Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wtf? Are they going to make nasty comments to this man and his children all night too? Would also consider uninviting.
OP here,
honestly, this is part of my concern. My DH has already spoken to them and made it clear that it was a joint decision for us to invite the neighbors and that they are to be polite. They argued with him about how if they wanted to eat dinner "with a bunch of strangers", they would have gone to a restaurant.
Anonymous wrote:This will be our first Christmas in our new house. We invited my parents and my in laws to come for dinner. They live several hours away, so they will be staying with us for a few days. I invited a neighbor to come to Christmas dinner and bring his children. This man is a single father and doesn't really have a lot of money. We often take him groceries or just ask "hey do you need anything from costco?" when we are on the way there and we refuse to accept any reimbursement.
I told my in laws today that it will be 13 people for Christmas dinner. They wanted to know where the extra people were coming from. I told them that I invited our neighbor and they pitched a fit. They totally flipped out about inviting him and said that this isn't a soup kitchen. Honestly, I'd rather have me neighbor and his well behaved kids over than them at this point. How can I best resolve this without drama?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe remind them that Jesus is the reason for the season? I don’t often say it but this does seem like a WWJD moment. Room at the inn and all.
You do know not everyone is Christian, right?
It's a Christmas dinner, so....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This will be our first Christmas in our new house. We invited my parents and my in laws to come for dinner. They live several hours away, so they will be staying with us for a few days. I invited a neighbor to come to Christmas dinner and bring his children. This man is a single father and doesn't really have a lot of money. We often take him groceries or just ask "hey do you need anything from costco?" when we are on the way there and we refuse to accept any reimbursement.
I told my in laws today that it will be 13 people for Christmas dinner. They wanted to know where the extra people were coming from. I told them that I invited our neighbor and they pitched a fit. They totally flipped out about inviting him and said that this isn't a soup kitchen. Honestly, I'd rather have me neighbor and his well behaved kids over than them at this point. How can I best resolve this without drama?
Have you told your MIL about your "charity"?
Yes, this. OP I’m not sure why you felt the need to tell us about buying things and not asking for reimbursement. Sounds like you’ve told your in laws about this. A lot of patting yourself on the back while humiliating your neighbor.
You really should learn to read.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe remind them that Jesus is the reason for the season? I don’t often say it but this does seem like a WWJD moment. Room at the inn and all.
You do know not everyone is Christian, right?
Anonymous wrote:I would uninvite them for this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Inviting a bunch of random kids to an otherwise adult Christmas dinner will certainly change the dynamic. Will there be no other kids there?
Yeah, so?.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe remind them that Jesus is the reason for the season? I don’t often say it but this does seem like a WWJD moment. Room at the inn and all.
Anonymous wrote:Inviting a bunch of random kids to an otherwise adult Christmas dinner will certainly change the dynamic. Will there be no other kids there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here.
We haven’t told anyone that we help him out. I told them that he would be spending the holiday alone with his kids, so i asked him to come over.
I would be humiliated if someone implied that I couldn't provide Christmas for my kids, or that being alone with my kids wasn't good enough for them. Does he know you're inviting him because you feel sorry and not because you enjoy his company?
-- single parent
Of course we enjoy his company. We were talking the other day and he said he misses big home cooked christmases. I invited him over. I’m not sure why this is such a point of contention.
Additionally, We haven’t told anyone that we help him out. I only mentioned it in the OP so that people wouldn’t ask “why are you inviting this random guy??”
I quoted you saying that you told your in laws that you are inviting him over because other wise they'd be alone.
Now you're saying that you didn't tell anyone that?