty breakfast people, and if I asked for what we really wanted - a can of Quaker Oats and a few bagels and cream cheese - it would also most certainly get used in the mix by Thursday morning. But I’m sure there will be something we can eat, so, again, letting this one go. (Unless bagels fit in my carry on)
Anonymous wrote:Are you driving to this location? If so, bring some bagels, at least for day 1. The teens will never clean up after themselves. That need to stay in the own room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a reasonable compromise would be to tell your sibling:
“You paid to arrive at a clean house with clean sheets on your bed and a clean bathroom. I also paid to arrive to clean sheets on my bed and a clean bathroom. If that doesn’t happen when I arrive, you will be refunding me partially for the room if your kids are responsible for messing up my bedroom and bathroom. If they do sleep in there, they will wash the sheets. If they do use the bathroom, they will clean it. Just as you would accept a partial refund if your rooms and bathrooms were dirty on arrival, so will I.”
Whoo, is this how people really talk to their family? I agree they shouldn’t use the room, but this script would start WWIII in my family.