Anonymous wrote:Maybe its a generational thing. My parents always did this when I was growing up. Now it doesn't really feel like a normal thing to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No.
DH likes to do this though including showing them inside closets. We grew up in NYC where there really wasn’t such a thing as a walk in closet so they do feel like a luxury but no one needs to see them, with my laundry basket and likely clothes crumpled on the floor etc!
NP and I’m still very excited to show people my washer and dryer! It’s the first stop on my house tour. You know you’ve found new friends from big cities when they oooh and ahh over full-size laundry machines inside a house.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. I get the southern thing that a PP mentioned b/c my mom was a debutante from South Carolina, but my MIL has always been the more informal and casual of the two so the pushiness was bothersome. I will survive, but I wish she would have done a better job picking up on my discomfort.
Anonymous wrote:I point out where they'll be sleeping (assuming overnight guests), where the bathrooms are (one on the main level, one in the basement), and where to find things in the kitchen. By then, we've basically seen the whole house except the bedrooms, which I leave closed off.
Just stopping by for a couple hours? No, no tour. I might say something like "let's go sit in the living room", and by the time we get there, they've seen the whole main level.
But I do remember being tasked as a young kid to give tours of our house to guests, so I think it is something that was common in prior generations.
Anonymous wrote:No.
DH likes to do this though including showing them inside closets. We grew up in NYC where there really wasn’t such a thing as a walk in closet so they do feel like a luxury but no one needs to see them, with my laundry basket and likely clothes crumpled on the floor etc!
Anonymous wrote:Who is curious about a house their relatives live in so much they ned a tour. This is very MC.
Anonymous wrote:My brother’s new girlfriend is an interior designer. They stayed with us over Xmas in our basement flat. She asked several times to see our upstairs/second floor not main (bedrooms and bathrooms in a row house) so she could offer advice on our upcoming remodel. Since the upstairs was filled with all the downstairs clutter for holiday hosting, and she was complaining about clients who buy “Home Depot” kitchens in our Home Depot kitchen, we declined her offer and the tour.