Anonymous wrote:If you don’t want to create any big waves (and you probably don’t…) I’d just send out an email to all about 4-6 weeks out with kind of a timeline/itinerary of sorts like:
Wed night: pizza at our house
Thursday: Thanksgiving at our house, of course!
Friday: my kitchen is closed (haha), let’s plan to do the xyz museum(s) for all who want to join in, and then all go out for dinner (Larla and Steve- can you make a reservation somewhere please? your choice)
Saturday: big breakfast at our house (we will order in from a great bagel place) and then plan to head to xyz for the afternoon-hope all can join? Dinner out! (Larlo and Suzy can you get a headcount & make a reservation somewhere please? Anything is good!)
Sunday: blah blah and so forth
Maybe to just add some structure and expectations. I think that would help a ton here. Particularly if finances are not an issue for people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stock up on food they can help themselves too, ie pastries for breakfast, sandwich fixings for lunch, etc.
Order delivery/pizza for dinner, get the men to grill- keep it simple.
Do “the men” flip the burgers with their dicks or something? In my family, men and women can grill, or bake, or whatever is helpful.
This is what I was thinking,😂😂😂Anonymous wrote:
I would never have allowed this in the first place. And there is no playing around in my kitchen on holidays when I need to cook a large meal. How on earth are you chill about this? You have nerves of steel, or you are in denial of your own suffering![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have never hosted this many people, but people say just have stuff on hand. Do you just buy three dozen bagels on Wednesday a bunch of gallons of milk, 50 yogurts, 10lbs of chicken plus food for thanksgiving? Where do you store all of this food?
I'm guessing there is a bubble of rich people with extra large houses. Our house is just big enough for the 4 of us and the fridge and kitchen are tiny. We can't do that sort of thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stock up on food they can help themselves too, ie pastries for breakfast, sandwich fixings for lunch, etc.
Order delivery/pizza for dinner, get the men to grill- keep it simple.
Do “the men” flip the burgers with their dicks or something? In my family, men and women can grill, or bake, or whatever is helpful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have never hosted this many people, but people say just have stuff on hand. Do you just buy three dozen bagels on Wednesday a bunch of gallons of milk, 50 yogurts, 10lbs of chicken plus food for thanksgiving? Where do you store all of this food?
I'm guessing there is a bubble of rich people with extra large houses. Our house is just big enough for the 4 of us and the fridge and kitchen are tiny. We can't do that sort of thing.
Anonymous wrote:It seems that the baton for hosting Thanksgiving has been passed to me and I need to figure out how to make the long weekend a bit less stressful. Last year, DH and I hosted 15 family members (19 including us + our kids) - his parents, his aunt and uncle, my parents, my sister, BIL and their 3 kids and my brother, SIL and their 2 kids.
While I really enjoyed having a big family thanksgiving dinner, the problem is that everyone lives a plane ride away so it was multiple days of hosting a massive group and entertaining them. Some stayed with us and others stayed in hotels. We tried to give everyone suggestions for things to do but they all just congregated at our house for 4.5 days and it was completely overwhelming to be responsible for figuring out meals and activities for everyone around the clock. Everyone was happy to contribute financially so that wasn’t an issue, but they all just wanted to hang out at our house and didn’t want to do separate activities yet couldn’t agree on group activities - so we literally did not leave the house expect for one dinner out. I was so frustrated on Thanksgiving day when I was trying to prepare a huge meal for everyone and our families had just taken over the house and messed up the kitchen making lunch for everyone, having snacks and not being helpful. Actually, my sister and SIL did try to help and broke a bowl and burned something which was annoying.
I am happy to host the dinner again this year but how do I get people to not move into our house for the whole time and also not expect that our group of 19 people has to do everything together or we do nothing at all? It would be great if they just came for 1-2 days but they all fly in Wednesday and don’t leave until Sunday/Monday and it’s just too much.
Anonymous wrote:I would plan a field trip every day
1. To the Hirschorn
2. American History Museum
3. To see a movie
4. Bowling
And combine each with a meal out for lunch.
For breakfast - bagels and cream cheese one day, eggs and bacon one day, cereal and fruit one day, doughnuts one day. Coffee and juice. Done. If someone wants something else, they can handle it themselves.
For dinner - pizza one night, Chinese one night, make dinner one night, thanksgiving