Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aghhh. I'm the OP!! Nobody cooked. Nobody PLANNED to "cook."
She invited us over to picnic on her lawn and let the kids run around. Outside. In the SUN. In the yard.
Nobody prepared a banquet or a multi-course feast for 12.
She did not have a tray of sandwiches and petit-fours waiting for us.
We simply plonked down, pulled out our food, and she was offended that we didn't expect that she'd provide the food and brought our own.
So if she invited you over to just let the kids play outside, why did you bring a picnic?
Do you have kids? They get hungry. They get cranky when they are hungry. There's nothing unusual about bringing some sandwiches for your kids if you know you are going to be away from home for a while.
Other than when they were nursing, or water I have never brought food for just my kids to another house with kids and served it when the other kids aren’t eating. I have a kid with massive food issues and I’ve brought him his own food that he ate when we shared a meal, or I’ve brought homemade cookies to share, and I could see meeting for a picnic where we both brought something for our own kid, but I can’t imagine feeding my kid when the other family wasn’t feeding theirs.
My mom or something who can go a long time without eating? Yes I would go to her house and midday serve my kids lunch when she isn’t eating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aghhh. I'm the OP!! Nobody cooked. Nobody PLANNED to "cook."
She invited us over to picnic on her lawn and let the kids run around. Outside. In the SUN. In the yard.
Nobody prepared a banquet or a multi-course feast for 12.
She did not have a tray of sandwiches and petit-fours waiting for us.
We simply plonked down, pulled out our food, and she was offended that we didn't expect that she'd provide the food and brought our own.
Huh. Then why did you say differently in a prior post?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really OP? You can’t eat her food? You are THAT worried? And yet you still went in the first place.
Do you get the difference between distancing in a yard and sharing food?
Anonymous wrote:Delete the email. Problem solved. Other people’s rage is NOT your problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Etiquette requires that everyone is clear who is providing food for whom. You should have explained that you were bringing your own, OP, otherwise you are putting your host in the position of working on your meal for nothing, which is extremely rude.
Of course your SIL attacked you for something completely different, and that is on her. But you can apologize for not warning her you were bringing your own food.
Now to the most important point: it's risky to enter someone's home, since this virus is aerosolized and droplet-transmitted. It does not make sense that you would be so careful about sharing food if you are taking the serious risk of being indoors with them in the first place!!!
So none of you are being very intelligent here.
You do know that a picnic happens outside right? And that OP said the host never prepared a meal? Oh dear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aghhh. I'm the OP!! Nobody cooked. Nobody PLANNED to "cook."
She invited us over to picnic on her lawn and let the kids run around. Outside. In the SUN. In the yard.
Nobody prepared a banquet or a multi-course feast for 12.
She did not have a tray of sandwiches and petit-fours waiting for us.
We simply plonked down, pulled out our food, and she was offended that we didn't expect that she'd provide the food and brought our own.
So if she invited you over to just let the kids play outside, why did you bring a picnic?
Do you have kids? They get hungry. They get cranky when they are hungry. There's nothing unusual about bringing some sandwiches for your kids if you know you are going to be away from home for a while.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aghhh. I'm the OP!! Nobody cooked. Nobody PLANNED to "cook."
She invited us over to picnic on her lawn and let the kids run around. Outside. In the SUN. In the yard.
Nobody prepared a banquet or a multi-course feast for 12.
She did not have a tray of sandwiches and petit-fours waiting for us.
We simply plonked down, pulled out our food, and she was offended that we didn't expect that she'd provide the food and brought our own.
So if she invited you over to just let the kids play outside, why did you bring a picnic?
Do you have kids? They get hungry. They get cranky when they are hungry. There's nothing unusual about bringing some sandwiches for your kids if you know you are going to be away from home for a while.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aghhh. I'm the OP!! Nobody cooked. Nobody PLANNED to "cook."
She invited us over to picnic on her lawn and let the kids run around. Outside. In the SUN. In the yard.
Nobody prepared a banquet or a multi-course feast for 12.
She did not have a tray of sandwiches and petit-fours waiting for us.
We simply plonked down, pulled out our food, and she was offended that we didn't expect that she'd provide the food and brought our own.
So if she invited you over to just let the kids play outside, why did you bring a picnic?
Anonymous wrote:Delete the email. Problem solved. Other people’s rage is NOT your problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call her. Obviously there is a tendency for miscommunication here. Talk it out.
+1 It's easier to de-escalate and work things out in a real-time conversation.