Anonymous wrote:If you say yes, you better be warm and welcoming not cold and judgmental as your post indicates you are. You only have one chance to make an impression on her. If this does go the distance, and she marries him, she will remember how you treated her. Trust me.
If you can’t hack that kind of welcoming environment just say no. Make up any reason you want for your son. Too soon. Not comfortable with it. Whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Define the "some things we know about her that suggest they may not be compatible" if you really want honest advice.
Anonymous wrote:He/Him, She/Her, Them/They or It/It?
Why are you switching genders?
Anonymous wrote:I’d invite her for just one night at beginning or end of break. Reasons include “protecting” and important break for sibling. They are not married or engaged so there is no reason to fling open the doors and disregard the rest of family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:my rising college senior has a new GF we haven't met. She lives near his oos campus so he's spent lots of time with his family and DS is there this summer. They've been dating less than 6 months and he wants to bring her home for Fall Break. My instinct says we need to embrace this as he seems in love with this young woman. There are some things we know about her that suggest they may not be compatible, but we haven't met her so I'm open-minded, and what I think doesn't really matter as I want DS to be happy and loved. I suspect by DH will hate this idea.
So what are the reasons we should get on board. Help me build out the rationale underpinning my instinct that says we need to suck it up and share our time with this person even if we might prefer not to. The only real "reason" I have to object is that younger sibling will be a first year, so this break will be their first college break home, and having an extra house guest probably isn't ideal for them.
I'm confused by your pronouns. Do you have a daughter who is a Lesbian? Or a son who is bringing home his girlfriend? Title and what you wrote are different.
Tell your college kid you would be happy to see the girlfriend. Have a low key barbeque or dinner at your house. Make it no big deal. Your second kid will be fine. How long would she stay and where would she sleep? If you are uncomfortable them sleeping together just let them know now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be thankful that your kid found someone and wants you to meet them. Finding a life partner is a better determinator of future health and happiness than career success or almost anything else. Do you wanna be the parent who is difficult when this was on the table and then 10 years from now your kid is still single with no sign of anyone new on the horizon and resenting you for it? Put aside your nostalgia over having your kids all to yourself - be joyful for them that they are actually exploring this key milestone in their lives.
This^. Read relationship and family forums to learn what not to do.
Anonymous wrote:Define the "some things we know about her that suggest they may not be compatible" if you really want honest advice.