Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know that your husband is United GS but don’t know that the flight doesn’t have first?
99% sure I am correct on that.
Calling troll on this one.
NP. They’re loving the pages of people going of on this.
I called it out on page 3 of this. OP was like oopsie! Definitely a troll.
My husband and I fly monthly internationally and we often use first and business interchangeably. Even though, I rarely fly first (always business). Some people just say it as an all encompassing statement for premium seating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know that your husband is United GS but don’t know that the flight doesn’t have first?
99% sure I am correct on that.
Calling troll on this one.
NP. They’re loving the pages of people going of on this.
I called it out on page 3 of this. OP was like oopsie! Definitely a troll.
Anonymous wrote:I already know what would happen in my family. We were upgraded but my mother was on a separate itinerary so she wasn't. My kids had a full on argument with my mother trying to convince her to take one of their first class seats. She kept refusing, they kept insisting. We finally worked out a compromise (with the help of a very nice purser who was amused by the boys) of letting the two boys rotate their seats and my mother acquiesced to taking one of the first class seats.
Anyway, I don't think your parents should demand it, but I'm a little surprised that your kids wouldn't want to give their grandparents the better seats.
Anonymous wrote:I already know what would happen in my family. We were upgraded but my mother was on a separate itinerary so she wasn't. My kids had a full on argument with my mother trying to convince her to take one of their first class seats. She kept refusing, they kept insisting. We finally worked out a compromise (with the help of a very nice purser who was amused by the boys) of letting the two boys rotate their seats and my mother acquiesced to taking one of the first class seats.
Anyway, I don't think your parents should demand it, but I'm a little surprised that your kids wouldn't want to give their grandparents the better seats.
Anonymous wrote:My issue here is that I suspect OPs parents are like mine. They waited too long and then all that was left was coach. I would pay for an upgrade or use miles for my parents but the never commit until almost all seats are gone. In that case, I don’t feel like I should be obligated to give up the better seats.
Anonymous wrote:Your wealthy husbands is asking your parents for $3,000 each? There is something so distasteful about this.
Between family members. It is not some business negotiation.
Sorry for you all. Values seem to have gotten lost along the way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whose parents are this kind of weak financially? As noted by the poster above, my parents killed it as equity and real estate investors riding their generational wave. They would be ashamed to put a hand out. They both know how well things broke for them and how much harder they are now.
What an ignorant comment.
Yep. SMH.