Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take this as a lesson in being more direct.
If you wanted one of them to host, ask "does someone else want to host?"
How old are the grandkids? If they are in school or day care, so much of vacationing and travel revolves around that calendar. It's hard and expensive. Maybe they're seizing an opportunity to take a trip for less money or stress. As for the other family spending it with your DIL's family, you can't fault them for that really.
Or she can offer to babysit while parents take a short trip right before or after TG.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don't want to host, you get to control that. You don't get to control deciding someone else will host.
If you want to get together, then suggest that everyone meet up a week after their Thanksgiving plans to catch up at a restaurant.
+1 if my mom or MIL don’t host the holidays (esp Thanksgiving because it involves a lot of cooking), then we won’t be spending it with them! No way I’m hosting it at my home. I am busy enough already.
So OP is right it is pay to play?
In many cases yes. Most young working parents who get maybe 2-3 weeks leave/year (half of which is eaten up by kids being sick, school closures etc) don’t want to use up their precious remaining leave cleaning and cooking to host grandparents for a holiday meal and can’t afford to cater or take everyone out to a restaurant.
Some people just can't be pleased. They don't want to host or be hosted.
Correction: they don’t want to host you, and they don’t want to be hosted by you.
Generally it's polite to reciprocate hosting. But manners are rare here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don't want to host, you get to control that. You don't get to control deciding someone else will host.
If you want to get together, then suggest that everyone meet up a week after their Thanksgiving plans to catch up at a restaurant.
+1 if my mom or MIL don’t host the holidays (esp Thanksgiving because it involves a lot of cooking), then we won’t be spending it with them! No way I’m hosting it at my home. I am busy enough already.
So OP is right it is pay to play?
Anonymous wrote:Take this as a lesson in being more direct.
If you wanted one of them to host, ask "does someone else want to host?"
How old are the grandkids? If they are in school or day care, so much of vacationing and travel revolves around that calendar. It's hard and expensive. Maybe they're seizing an opportunity to take a trip for less money or stress. As for the other family spending it with your DIL's family, you can't fault them for that really.
Anonymous wrote:Well, now you blew it. New Thanksgiving tradition of everyone doing what they want. Enjoy your no work but lonely Thanksgiving.
Anonymous wrote:Do something fun and enjoy not having to host. Go to Bermuda, or wherever.
Next year, ask them if they would like you to host Thanksgiving and, if so, whether they will be able to come. No drama needed.