Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are downsides to a hotel too though. It means you have to be back at the hotel for the kids’ bedtimes, and then have to keep the room dark and quiet after they fall asleep. In my family that would mean missing out on the most fun part of our family get-togethers - after dinner when the kids are asleep and the adults drink/play games/chat/watch a movie etc.
Great point.
Excellent point. Which is why we always tough it out. The parents get the bed, with one or two little kids in with us. Then all the other kids are in sleeping bags and air mattresses on the floor. If they're old enough then a bunch of kids can have a sleep over in the family room and parents take individual shifts to be up and make sure they are all okay. I dunno why but it works for our family. We'd rather be all together even if it is a little physically unconventional or uncomfortable.
See, the reason it works for your family is that you enjoy the wine drinking/game playing/chatting that happens when the kids get to bed.
In a lot of families, basically the ones where the elderly relatives try to dictate everything - that’s not happening. Grandma closed the kitchen, remember!
Basically, I keep harping on this point, because my life got so much better and my family interactions got much more satisfying when I started focusing on what I wanted/needed. Basically:
We’ve decided to stay in a hotel. Everyone we’ll get a better night sleep, dad!
We’re going out to lunch because the kids do better when they eat at noon!
We’re thinking of going to the zoo tomorrow! Do you want to join us?
The visit where ^ that happened went well.
The visit where we were all trapped in a condo, my parents tried to make one can of soup for 5 people for lunch, my parents didn’t get dressed before noon, wondered why 7:30 PM dinner reservations didn’t work for kids who normally go to bed at 8 PM...
You gotta speak up/stand up and just be say no, that’s not really going to work (while being nice about it)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are downsides to a hotel too though. It means you have to be back at the hotel for the kids’ bedtimes, and then have to keep the room dark and quiet after they fall asleep. In my family that would mean missing out on the most fun part of our family get-togethers - after dinner when the kids are asleep and the adults drink/play games/chat/watch a movie etc.
Great point.
Excellent point. Which is why we always tough it out. The parents get the bed, with one or two little kids in with us. Then all the other kids are in sleeping bags and air mattresses on the floor. If they're old enough then a bunch of kids can have a sleep over in the family room and parents take individual shifts to be up and make sure they are all okay. I dunno why but it works for our family. We'd rather be all together even if it is a little physically unconventional or uncomfortable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are downsides to a hotel too though. It means you have to be back at the hotel for the kids’ bedtimes, and then have to keep the room dark and quiet after they fall asleep. In my family that would mean missing out on the most fun part of our family get-togethers - after dinner when the kids are asleep and the adults drink/play games/chat/watch a movie etc.
Great point.
Excellent point. Which is why we always tough it out. The parents get the bed, with one or two little kids in with us. Then all the other kids are in sleeping bags and air mattresses on the floor. If they're old enough then a bunch of kids can have a sleep over in the family room and parents take individual shifts to be up and make sure they are all okay. I dunno why but it works for our family. We'd rather be all together even if it is a little physically unconventional or uncomfortable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are downsides to a hotel too though. It means you have to be back at the hotel for the kids’ bedtimes, and then have to keep the room dark and quiet after they fall asleep. In my family that would mean missing out on the most fun part of our family get-togethers - after dinner when the kids are asleep and the adults drink/play games/chat/watch a movie etc.
Great point.
Anonymous wrote:There are downsides to a hotel too though. It means you have to be back at the hotel for the kids’ bedtimes, and then have to keep the room dark and quiet after they fall asleep. In my family that would mean missing out on the most fun part of our family get-togethers - after dinner when the kids are asleep and the adults drink/play games/chat/watch a movie etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Early on in our relationship, my future wife brought me along to her family’s beach house in Delaware. Well, it turns out us younger people were expected to sleep on air matresses in the living floor.
I did it for one night because I didn’t have any choice. In the morning, I got up and told her if that ever happened again, we were done. It’s never happened again.
You sound like quite the diva.
No, I’m not a diva. I just think it’s rude to invite so many people to your house that they have to sleep on the floor. My rule is pretty simple- every guest should get their own room and bed. That includes kids (though putting kids in bunk beds is fine). Couples can of course share a bed, but nothing smaller than a full size. And no fewer than one bathroom per bedroom.
If you can’t accommodate this, I’m staying at a hotel.
And you were going to scrap your relationship over THAT? Your future wife got an eye-opening insight into your personality! I would have tossed you to the curb just for being so arrogant in general.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Early on in our relationship, my future wife brought me along to her family’s beach house in Delaware. Well, it turns out us younger people were expected to sleep on air matresses in the living floor.
I did it for one night because I didn’t have any choice. In the morning, I got up and told her if that ever happened again, we were done. It’s never happened again.
You sound like quite the diva.
No, I’m not a diva. I just think it’s rude to invite so many people to your house that they have to sleep on the floor. My rule is pretty simple- every guest should get their own room and bed. That includes kids (though putting kids in bunk beds is fine). Couples can of course share a bed, but nothing smaller than a full size. And no fewer than one bathroom per bedroom.
If you can’t accommodate this, I’m staying at a hotel.
You are a diva. Some sharing is ok. 8 people to 1 bathroom is not ok. But every bedroom having a bathroom is a ridiculous request.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Early on in our relationship, my future wife brought me along to her family’s beach house in Delaware. Well, it turns out us younger people were expected to sleep on air matresses in the living floor.
I did it for one night because I didn’t have any choice. In the morning, I got up and told her if that ever happened again, we were done. It’s never happened again.
You sound like quite the diva.
No, I’m not a diva. I just think it’s rude to invite so many people to your house that they have to sleep on the floor. My rule is pretty simple- every guest should get their own room and bed. That includes kids (though putting kids in bunk beds is fine). Couples can of course share a bed, but nothing smaller than a full size. And no fewer than one bathroom per bedroom.
If you can’t accommodate this, I’m staying at a hotel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Early on in our relationship, my future wife brought me along to her family’s beach house in Delaware. Well, it turns out us younger people were expected to sleep on air matresses in the living floor.
I did it for one night because I didn’t have any choice. In the morning, I got up and told her if that ever happened again, we were done. It’s never happened again.
You sound like quite the diva.
No, I’m not a diva. I just think it’s rude to invite so many people to your house that they have to sleep on the floor. My rule is pretty simple- every guest should get their own room and bed. That includes kids (though putting kids in bunk beds is fine). Couples can of course share a bed, but nothing smaller than a full size. And no fewer than one bathroom per bedroom.
If you can’t accommodate this, I’m staying at a hotel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Early on in our relationship, my future wife brought me along to her family’s beach house in Delaware. Well, it turns out us younger people were expected to sleep on air matresses in the living floor.
I did it for one night because I didn’t have any choice. In the morning, I got up and told her if that ever happened again, we were done. It’s never happened again.
You sound like quite the diva.
Anonymous wrote:My IL's had a 3 bedroom house; the master bedroom and then two "guest rooms." This was not the house Dh and his (3) siblings grew up in.
MIL was a bit of a hoarder so each of these guestrooms had way more furniture than they could reasonably fit--basically there were narrow pathways between dressers, shelves, beds, etc. Closets and dressers were crammed with clothes so you definitely couldn't unpack.
MIL didn't think it was a big deal and wanted all 4 of her kids, kids' spouses, and any grandchildren to sleep over there. She figured everyone would just end up in a sleeping bag on the living room floor like they did when they had sleepovers with their friends when they were young!
Needless to say, after the first time, I insisted that we stay in a hotel. They lived in a fairly remote area so the hotels were about half an hour away. she threw a fit but we just ignored it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you. My parents insist that we cannot stay at hotels, so we mostly don’t visit or I go solo with my toddler. My parents’ house has two bathrooms but a tiny hot water heater and messed-up plumbing. My mom will not share a bathroom and has an elaborately long getting-ready routine. So everyone else gets cold showers and has to announce everything they’re doing that involves running water, flushing, or showering, because if you do anything while someone is showering, you’ll freeze or scald them. We can’t shower at night because “the house is shut down for the night” and it’s too noisy. More than two adults getting ready within an hour is impossible and it seems like every conversation is about bathroom schedules.
Let me guess, they also close the kitchen and seem perplexed that they salad you ate for dinner won’t tide you over until 7 AM because it was “hearty” salad.
It is insane. Mine get up at 5 AM and start rattling pots and pans in the kitchen. Hotel all the way.