Anonymous wrote:They were scheduled to arrive today. They arrived early. If you were them, you drive up, and notice no one at home (OP mentioned the car was in the garage) and usually OP is at work all day. So did they really need to call in advance before using a key to enter their son and DIL's house, when they assumed no one was at home?
Anonymous wrote:You are totally overreacting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They were scheduled to arrive today. They arrived early. If you were them, you drive up, and notice no one at home (OP mentioned the car was in the garage) and usually OP is at work all day. So did they really need to call in advance before using a key to enter their son and DIL's house, when they assumed no one was at home?
Um, YES. On account of IT IS NOT THEIR HOUSE. And on account of the fact that they key they were given was only for emergencies, and for one specific purpose (watching older child while parents were at the hospital).
Think of it this way--if you gave your college-age son a credit card for emergencies only, does he need to call you first when he decides to use that card for any reason other than an emergency? YES.
Anonymous wrote:They were scheduled to arrive today. They arrived early. If you were them, you drive up, and notice no one at home (OP mentioned the car was in the garage) and usually OP is at work all day. So did they really need to call in advance before using a key to enter their son and DIL's house, when they assumed no one was at home?
Anonymous wrote:They were scheduled to arrive today. They arrived early. If you were them, you drive up, and notice no one at home (OP mentioned the car was in the garage) and usually OP is at work all day. So did they really need to call in advance before using a key to enter their son and DIL's house, when they assumed no one was at home?
Anonymous wrote:Overreacting. They didn't show up without your knowledge or permission. You invited them and they came early. That is a big difference. It may be rude, that's certainly arguable, but it's not a major boundary overstep.
I get that it has disrupted your day - I don't like unexpected people in my space either - but there is no reason to make a big deal of this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was creepy. Your mistake was saying anything beyond
"What a surprise! make yourself at home, but I have to get back to work now. I'll see you later."
Don't let them pick the kids up early. Just leave them as if they weren't there. Don't reward this.
Changing the locks is expensive, so I wouldn't do it so fast. At dinner, after the work day, you and your husband ask them point blank why they showed up so early and ask them not to do so without calling ahead.
TBH, I know I seemed stunned, because I was--and I have no poker face. I think they felt awkward as I stopped working to rush to finish the guest room while they got some tea. I also immediately went back to work, and turned down the daycare pickup offer (I did explain about not wanting to interrupt nap, but maybe later).
I'm sure DH will talk to them later, but I want to get on the same page with him first about what he'll say. I just feel very awkward about this visit now, which is a shame, because we usually get on very well.
Anonymous wrote:Your dh should talk to them tonight, and tell them that's not okay. He doesn't have to get mad, but he should make the boundary clear.
I'd change the locks so it doesn't happen again, and then just hide a key in one of those fake rock things so it will be available in an emergency.