Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've traveled long distances to visit an older brother at least four times and they will usually leave grocery receipts on the table as a major hint. We write a check to cover it. One year we flew cross country for xmas and when we asked if they needed any basics back at the house, they proceeded to list off the entire xmas dinner list, including the main (prime rib). for sure, we always expected to replace what we eat, but that was odd. now, I just expect to spend at least $100 on replacing groceries for a 3-5 day visit. FWIW, they pulled this on our mom, so it's not a sibling thing. In her case, it included sundries that went beyond what she consumed, and she was shocked but paid.
I haven't hosted them so don't know what they would expect should they come to me. Incomes are comparable, with them majorly in the lead.
I have no idea what is normal anymore.
Your family is not normal. You know that, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my culture, parents should never pay for anything, regardless of who is visiting. I think it's very odd and rude that you expect them to treat you while you visit them.
Right, I'd rather make my DC-based son, wife and young kids pay for us for everything when we houseguest with them.
They can inherit our money later, for now, they pay! They live here in America and DC, where everyone is rich and the streets are paved with gold.
Why would parents NOT pay? Our parents have higher salaries, no daycare, no student loans and their houses are paid off. They're just sitting on piles of cash and are working for fun.
-signed someone who goes dutch with parents because my parents order up the bill more than my family can afford.
Anonymous wrote:I've traveled long distances to visit an older brother at least four times and they will usually leave grocery receipts on the table as a major hint. We write a check to cover it. One year we flew cross country for xmas and when we asked if they needed any basics back at the house, they proceeded to list off the entire xmas dinner list, including the main (prime rib). for sure, we always expected to replace what we eat, but that was odd. now, I just expect to spend at least $100 on replacing groceries for a 3-5 day visit. FWIW, they pulled this on our mom, so it's not a sibling thing. In her case, it included sundries that went beyond what she consumed, and she was shocked but paid.
I haven't hosted them so don't know what they would expect should they come to me. Incomes are comparable, with them majorly in the lead.
I have no idea what is normal anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my culture, parents should never pay for anything, regardless of who is visiting. I think it's very odd and rude that you expect them to treat you while you visit them.
Right, I'd rather make my DC-based son, wife and young kids pay for us for everything when we houseguest with them.
They can inherit our money later, for now, they pay! They live here in America and DC, where everyone is rich and the streets are paved with gold.
Anonymous wrote:In my culture, parents should never pay for anything, regardless of who is visiting. I think it's very odd and rude that you expect them to treat you while you visit them.
Anonymous wrote:Growing up my family always had the philosophy that if someone travels to visit us, we pay for them if we go places. My parents explained it that we're the hosts and the visitors were our guests so we should pay. Also they had spent money on flying or driving to see us already so they didn't need to spend more on doing things. Obviously if someone wanted to take us to dinner or something to say thank you for hosting, we were fine with that but on the whole our philosophy was "put your wallet away while you're here." DH and I feel the same way and try to treat relatives when they come to visit. His family definitely doesn't do the same though and when we visit them they never offer to pay even though they're both in high earning jobs. I'm not ever going to make a big deal of it because it's not worth causing strife over a dinner bill, but I just wonder how common this is. For example, last time we visited they took us somewhere where they have a membership. We had to pay the full rate for our family to get in and they never offered to even chip in. Even if we go get a coffee, they wouldn't offer to buy it, the expectation is we'd have two separate orders. Is this common? Notplanning to do anything with the info other than know - like I said, not worth rocking the boat over some meals and activities. It just seems odd.