Anonymous wrote:U14? This tournament is not important at that age. By u15 or u16 u 17, no one will know or care or ever think about that tournament. The christening is more important.
Anonymous wrote:U14? This tournament is not important at that age. By u15 or u16 u 17, no one will know or care or ever think about that tournament. The christening is more important.
Anonymous wrote:I think this is really insulting to your church/priest. It’s very clear you’re just doing this as a party and photo op if your husband isn’t even observant enough to attend his own son’s christening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here to clarify.
Subject line should say son. I also have a daughter but she is going to baptism. Baptism was scheduled months ago so my parents can purchase flights. Plus, baptisms are a big deal in my culture and it is traditional to host a luncheon afterwards so we had to book restaurant and send invitations. This was all scheduled well before we knew about tournament.
Son is 15. Husband is of the same faith as me and his entire family will be there.
You had to have known the tournament was a possibility and that there was a chance your husband and son would not be available. You played the odds and lost. I get the logistics - I have a kid in travel sports and I had baptisms for all of my kids. But you prioritized your baby and parents over your son and husband and now are upset that they called you on it. And clearly when you realized there was a conflict instead of looking into the possibility of changing the dates, you dug in your heels decided to continue prioritizing baby and parents.
I would be upset to miss my baby’s baptism. But I’m not so sure I’d make a different choice. Either way I’m going to have to pick which kid to support.
And even a few weeks out you can still change it. Your parents can change their arrangements and you can move the date.
OP here. The son we are baptizing is also my husband's son and just as important. He was involved with choosing the date. The fact that you are making this all about me is just plain weird.
Also, all kids are biological kids.
No way to change the date this late in the game. Read my earlier comment. Church reserved and booked solid. Restaurant reserved. Guests are attending. Flights booked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here to clarify.
Subject line should say son. I also have a daughter but she is going to baptism. Baptism was scheduled months ago so my parents can purchase flights. Plus, baptisms are a big deal in my culture and it is traditional to host a luncheon afterwards so we had to book restaurant and send invitations. This was all scheduled well before we knew about tournament.
Son is 15. Husband is of the same faith as me and his entire family will be there.
You had to have known the tournament was a possibility and that there was a chance your husband and son would not be available. You played the odds and lost. I get the logistics - I have a kid in travel sports and I had baptisms for all of my kids. But you prioritized your baby and parents over your son and husband and now are upset that they called you on it. And clearly when you realized there was a conflict instead of looking into the possibility of changing the dates, you dug in your heels decided to continue prioritizing baby and parents.
I would be upset to miss my baby’s baptism. But I’m not so sure I’d make a different choice. Either way I’m going to have to pick which kid to support.
And even a few weeks out you can still change it. Your parents can change their arrangements and you can move the date.
OP here. The son we are baptizing is also my husband's son and just as important. He was involved with choosing the date. The fact that you are making this all about me is just plain weird.
Also, all kids are biological kids.
No way to change the date this late in the game. Read my earlier comment. Church reserved and booked solid. Restaurant reserved. Guests are attending. Flights booked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can your 15 year old go to the tournament with another family?
This has been suggested but husband not agreeing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here to clarify.
Subject line should say son. I also have a daughter but she is going to baptism. Baptism was scheduled months ago so my parents can purchase flights. Plus, baptisms are a big deal in my culture and it is traditional to host a luncheon afterwards so we had to book restaurant and send invitations. This was all scheduled well before we knew about tournament.
Son is 15. Husband is of the same faith as me and his entire family will be there.
You had to have known the tournament was a possibility and that there was a chance your husband and son would not be available. You played the odds and lost. I get the logistics - I have a kid in travel sports and I had baptisms for all of my kids. But you prioritized your baby and parents over your son and husband and now are upset that they called you on it. And clearly when you realized there was a conflict instead of looking into the possibility of changing the dates, you dug in your heels decided to continue prioritizing baby and parents.
I would be upset to miss my baby’s baptism. But I’m not so sure I’d make a different choice. Either way I’m going to have to pick which kid to support.
And even a few weeks out you can still change it. Your parents can change their arrangements and you can move the date.
This is so weird.
You're not picking which kid to support. It's not like each member of the family is an autonomous being. It's the family unit, which includes every member of the family, that needs to sometimes be prioritized.
I know you'll disagree but you're the odd one out and there is a reason for that.
I agree that a family is a unit. But why then would you schedule a date optional family event for a date when there is a likelihood that significant members of the unit might not be available. I never said what I’d do - except that I’d schedule better. But i do think there’s a problem when you ignore 40% of your family’s priorities when scheduling and then choosing outsiders (yes they’re grandparents, but not part of the family unit) needs and desires over your husband’s and son’s when deciding not to reschedule.
Anonymous wrote:Can your 15 year old go to the tournament with another family?
Anonymous wrote:Did your husband not want this newest baby, OP?