Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what my parents do - say they are dying to go on a family vacation and then pick something that interests them and is often inconvenient for others, then expect us to pay (although they certainly have the money to treat us all).
In your situation, I told my parents we would love to join but are already planning a trip to London to visit friends (which was true) so unfortunately it’s not in our budget for next year. That gave them a clear opportunity to offer to pay, but they didn’t so we didn’t go.
You should try the same. Just tell them you’ve already planned/committed to something else and give them the hint.
Are you not embarassed to accept money from your parents or inlaws now that you are an adult? I would be. In my culture we pay for our parents and inlaws once they get older, even if we are not as wealthy as them. Just a sign of respect for our parents they have done for us.
I'm with you on this one. At some point you have to grow up, pay your own way and have some dignity. I'm about as American as it gets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what my parents do - say they are dying to go on a family vacation and then pick something that interests them and is often inconvenient for others, then expect us to pay (although they certainly have the money to treat us all).
In your situation, I told my parents we would love to join but are already planning a trip to London to visit friends (which was true) so unfortunately it’s not in our budget for next year. That gave them a clear opportunity to offer to pay, but they didn’t so we didn’t go.
You should try the same. Just tell them you’ve already planned/committed to something else and give them the hint.
Are you not embarassed to accept money from your parents or inlaws now that you are an adult? I would be. In my culture we pay for our parents and inlaws once they get older, even if we are not as wealthy as them. Just a sign of respect for our parents they have done for us.
Oh, so in your culture you also disclaim any inheritance, because you don't take money from your parents as an adult?
No?
Then pipe down. It all ends up as a wash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what my parents do - say they are dying to go on a family vacation and then pick something that interests them and is often inconvenient for others, then expect us to pay (although they certainly have the money to treat us all).
In your situation, I told my parents we would love to join but are already planning a trip to London to visit friends (which was true) so unfortunately it’s not in our budget for next year. That gave them a clear opportunity to offer to pay, but they didn’t so we didn’t go.
You should try the same. Just tell them you’ve already planned/committed to something else and give them the hint.
Are you not embarassed to accept money from your parents or inlaws now that you are an adult? I would be. In my culture we pay for our parents and inlaws once they get older, even if we are not as wealthy as them. Just a sign of respect for our parents they have done for us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As for letting parents pay... my dad earns roughly ten times what we do every year. He can pay for all sorts of things we can't, and he likes spending time with us on his terms. I don't know why it bothers some of you so much to let a parent pay.
We were taken to Europe, but at a place we didn't like, on the kind of trip we don't enjoy, and completely out of budget. He was happy because we joined him. We were happy because we made him happy and could still afford braces. What could possibly be the problem here?
OP, would you be willing to pay for a trip that fit you all better? Or is there no trip that works for everyone's budget? I wouldn't pay for a Disney cruise, either.
I'm a mom of adults. Sounds like many posters work plus have kids yet parents/IL's act like all are retired with nothing else to do. And are dictating how to spend their adult children's disposable income plus allocate scarce vacation time. One of my DC's has pressure for lengthy vacation etc plus frequent dinners. Intrusive. I would offer a 4 day weekend full payment for them as parents of tots including airfare, hotel, etc to a nice Disneyworld resort. Beachclub. Us in our own room and no-nag/tag a long days. This spring paid for a vacation of one DC+partner choice and never thought once about us going also. Different category than seeing cute little grandchildren at Disney, beach, Williamsburg, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As for letting parents pay... my dad earns roughly ten times what we do every year. He can pay for all sorts of things we can't, and he likes spending time with us on his terms. I don't know why it bothers some of you so much to let a parent pay.
We were taken to Europe, but at a place we didn't like, on the kind of trip we don't enjoy, and completely out of budget. He was happy because we joined him. We were happy because we made him happy and could still afford braces. What could possibly be the problem here?
OP, would you be willing to pay for a trip that fit you all better? Or is there no trip that works for everyone's budget? I wouldn't pay for a Disney cruise, either.
Its asking someone else to pay that is a problem, especially for something you neither need nor really want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what my parents do - say they are dying to go on a family vacation and then pick something that interests them and is often inconvenient for others, then expect us to pay (although they certainly have the money to treat us all).
In your situation, I told my parents we would love to join but are already planning a trip to London to visit friends (which was true) so unfortunately it’s not in our budget for next year. That gave them a clear opportunity to offer to pay, but they didn’t so we didn’t go.
You should try the same. Just tell them you’ve already planned/committed to something else and give them the hint.
Are you not embarassed to accept money from your parents or inlaws now that you are an adult? I would be. In my culture we pay for our parents and inlaws once they get older, even if we are not as wealthy as them. Just a sign of respect for our parents they have done for us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what my parents do - say they are dying to go on a family vacation and then pick something that interests them and is often inconvenient for others, then expect us to pay (although they certainly have the money to treat us all).
In your situation, I told my parents we would love to join but are already planning a trip to London to visit friends (which was true) so unfortunately it’s not in our budget for next year. That gave them a clear opportunity to offer to pay, but they didn’t so we didn’t go.
You should try the same. Just tell them you’ve already planned/committed to something else and give them the hint.
Are you not embarassed to accept money from your parents or inlaws now that you are an adult? I would be. In my culture we pay for our parents and inlaws once they get older, even if we are not as wealthy as them. Just a sign of respect for our parents they have done for us.
Oh, so in your culture you also disclaim any inheritance, because you don't take money from your parents as an adult?
No?
Then pipe down. It all ends up as a wash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what my parents do - say they are dying to go on a family vacation and then pick something that interests them and is often inconvenient for others, then expect us to pay (although they certainly have the money to treat us all).
In your situation, I told my parents we would love to join but are already planning a trip to London to visit friends (which was true) so unfortunately it’s not in our budget for next year. That gave them a clear opportunity to offer to pay, but they didn’t so we didn’t go.
You should try the same. Just tell them you’ve already planned/committed to something else and give them the hint.
Are you not embarassed to accept money from your parents or inlaws now that you are an adult? I would be. In my culture we pay for our parents and inlaws once they get older, even if we are not as wealthy as them. Just a sign of respect for our parents they have done for us.
Anonymous wrote:This is what my parents do - say they are dying to go on a family vacation and then pick something that interests them and is often inconvenient for others, then expect us to pay (although they certainly have the money to treat us all).
In your situation, I told my parents we would love to join but are already planning a trip to London to visit friends (which was true) so unfortunately it’s not in our budget for next year. That gave them a clear opportunity to offer to pay, but they didn’t so we didn’t go.
You should try the same. Just tell them you’ve already planned/committed to something else and give them the hint.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with “It’s not in the budget.”
That gives them an in and you an out.
Anonymous wrote:Just say you already have plans. If my in-laws wanted to pay I would still say no to a cruise.