Anonymous wrote:First, this has to be fake.
Anonymous wrote:I’m supposed to attend a friend’s sibling’s wedding this weekend (ceremony + reception), but my 15 year old daughter really doesn’t want to stay home alone and gets anxious about it. She’s technically old enough, but evenings by herself make her nervous, and she doesn’t have any friends she could hang with.
The wedding will be several hours, and I’d be gone for both the ceremony and reception. I really want to be there for my friend since it’s an important family event, but I’m wondering… would it be inappropriate to ask if my daughter could come with me?
WWYD? Ask the friend, have her stay home, or another solution?
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t even bother going to the wedding. I would use that time to take your daughter to see a therapist.
Anonymous wrote:I’m supposed to attend a friend’s sibling’s wedding this weekend (ceremony + reception), but my 15 year old daughter really doesn’t want to stay home alone and gets anxious about it. She’s technically old enough, but evenings by herself make her nervous, and she doesn’t have any friends she could hang with.
The wedding will be several hours, and I’d be gone for both the ceremony and reception. I really want to be there for my friend since it’s an important family event, but I’m wondering… would it be inappropriate to ask if my daughter could come with me?
WWYD? Ask the friend, have her stay home, or another solution?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best plan: Daughter stays home.
If that can't happen, then you contact your friend (I would call so it's a conversation vs just texting back and forth) and say something came up and DH will be out of town and DD is scared to stay home alone. So I won't be able to attend. Sorry!
If friend really wants you to go with her she will either suggest a solution or say, Bring DD.
That said, I had someone bring me to an event, swearing the host would love for me to attend, and it was very clear host was p*ssed. Friend was my ride, at a time when Ubers were not that prevalent, and it was a very long, uncomfortable night.
But canceling at the last minute is just as rude as asking to bring someone. If the wedding is this week, they have already paid for OP and canceling now won't avoid this.
OP - this is basic adult stuff. Think about your conflicts before accepting an invitation. Once you RSVP yes, unless you are deathly ill, you attend.
Anonymous wrote:Best plan: Daughter stays home.
If that can't happen, then you contact your friend (I would call so it's a conversation vs just texting back and forth) and say something came up and DH will be out of town and DD is scared to stay home alone. So I won't be able to attend. Sorry!
If friend really wants you to go with her she will either suggest a solution or say, Bring DD.
That said, I had someone bring me to an event, swearing the host would love for me to attend, and it was very clear host was p*ssed. Friend was my ride, at a time when Ubers were not that prevalent, and it was a very long, uncomfortable night.