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| #Post#: 72551-------------------------------------------------- | |
| The More the Merrier? | |
| By: Jem Date: December 22, 2021, 9:18 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| This is more of a general "how do other people view this" post | |
| as opposed to an actual question of how I should handle it. | |
| Situation One: My father in law is immuno-compromised due to | |
| general poor health. He just got out of the hospital yet again. | |
| He has been very careful in connection with COVID. He and his | |
| wife invited his immediate family (meaning his children/spouses | |
| including my husband/me and grandchildren) for Christmas Day. My | |
| sister in law responded to the group text asking for a head | |
| count that she and her husband would be attending along with her | |
| husband's adult daughter. This was all fine with my father in | |
| law. But then my SIL said that she had invited an adult neighbor | |
| who would be alone for Christmas because his wife was visiting | |
| her parents in a neighboring state and his brother was in the | |
| ICU with COVID. My FIL was livid and said that if she brought | |
| the neighbor my FIL would have to not participate because he is | |
| immuno-compromised, does not know this neighbor, and wanted | |
| Christmas to be about family and not getting to know someone he | |
| will likely never see again. I think it was very rude for my SIL | |
| to simply announce that she had invited someone to Christmas, | |
| especially in the age of COVID. I imagine my SIL thinks my FIL | |
| is rude for saying that she can't bring him. How do you view | |
| this? | |
| Situation Two: A number of years ago I invited my mother, | |
| sister, and three nieces to bake Christmas cookies. I purchased | |
| the ingredients and made a plan for which cookies should be made | |
| first to maximize prep times, oven times, etc. My daughter and I | |
| were really excited for some family time! But then my sister | |
| showed up with her three daughters and a random neighborhood | |
| girl. I was livid. She did not ask, she just showed up with this | |
| girl and then insisted on making the experience focused on her. | |
| This girl is from an affluent family (so it wasn't a situation | |
| of helping out the needy or something) and perfectly nice, but | |
| she was not invited and her presence completely changed the day | |
| for the worse. Also, my sister insisted that this girl get an | |
| equal share of the cookies. My daughter and I were very | |
| disappointed that the family day simply wasn't and my daughter | |
| felt excluded in her own home because the four other girls were | |
| palling around. I think my sister was very rude for bringing an | |
| uninvited person to my house without asking. Had she asked, I | |
| would have said not to bring her. My sister has a history of | |
| doing this with her dog also. I am allergic to most dogs and | |
| have made it clear that her dog is NOT welcome in my home. I | |
| think my sister is very rude. I imagine she thinks I am. How do | |
| you guys view this? | |
| #Post#: 72554-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The More the Merrier? | |
| By: Aleko Date: December 22, 2021, 9:37 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re situation #1: do you know whether SIL invited the neighbour | |
| after receiving FIL's invitation, or whether she had already | |
| done so? Because if she had already invited him to have | |
| Christmas dinner with her family,, of course she couldn't | |
| decently un-invite him. If FIL's invitation was along the lines | |
| of ' I'd like your family to come over for Christmas Day! How | |
| many of you are there?', it seems reasonable for her to list | |
| everyone who would otherwise be having Christmas dinner at her | |
| home. And if he told her 'I don't care that you had invited | |
| this guy, you can't bring him', then yes actually he was rude. | |
| It's fair enough to say 'well, that's a deal-breaker for me; you | |
| and Jack and your guest had better stay home', but to tell her | |
| to disinvite him, no. | |
| #Post#: 72556-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The More the Merrier? | |
| By: Jem Date: December 22, 2021, 9:48 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Aleko link=topic=2239.msg72554#msg72554 | |
| date=1640187476] | |
| Re situation #1: do you know whether SIL invited the neighbour | |
| after receiving FIL's invitation, or whether she had already | |
| done so? Because if she had already invited him to have | |
| Christmas dinner with her family,, of course she couldn't | |
| decently un-invite him. If FIL's invitation was along the lines | |
| of ' I'd like your family to come over for Christmas Day! How | |
| many of you are there?', it seems reasonable for her to list | |
| everyone who would otherwise be having Christmas dinner at her | |
| home. And if he told her 'I don't care that you had invited | |
| this guy, you can't bring him', then yes actually he was rude. | |
| It's fair enough to say 'well, that's a deal-breaker for me; you | |
| and Jack and your guest had better stay home', but to tell her | |
| to disinvite him, no. | |
| [/quote] | |
| The neighbor was never invited by my FIL. It is standard for my | |
| FIL and MIL to have "family" over on Christmas Day. The group | |
| text was along the lines of "Please come any time after 12:00 | |
| and we will plan to eat at 1:30. Please let me know who will be | |
| coming so we have a head count." Every family member was on the | |
| text and my FIL was clear that this is a family only event. The | |
| head count was so that FIL/MIL knew whether my daughter would be | |
| there, and which of my husband's three adult kids and/or their | |
| SOs (who are considered family). A random neighbor would not be | |
| considered family. | |
| My SIL to my knowledge has never done Christmas Day with just | |
| her family (which would be her husband and her, and sometimes | |
| her stepdaughter). Also, the neighbor is not family. My SIL | |
| invited the neighbor to my FIL's home without asking my FIL. For | |
| me, my FIL saying "I don't care that you invited this guy, you | |
| can't bring him" is not rude. To me, my SIL inviting a stranger | |
| (who had arguably been exposed to COVID) to my FIL's home was | |
| very rude. | |
| #Post#: 72557-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The More the Merrier? | |
| By: NFPwife Date: December 22, 2021, 9:53 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I generally hate the more the merrier, because, as in your | |
| second example, more is not always merrier. | |
| Your FIL had a perfect response in the first scenario. He'd be | |
| right about a random neighbor changing the dynamic in typical | |
| times, but in the time of covid? The risk is too high to include | |
| a stranger right now. Besides that, people haven't been able to | |
| connect and gather so it's completely reasonable to want just | |
| family time and have that prioritized more than usual. Finally, | |
| based on SIL even asking to bring a stranger, I'd be questioning | |
| how she's assessing risk in general and I'd just disinvite her | |
| whole branch because of that. | |
| For the second, I'd love to say, "Oh, I would have told sister | |
| that we'd reschedule since she brought an extra person and this | |
| was meant to be mom/ daughter/ cousin time," but I would have | |
| done exactly what you did and tried to go with the flow. Your | |
| sister was rude, she ruined the day, and the best you can hope | |
| for future time together is to try to get in front of it with, | |
| "Now today is about, blah, blah, blah, no extras. More is not | |
| merrier for this event." | |
| My husband has a friend who does this all. the. time. DH and I | |
| make the best of it and, occasionally, more is merrier, but it | |
| changes the event. My husband has bowed out of things where he | |
| knows extra people were invited. For instance, we were planning | |
| dinner as two couples and another couple was invited, my DH | |
| said, "I don't want to crash your evening with that couple, | |
| enjoy yourself, we'll catch you another time." That slowed the | |
| tendency a touch. | |
| *edit - typo, tenses | |
| #Post#: 72558-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The More the Merrier? | |
| By: NFPwife Date: December 22, 2021, 10:12 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Aleko link=topic=2239.msg72554#msg72554 | |
| date=1640187476] | |
| Re situation #1: do you know whether SIL invited the neighbour | |
| after receiving FIL's invitation, or whether she had already | |
| done so? Because if she had already invited him to have | |
| Christmas dinner with her family,, of course she couldn't | |
| decently un-invite him. If FIL's invitation was along the lines | |
| of ' I'd like your family to come over for Christmas Day! How | |
| many of you are there?', it seems reasonable for her to list | |
| everyone who would otherwise be having Christmas dinner at her | |
| home. And if he told her 'I don't care that you had invited | |
| this guy, you can't bring him', then yes actually he was rude. | |
| It's fair enough to say 'well, that's a deal-breaker for me; you | |
| and Jack and your guest had better stay home', but to tell her | |
| to disinvite him, no. | |
| [/quote] | |
| In the scenario that SIL had already invited Jack to her home, | |
| the only appropriate response on the group text is "We invited | |
| (guest) to spend Christmas with us, is it okay if he comes | |
| with?" That's an ask before telling situation anytime, but | |
| especially during (yet another!) covid wave. | |
| #Post#: 72561-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The More the Merrier? | |
| By: VorFemme Date: December 22, 2021, 11:15 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| This is a situation where FIL's medical condition card trumps | |
| Sister-in-Law's right to bring anyone outside the family to the | |
| event. They can come over early for a while, then go home to | |
| have dinner with their neighbor (and I hope that they haven't | |
| socialized with him in the previous few days - potentially | |
| exposing themselves to an increased risk of any seasonal | |
| illnesses before seeing someone who is KNOWN to be | |
| immune-compormised). | |
| Having read of SIL's known tendency to bring neighbors, dogs, | |
| and whatever else along with her on "family visits" - perhaps | |
| arrangements need to be made with her husband or anyone else | |
| known to be able to influence her tendency to accumulate | |
| "extras" in her party....? But I fear that she is one of those | |
| people who cannot see that SHE might be the one who needs to | |
| control her preference for larger gatherings to match the needs | |
| of other people who are immune compromised or allergic to the | |
| pet she's bringing along. She will never see it as a problem - | |
| it will be, at best, a vague recognition on her part of "they're | |
| just so fussy about it that it's not going to work out to bring | |
| Fluffy or the neighbor" along. | |
| #Post#: 72562-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The More the Merrier? | |
| By: STiG Date: December 22, 2021, 11:27 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I grew up in a house where there were often extra people for | |
| holiday meals. We often celebrated with another family; their | |
| daughter was in university and invited a friend, who was an | |
| exchange student, to come home with her so she wouldn't be alone | |
| in the dorms. She let my Mom know the day before the meal but | |
| knew that my Mom wouldn't have minded an extra person. | |
| Especially since this student was from the same country as Mom's | |
| father. | |
| I have done the same when hosting holiday meals. However, this | |
| was pre-Covid. | |
| Right now, I would not allow someone I didn't know into my home | |
| for a holiday meal. Full Stop. FIL wasn't rude, IMO, but even | |
| if he was? Safety trumps etiquette. SIL was rude to FIL | |
| because she didn't ask to bring an extra guest. She may have | |
| been rude to neighbour if the original invite was to FIL's house | |
| and not her own because she didn't have the authority to invite | |
| him to an event she was not hosting. If the invite to the | |
| neighbour predated the invite to FIL's, the correct thing for | |
| SIL to do would have been to ask FIL if she could bring the | |
| neighbour and let FIL know that they wouldn't be attending so | |
| they could host neighbour in their own home. | |
| As for the second situation, that was just wrong on so many | |
| levels. But you couldn't turn them away without upsetting the | |
| kid(s) and your sister knew that. Going forward, any invite I | |
| issued to her would explicitly spell out who was invited and any | |
| additional persons were not welcome. You'd probably have to | |
| actual turn her away once for her to understand that you were | |
| serious. | |
| #Post#: 72566-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The More the Merrier? | |
| By: Hmmm Date: December 22, 2021, 1:14 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I am of the camp that you should never invite someone to an | |
| event unless you are the one hosting it in your home. We have a | |
| well established precedent that random people will be invited to | |
| family events. However, even though we never said no, my family | |
| still asks me if it is ok. | |
| I think if your FIL should have said "Sorry, we aren't open to | |
| having additional people this year. Let us know if you want to | |
| come by after you host your neighbor at your house." | |
| #Post#: 72571-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The More the Merrier? | |
| By: Jem Date: December 22, 2021, 1:48 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Hmmm link=topic=2239.msg72566#msg72566 | |
| date=1640200498] | |
| I am of the camp that you should never invite someone to an | |
| event unless you are the one hosting it in your home. We have a | |
| well established precedent that random people will be invited to | |
| family events. However, even though we never said no, my family | |
| still asks me if it is ok. | |
| I think if your FIL should have said "Sorry, we aren't open to | |
| having additional people this year. Let us know if you want to | |
| come by after you host your neighbor at your house." | |
| [/quote] | |
| Agreed. To be clear though, SIL doesn't host people at her | |
| house. She never intended (and still does not) intend to host | |
| the neighbor at her house. She fully invited the neighbor to my | |
| FIL's (her father) house without asking. Frankly, I am very | |
| relieved that she mentioned the invitation on the group text as | |
| opposed to simply showing up with a random stranger with recent | |
| possible COVID exposure (from my FIL's perspective)! | |
| #Post#: 72572-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The More the Merrier? | |
| By: Hmmm Date: December 22, 2021, 1:54 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Jem link=topic=2239.msg72571#msg72571 | |
| date=1640202485] | |
| [quote author=Hmmm link=topic=2239.msg72566#msg72566 | |
| date=1640200498] | |
| I am of the camp that you should never invite someone to an | |
| event unless you are the one hosting it in your home. We have a | |
| well established precedent that random people will be invited to | |
| family events. However, even though we never said no, my family | |
| still asks me if it is ok. | |
| I think if your FIL should have said "Sorry, we aren't open to | |
| having additional people this year. Let us know if you want to | |
| come by after you host your neighbor at your house." | |
| [/quote] | |
| Agreed. To be clear though, SIL doesn't host people at her | |
| house. She never intended (and still does not) intend to host | |
| the neighbor at her house. She fully invited the neighbor to my | |
| FIL's (her father) house without asking. Frankly, I am very | |
| relieved that she mentioned the invitation on the group text as | |
| opposed to simply showing up with a random stranger with recent | |
| possible COVID exposure (from my FIL's perspective)! | |
| [/quote] | |
| Oh, I understood that she never intended to host the neighbor in | |
| her own home. But FIL doesn't have to let on that he knows that | |
| too. | |
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