Anonymous wrote:I have 3 kids. I would not bring my kids to my neighbor's adult family dinner party on Christmas. I sort of assumed OP had her own kids and the families all knew each other, which sounds like a great idea, but that's not the case. Since there won't be other kids there to make it fun for my kids it's not an invitation I would accept. Does neighbor know his kids will be the only ones? it would matter to me that this was a family/kid friendly party which sounds like this is not, so I would not go.
Anonymous wrote:Invite the family over any other night in December for hot chocolate, cookie decorating, ornament making, Christmas music, or whatever for a festive neighborly gathering that can be fun for the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Invite the family over any other night in December for hot chocolate, cookie decorating, ornament making, Christmas music, or whatever for a festive neighborly gathering that can be fun for the kids.
Uh, no. OP should not, and will not, rescind an already-extended invitation to Christmas dinner to indulge her MIL’s nasty toddler temper tantrum.
Oh just stop. It wasn't an invitation engraved in stone. Maybe neighbor felt put on the spot at the initial asking. His kids will probably be bored out of their minds anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Invite the family over any other night in December for hot chocolate, cookie decorating, ornament making, Christmas music, or whatever for a festive neighborly gathering that can be fun for the kids.
Uh, no. OP should not, and will not, rescind an already-extended invitation to Christmas dinner to indulge her MIL’s nasty toddler temper tantrum.
Anonymous wrote:It was very kind of you to invite them and very rude of ILs to say what they said but honestly Christmas is for family and this guy isn’t lonely, he has his kids and they could have celebrated on their own. Wasn’t worth the fallout with in laws imo
Anonymous wrote: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....
Millions of people celebrate Christmas secularly, soo…
Anonymous wrote:Invite the family over any other night in December for hot chocolate, cookie decorating, ornament making, Christmas music, or whatever for a festive neighborly gathering that can be fun for the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Then they can.
Set this boundary now or deal with it forever. I wouldn't be able to stomach having them, TBH.
I don't think this is worth blowing up the family over. If I was the neighbor I'd be mortified if I found out that inviting me caused a massive rift in the family. Who would want that?
Anonymous wrote: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.
Then they can.
Set this boundary now or deal with it forever. I wouldn't be able to stomach having them, TBH.