Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did the OP ever come back to say who is paying for the cruise? Are the parents paying their own way there or are OP and spouse paying for everyone?
She has said this several times. Read the thread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sixteen and fourteen year olds are fine in coach.
I'd definitely put my parents in first class so they are more comfortable.
This.
How is this even a question?
Grandparents take priority. Although I think they should have offered your kids more money. Like $250 each for spending money on the trip.
OP here. Round-trip business class tix IAD-ATH in August are about $7K, but coach was more like $1500. So my parents went with the cheaper and more affordable option even though they probably wanted business class. Now they want to switch. They assume our business class tix are basically free due to DH’s business travel and status. They could have bought business class tix, but chose not to do so.
Well, the tix are essentially free...so they are not wrong there.
We are going to Europe next month and paying about $7k in our own money for each ticket (jobs without travel).
Points/miles person here. The bolded is often said about using points/miles, but its incorrect. United miles don't expire, and they can be stored and instead used for future travel. So there is a significant opportunity cost involved in using them- OP said not long ago that it would be over 700k miles to fly the grandparents roundtrip in business- that's worth at a minimum $7000 in future travel for their family. While there may not have been a direct cash cost to get the miles, they are a valuable asset and thus there is cost involved in using them. And should also note that the type of travel OP's DH does to earn this many miles is not easy when you do it over and over and is essentially unpaid labor. There is absolutely a cost associated with earning them.
I cannot make it through all 26 pages. Did OP say why they did not use miles just the upgrade portion? Many people buy the coach ticket and then use miles to upgrade.
Yes. That type of upgrade is usually oversubscribed and subject to a wait-list which the grandparents would not clear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unbelievable how the family dynamic is so selfish all around. I would definitely make my teenagers sit in coach and give my parents the upgraded seats. In fact it would give me so much joy to give up my seat to have my parents sit in comfort. Wait till you are your parents age. Your kids won’t be giving you any business class seats. SMH
I won't expect my kids to pay for my plane tickets. And I won't try to take seats from my grandkids. I'm an adult, and adults pay for their own plane tickets.
This is White people thinking. Just unbelievably self-focused.
It's self-focused to not expect my kids to pay for my airline tickets someday? Sure, if they wanted to and can afford to do so, I wouldn't object. But, it's incredibly self-focused to expect your kids to spend money on you.
Resources should flow downwards.
No. Resources should flow from well-off to less well-off.
I just cannot put "resource" this category. It's a luxury item, not deciding how you are going to pay for college.
It's a type of currency, so it's certainly a resource. Resources that DH acquired through his hard work. I'm guessing that the reason DH works hard is to provide for his kids, not his in-laws. They should benefit from Dad's efforts, and travel in luxury with him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sixteen and fourteen year olds are fine in coach.
I'd definitely put my parents in first class so they are more comfortable.
This.
How is this even a question?
Grandparents take priority. Although I think they should have offered your kids more money. Like $250 each for spending money on the trip.
OP here. Round-trip business class tix IAD-ATH in August are about $7K, but coach was more like $1500. So my parents went with the cheaper and more affordable option even though they probably wanted business class. Now they want to switch. They assume our business class tix are basically free due to DH’s business travel and status. They could have bought business class tix, but chose not to do so.
Well, the tix are essentially free...so they are not wrong there.
We are going to Europe next month and paying about $7k in our own money for each ticket (jobs without travel).
Points/miles person here. The bolded is often said about using points/miles, but its incorrect. United miles don't expire, and they can be stored and instead used for future travel. So there is a significant opportunity cost involved in using them- OP said not long ago that it would be over 700k miles to fly the grandparents roundtrip in business- that's worth at a minimum $7000 in future travel for their family. While there may not have been a direct cash cost to get the miles, they are a valuable asset and thus there is cost involved in using them. And should also note that the type of travel OP's DH does to earn this many miles is not easy when you do it over and over and is essentially unpaid labor. There is absolutely a cost associated with earning them.
I cannot make it through all 26 pages. Did OP say why they did not use miles just the upgrade portion? Many people buy the coach ticket and then use miles to upgrade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine sitting up in first with my teenagers while my parents flew coach.
If your husband is Global Services, kind of surprised he can't swing two upgrades for them as well.
OP said earlier they didn't have enough Plus Points left. Which makes sense especially if they used a bunch of PPs previously to upgrade some of the nuclear family.
Someone on Global Services doesn't have points after 4 tickets? So many of these details just don't add up. I think OP is a troll. She got us to 27 pages, so a good one.
Anonymous wrote:Your parents are selfish entitled jerks. Normally I'd offer to trade the seats, but the way they're going about it makes me never want to vacation with them again.
Honestly I'd call their bluff and say so be it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unbelievable how the family dynamic is so selfish all around. I would definitely make my teenagers sit in coach and give my parents the upgraded seats. In fact it would give me so much joy to give up my seat to have my parents sit in comfort. Wait till you are your parents age. Your kids won’t be giving you any business class seats. SMH
I won't expect my kids to pay for my plane tickets. And I won't try to take seats from my grandkids. I'm an adult, and adults pay for their own plane tickets.
This is White people thinking. Just unbelievably self-focused.
It's self-focused to not expect my kids to pay for my airline tickets someday? Sure, if they wanted to and can afford to do so, I wouldn't object. But, it's incredibly self-focused to expect your kids to spend money on you.
Resources should flow downwards.
No. Resources should flow from well-off to less well-off.
I just cannot put "resource" this category. It's a luxury item, not deciding how you are going to pay for college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unbelievable how the family dynamic is so selfish all around. I would definitely make my teenagers sit in coach and give my parents the upgraded seats. In fact it would give me so much joy to give up my seat to have my parents sit in comfort. Wait till you are your parents age. Your kids won’t be giving you any business class seats. SMH
I won't expect my kids to pay for my plane tickets. And I won't try to take seats from my grandkids. I'm an adult, and adults pay for their own plane tickets.
This is White people thinking. Just unbelievably self-focused.
It's self-focused to not expect my kids to pay for my airline tickets someday? Sure, if they wanted to and can afford to do so, I wouldn't object. But, it's incredibly self-focused to expect your kids to spend money on you.
Resources should flow downwards.
No. Resources should flow from well-off to less well-off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine sitting up in first with my teenagers while my parents flew coach.
If your husband is Global Services, kind of surprised he can't swing two upgrades for them as well.
OP said earlier they didn't have enough Plus Points left. Which makes sense especially if they used a bunch of PPs previously to upgrade some of the nuclear family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sixteen and fourteen year olds are fine in coach.
I'd definitely put my parents in first class so they are more comfortable.
This.
How is this even a question?
Grandparents take priority. Although I think they should have offered your kids more money. Like $250 each for spending money on the trip.
OP here. Round-trip business class tix IAD-ATH in August are about $7K, but coach was more like $1500. So my parents went with the cheaper and more affordable option even though they probably wanted business class. Now they want to switch. They assume our business class tix are basically free due to DH’s business travel and status. They could have bought business class tix, but chose not to do so.
Well, the tix are essentially free...so they are not wrong there.
We are going to Europe next month and paying about $7k in our own money for each ticket (jobs without travel).
Points/miles person here. The bolded is often said about using points/miles, but its incorrect. United miles don't expire, and they can be stored and instead used for future travel. So there is a significant opportunity cost involved in using them- OP said not long ago that it would be over 700k miles to fly the grandparents roundtrip in business- that's worth at a minimum $7000 in future travel for their family. While there may not have been a direct cash cost to get the miles, they are a valuable asset and thus there is cost involved in using them. And should also note that the type of travel OP's DH does to earn this many miles is not easy when you do it over and over and is essentially unpaid labor. There is absolutely a cost associated with earning them.
Thank you! And honestly as someone whose spouse travels a lot for work, those miles are hard earned. I really hate when people assume it’s free.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unbelievable how the family dynamic is so selfish all around. I would definitely make my teenagers sit in coach and give my parents the upgraded seats. In fact it would give me so much joy to give up my seat to have my parents sit in comfort. Wait till you are your parents age. Your kids won’t be giving you any business class seats. SMH
I won't expect my kids to pay for my plane tickets. And I won't try to take seats from my grandkids. I'm an adult, and adults pay for their own plane tickets.
This is White people thinking. Just unbelievably self-focused.
It's self-focused to not expect my kids to pay for my airline tickets someday? Sure, if they wanted to and can afford to do so, I wouldn't object. But, it's incredibly self-focused to expect your kids to spend money on you.
Resources should flow downwards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sixteen and fourteen year olds are fine in coach.
I'd definitely put my parents in first class so they are more comfortable.
This.
How is this even a question?
Grandparents take priority. Although I think they should have offered your kids more money. Like $250 each for spending money on the trip.
OP here. Round-trip business class tix IAD-ATH in August are about $7K, but coach was more like $1500. So my parents went with the cheaper and more affordable option even though they probably wanted business class. Now they want to switch. They assume our business class tix are basically free due to DH’s business travel and status. They could have bought business class tix, but chose not to do so.
Well, the tix are essentially free...so they are not wrong there.
We are going to Europe next month and paying about $7k in our own money for each ticket (jobs without travel).
Points/miles person here. The bolded is often said about using points/miles, but its incorrect. United miles don't expire, and they can be stored and instead used for future travel. So there is a significant opportunity cost involved in using them- OP said not long ago that it would be over 700k miles to fly the grandparents roundtrip in business- that's worth at a minimum $7000 in future travel for their family. While there may not have been a direct cash cost to get the miles, they are a valuable asset and thus there is cost involved in using them. And should also note that the type of travel OP's DH does to earn this many miles is not easy when you do it over and over and is essentially unpaid labor. There is absolutely a cost associated with earning them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sixteen and fourteen year olds are fine in coach.
I'd definitely put my parents in first class so they are more comfortable.
This.
How is this even a question?
Grandparents take priority. Although I think they should have offered your kids more money. Like $250 each for spending money on the trip.
OP here. Round-trip business class tix IAD-ATH in August are about $7K, but coach was more like $1500. So my parents went with the cheaper and more affordable option even though they probably wanted business class. Now they want to switch. They assume our business class tix are basically free due to DH’s business travel and status. They could have bought business class tix, but chose not to do so.
Well, the tix are essentially free...so they are not wrong there.
We are going to Europe next month and paying about $7k in our own money for each ticket (jobs without travel).
Points/miles person here. The bolded is often said about using points/miles, but its incorrect. United miles don't expire, and they can be stored and instead used for future travel. So there is a significant opportunity cost involved in using them- OP said not long ago that it would be over 700k miles to fly the grandparents roundtrip in business- that's worth at a minimum $7000 in future travel for their family. While there may not have been a direct cash cost to get the miles, they are a valuable asset and thus there is cost involved in using them. And should also note that the type of travel OP's DH does to earn this many miles is not easy when you do it over and over and is essentially unpaid labor. There is absolutely a cost associated with earning them.