Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse A is right, but if I were Spouse B and you left without me, I wouldn’t uber myself to the restaurant; I would stay home.
I wouldn’t care if you left without me. But the threatening and then deliberately embarrassing me in front of work friends would not be okay.
Didn't YOU embarrass YOURSELF by not being ready to go on time? Why can't you take responsibility for your (in)actions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse A is right, but if I were Spouse B and you left without me, I wouldn’t uber myself to the restaurant; I would stay home.
I wouldn’t care if you left without me. But the threatening and then deliberately embarrassing me in front of work friends would not be okay.
Anonymous wrote:Spouse A is right, but if I were Spouse B and you left without me, I wouldn’t uber myself to the restaurant; I would stay home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse A is right, but if I were Spouse B and you left without me, I wouldn’t uber myself to the restaurant; I would stay home.
I wouldn’t care if you left without me. But the threatening and then deliberately embarrassing me in front of work friends would not be okay.
But why would you be embarrassed? If being late is not rude, there is nothing to be embarrassed about, right?
Anonymous wrote:Suppose Spouse A is big on punctuality because they come from a military background and also feel that being on time means respecting other people's time. Spouse A also thinks that punctuality is a good habit to pass on to children. Spouse B is less punctual and feels that being 15-30 minutes late is not that big of a deal. Part of this is attributable to cultural/family background and part of it is a tendency to get distracted.
They have discussed the issue repeatedly and Spouse A frequently threatens to just leave Spouse B and go to events, but has never followed through with it until this weekend. They were supposed to meet another couple for dinner and were already running late. The other couple consists of Spouse A's work colleague and their spouse. They are work friends, but not best friends, and the couples have hung out socially together a few times. Spouse A told Spouse B that if they were not ready in 5 minutes, they could take an Uber to the restaurant. Spouse A actually followed through and left to the restaurant in frustration while Spouse B was still dithering.
Spouse B is furious with Spouse A and feels they were trying to embarrass them. Was Spouse A a too drastic?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse A is right, but if I were Spouse B and you left without me, I wouldn’t uber myself to the restaurant; I would stay home.
I wouldn’t care if you left without me. But the threatening and then deliberately embarrassing me in front of work friends would not be okay.
Anonymous wrote:Spouse A is right, but if I were Spouse B and you left without me, I wouldn’t uber myself to the restaurant; I would stay home.
Anonymous wrote:Spouse A is a punctuality freak. Spouse B should ask for a divorce. They are incompatible.
Anonymous wrote:Spouse A is a punctuality freak. Spouse B should ask for a divorce. They are incompatible.