Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honor the commitment to the team. Your MIL chose to be wishy-washy and you made a new plan in accordance with her cancellation. One should not ditch a commitment because something better came along. Instead, your solution of playing part of the game and attending the event is a perfect compromise.
I still do not understand this reasoning. The son ALWAYS had a commitment to play in the game. They "ditched the commitment" when the party was first scheduled, so why dos it become wrong to do it a second time?
Are you being stupid on purpose?
You can't see the difference between having to ditch a commitment on a one time basis and going back-and-forth and doing it more than once you really can't see the difference?
I'll use? What other values how is that making it more poor than another value it's a matter of OPH want to figure out how to do two important thingsAnonymous wrote:gosh, I dunno, I can see your frustration, but it seems to me like you have more in common with your MIL than you probably like to admit. both of you seem pretty rigid in your thinking....her in just assuming everyone will drop everything for her, you assuming that your "one must keep one's commitments" attitude is superior to other values, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honor the commitment to the team. Your MIL chose to be wishy-washy and you made a new plan in accordance with her cancellation. One should not ditch a commitment because something better came along. Instead, your solution of playing part of the game and attending the event is a perfect compromise.
I still do not understand this reasoning. The son ALWAYS had a commitment to play in the game. They "ditched the commitment" when the party was first scheduled, so why dos it become wrong to do it a second time?
Anonymous wrote:Honor the commitment to the team. Your MIL chose to be wishy-washy and you made a new plan in accordance with her cancellation. One should not ditch a commitment because something better came along. Instead, your solution of playing part of the game and attending the event is a perfect compromise.
Anonymous wrote:The back and forth would make me mad too and the kid would go to the game, or at least half. I'd try and arrange for another parent to drop him off at the dinner and then I'd go to that with the rest of the family. If I couldn't, I'd call the coach and explain what happened, ask if my kid was even going to play that night, and tell him we could make the first half and have to leave. If he said my kid wasn't starting or wasn't playing, I wouldn't waste my time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's your husband's family. Go with the flow. It's a kid sport, not the NBA.
I agree with you completely up to the point that the party was cancelled and we then made the commitment for our son to now attend the game. It's the back and forth that I have the problem with. There was no question that our son would miss the game before the cancellation was made. Given that the team is small and we're less than a week out from the game, it does have an impact on the team and the coach. Since we can go to both the game and the party, I just believe we should honor the commitment we made after the party was cancelled.
I agree with you, OP.
Why is the impact on the team any greater now than it as when you first said you couldn't make it? I assume the team hasn't loss members since then? Did the coach have a set line-up already, and if so, would it be any harder to alter that line-up now than two weeks ago? Honest question. Maybe if they no longer have enough players, or if somebody else dropped out in reliance on your son being able to play, that would mean something. Otherwise, I am not seeing it?
The team is small and my son's a key player, so there's some planning on the coach's part, but that's not the main point for me. It's just rude, IMO, to keep going back and forth. We said we'd be there and now we should go.
I agree, OP. I think the solution that your husband and any other kids go to the party and you and your son meet them there later is a reasonable solution. While I value family A LOT , I also want my kids to see that it's important to keep commitments and not jerk other people around and that reasonable solutions can be found.
Honestly curious about this "honoring commitments" issue. Do most of you have your child attend sporting events because they have made a commitment to be there when there is a friend's birthday party? a wedding? another grandparent's birthday? the opportunity for a fun family getaway weekend? For my third grader's sports and other practices, we are pretty lenient about letting her miss for other activities. I'm wondering how far outside the norm we are?
For us it would depend on the importance and urgency of the other event. When you commit to something, you tell a coach and other team members that you are going to be a part of something for a season, it's pretty piss poor to just show up when you want. You are the other team parent that pisses everyone else off.
Does stuff come up, sure, and sometimes you have to miss a game or practice, but not for every other opportunity that sounds like more fun.
I'm not speaking to OP's situation, just answering the pp.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's your husband's family. Go with the flow. It's a kid sport, not the NBA.
I agree with you completely up to the point that the party was cancelled and we then made the commitment for our son to now attend the game. It's the back and forth that I have the problem with. There was no question that our son would miss the game before the cancellation was made. Given that the team is small and we're less than a week out from the game, it does have an impact on the team and the coach. Since we can go to both the game and the party, I just believe we should honor the commitment we made after the party was cancelled.
I agree with you, OP.
Why is the impact on the team any greater now than it as when you first said you couldn't make it? I assume the team hasn't loss members since then? Did the coach have a set line-up already, and if so, would it be any harder to alter that line-up now than two weeks ago? Honest question. Maybe if they no longer have enough players, or if somebody else dropped out in reliance on your son being able to play, that would mean something. Otherwise, I am not seeing it?
The team is small and my son's a key player, so there's some planning on the coach's part, but that's not the main point for me. It's just rude, IMO, to keep going back and forth. We said we'd be there and now we should go.
I agree, OP. I think the solution that your husband and any other kids go to the party and you and your son meet them there later is a reasonable solution. While I value family A LOT , I also want my kids to see that it's important to keep commitments and not jerk other people around and that reasonable solutions can be found.
Honestly curious about this "honoring commitments" issue. Do most of you have your child attend sporting events because they have made a commitment to be there when there is a friend's birthday party? a wedding? another grandparent's birthday? the opportunity for a fun family getaway weekend? For my third grader's sports and other practices, we are pretty lenient about letting her miss for other activities. I'm wondering how far outside the norm we are?
Well, you're not teaching her to be responsible. Is that what you want?
No, it is not what I want. I believe I am teaching her responsibility in lots of other ways. I think I am also teaching her to value relationships, and at this young age I think I have struck the right balance for my child.
For what it is worth, I was asking a sincere question to see what other parents do.
Anonymous wrote:What does your son want to do?