Anonymous wrote:When you’re the one who wants to talk to me!! It’s so entitled. There’s a dad in my child’s friend group who does this all the time. Maybe it’s just a verbal tic, but if YOU want to talk to me, then you should call me or ask when a good time is for you to call. Do not order me to call you.
Ex- planned outing with teen boys. Son asks friend if he’s free that day. Friend says my dad said your mom should call him with details. I’m sure in a day or so, he’ll email or text and say- can you call me to talk about this activity.
Same rules apply at work. Person who wants to talk doesn’t ask the other person to call / send calendar invite unless the initiator is higher up the food chain.
Anonymous wrote:I think the opposite. I would much rather talk to you on my own schedule. Don't cold call me! Ask me to call when I have a chance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know, I like the idea that if they ask me to call, I can control when I call instead of waiting around for them to call me. And once I call and leave a message I've done my part and I don't care if I miss their call back.
This works if they say something like "hey can you give me a call when you're free?" or "I wanted to talk about the dinner plans -- can you call when you have a chance?"
But what some people will do is say "please call me" or "can you call me please." It comes off like an order and also is so free of context that it makes me think something's wrong and that I need to drop what I'm doing to call them. My parents will do this and I'll worry that one of them is hurt or someone died or something horrible happened, and I'll rush to call them and they'll be like "we hadn't chatted in a while and I was wondering what you were thinking about for the 4th of July this year." It's sooooo annoying.
Anonymous wrote:Along teh same lines, I hate when people say “We should get together”. Ok, if you want to get together, ask me to do something, but don’t then put the onus on me to arrange something if you are suggesting we get together. I mean, how do you answer that? Yes! We should!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you’re the one who wants to talk to me!! It’s so entitled. There’s a dad in my child’s friend group who does this all the time. Maybe it’s just a verbal tic, but if YOU want to talk to me, then you should call me or ask when a good time is for you to call. Do not order me to call you.
Ex- planned outing with teen boys. Son asks friend if he’s free that day. Friend says my dad said your mom should call him with details. I’m sure in a day or so, he’ll email or text and say- can you call me to talk about this activity.
Same rules apply at work. Person who wants to talk doesn’t ask the other person to call / send calendar invite unless the initiator is higher up the food chain.
I don't think this is odd. Your son issued an invitation and the dad is asking for the invitation to come directly from "the source". Maybe he feels like calling and saying "Josh says Nathan invited him to X" feels too much like inviting his kid?
I agree with your work point, though.