Anonymous wrote:Wow, I can't imagine sharing a house on vacation and not being willing to sharing food. Truly bizarre.
We handle this in one of two ways when traveling with others:
1. We use a shared Google doc to set a grocery list, one person buys everything and other send that person money via venmo.
2. We use a shared Google doc to set a grocery list and divide it to split the shopping and transporting to the vacation home.
If there are special foods for special dietary needs, that family would buy that on their own and it is marked as such (e.g., Gluten Free for Larla) so no one would ask for it. Doesn't seem like that is the case for you though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When a kid wanders into the kitchen and asks for some food, tell them to go talk to their mom because she brought food for them. Why is this so hard? If your family is the first one up and eating, tell parents to show their own children to their food corner if they want to self serve before parents come to the kitchen.
No, that’s not how it happens. The kids are in the kitchen eating their breakfast. We cook our breakfast and start eating it a bit later. They want to eat ours.
Anonymous wrote:
Go to the g*d damn store and buy more bagels?
You are being ridiculous, OP. There’s not some magic way to ensure other kids don’t eat your breakfast except saying “no.” If that makes you feel like a jerk, it’s because it’s a jerky thing to say. So you are back to either bringing more bagels or buying more when you run out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it the type of thing where you’re making omelets for your kids and other families brought Cheerios?
If it’s something like that, you need to bring similar foods. There’s no way around it. If the other kids see a mom cooking something that smells good they’re going to ask for some.
No, they ate all our bacon and cereal and bread. So it’s not like we bring gourmet breakfast.
Anonymous wrote:When a kid wanders into the kitchen and asks for some food, tell them to go talk to their mom because she brought food for them. Why is this so hard? If your family is the first one up and eating, tell parents to show their own children to their food corner if they want to self serve before parents come to the kitchen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
It’s not about money. Really!
It’s just I don’t want to bring groceries for 10 people, I just want to bring enough for our family of 3. We are already sharing dinners.
Why do you assume that you'll be bringing all the groceries? Aren't the others bringing groceries too? If all of you bring groceries for 10 people, you'd be able to feed 30 people in that place. Obviously there's no need for that. Just bring a little extra than you usually bring.
Yes, but let’s imagine the situation that we all arrived and I brought groceries for my family for 3 days, but the other kids eat all our breakfast supplies on day 1. Then I have nothing left. I don’t want to eat their food, neither do they have enough for us.