Something I've noticed lately...
Sep. 10th, 2008 12:40 pmLately, I've been made aware of a somewhat obnoxious trend in social norms (or maybe people were always assholes like this, and I was blissfully naive.)
http://www.cnn.com/2008/LIVING/wayoflife/09/10/lw.pay.for.my.party/index.html
Do people REALLY pull this sort of shit on their friends? Do they say, "Hey, come to my party!", and then expect the guests to foot a bill of hundreds of dollar apiece? Do adult offspring "throw an anniversary party" for their parents, and then demand that their parents pay exorbitant bills for the party after the fact? Do they invite people to parties, tell them to bring their own food, but not make it a true "pot-luck" where everyone shares? (Dude, I thought the POINT of a pot-luck was to SHARE.)
I also heard about bridezillas demanding that their best friends throw them bachelorette parties worth thousands of dollars. It's bad enough that the bridesmaids have to buy their own ugly dresses for the weddings! I've heard of people TELLING their friends and family what to buy them for weddings and birthdays. Specific EXPENSIVE stuff, too. (I feel bad enough just "registering" for my wedding. It feels like I'm asking for stuff! And we only registered at Target! Not Crate and Barrel or other fancy stores.)
I dunno... it just seems like common courtesies are going out the door.
What do you guys think?
http://www.cnn.com/2008/LIVING/wayoflife/09/10/lw.pay.for.my.party/index.html
Do people REALLY pull this sort of shit on their friends? Do they say, "Hey, come to my party!", and then expect the guests to foot a bill of hundreds of dollar apiece? Do adult offspring "throw an anniversary party" for their parents, and then demand that their parents pay exorbitant bills for the party after the fact? Do they invite people to parties, tell them to bring their own food, but not make it a true "pot-luck" where everyone shares? (Dude, I thought the POINT of a pot-luck was to SHARE.)
I also heard about bridezillas demanding that their best friends throw them bachelorette parties worth thousands of dollars. It's bad enough that the bridesmaids have to buy their own ugly dresses for the weddings! I've heard of people TELLING their friends and family what to buy them for weddings and birthdays. Specific EXPENSIVE stuff, too. (I feel bad enough just "registering" for my wedding. It feels like I'm asking for stuff! And we only registered at Target! Not Crate and Barrel or other fancy stores.)
I dunno... it just seems like common courtesies are going out the door.
What do you guys think?
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Date: 2008-09-10 06:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-10 06:27 pm (UTC)But if she doesn't bring anything to share, yet eats things that other people bring, then that's absolutely not cool. I'm surprised nobody says anything to her.
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Date: 2008-09-10 06:31 pm (UTC)And of course the nice and polite people suffer, because they are too nice to say anything, don't want to rock the boat, want to make everyone happy, etc.
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Date: 2008-09-10 06:32 pm (UTC)But I believe they call this generation the 'Me' Generation. There is alot of people who believe the world revolves around them. They want their needs instantly statisified and don't think of others. (shrugs)
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Date: 2008-09-10 06:32 pm (UTC)People disappoint me more and more with every passing day.
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Date: 2008-09-10 06:54 pm (UTC)This is the sort of thing that makes me very glad that my few friends aren't the party-throwing sort. And that I'm stingy; I always ask, just to be sure I don't forget my wallet when I need it.
S'hard to get angry right now, though; I'm watching one of the only live TV broadcasts Billy Joel ever did, in the 70s in Britain, and it only aired in America sometime last week.
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Date: 2008-09-10 06:56 pm (UTC)All I can say is I am for one very glad my few chosen friends would never ever do anything like this. And if they did we would not be friends much longer.
Oh and congrates on the upcoming nuptials. When is the lucky event to take place? I can never quite find the date.
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Date: 2008-09-10 07:02 pm (UTC)I like to throw parties, but when I do, I do one of the following:
1. Invite people to join us at a restaurant, and make it clear that we're all paying our own tabs. My friends are generally considerate enough that they don't try to order the most expensive meal and drinks, and then "split the bill".
2. "Go out" to a bar or club, and then it's obvious that everyone pays for himself or herself.
3. Host a dinner party at my house and say, "I'm providing _____. Please bring an appropriate side-dish, dessert, or drink to share." Or I'll say, "I'm providing all the food. Bring alcohol if you want!"
For our at-home (non-fandom) bachelorette party (even though we had fandomers there, too), one of Fiona's best friends covered the tab, people paid her for their meals, and she bought my meal and Fi's as her gift to us. We went to a very moderate restaurant, not badly expensive at all (dude, it was so much fun - I'm GLAD we didn't go to a fancy place!). I ordered a mid-priced meal (I think it was about $15), and I didn't order any alcohol myself. To me, that just seems right, ya know?
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Date: 2008-09-10 07:22 pm (UTC)When I throw parties, they're my twelfth birthday party and my mom pays for them. *shrug* I haven't been grown-up long enough to know how the world works yet. (Because I am so grown up.)
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Date: 2008-09-10 07:26 pm (UTC)Really, it's just common sense. Put yourself in the shoes of the other people. If my friends aren't wealthy, it would be rude to ask them to pay for really expensive stuff. They also know I'm not wealthy, so they know they can't expect me to pay for huge fancy parties for them. It's all a matter of being reasonable and communicating honestly.
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Date: 2008-09-10 07:31 pm (UTC)Come be on Y!M. (Or AIM. *nudge*) It's easier than comment-tag.
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Date: 2008-09-10 07:34 pm (UTC)Oh, and if you ever need to double-check whether something is etiquette-reasonable or not by normal human adult standards, feel free to buzz me. :)
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Date: 2008-09-10 07:37 pm (UTC)This is the first time in three months I've been awake before noon, and the first time in weeks I've been up before 2PM, so teh concept of people not being home from work already seems odd. When're you coming home?
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Date: 2008-09-10 07:38 pm (UTC)*hugs*
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Date: 2008-09-10 08:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-10 08:02 pm (UTC)Of course things had already gone downhill at that point and weren't getting any better with the maternal relatives, but oh well.
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Date: 2008-09-10 08:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-10 10:26 pm (UTC)I do remember being in college when my best friend from high school was getting married. I was living on about $25.00 a week for food at the time. I did save enough to fly home for the wedding and for the horrid dress and shoes, but when presented with the bill for colouring the shoes, altering the dress, flowers, etc for around $200, I burst out crying. Her father, who had not been involved with the arrangements, was mortified as he understood the position I was in. He covered not only that expense but for everything else too. My girlfriend was in shock and so was her mother.
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Date: 2008-09-10 11:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-10 11:13 pm (UTC)As far as registries go- I admit I'm in favor of them, and I have a wish list pretty much everywhere online one can have one, for pretty much one reason- I have various relatives who absolutely WILL NOT give cash, or a gift card, and yet don't want to buy something they pick out. Having some form of gift list they can go and look at and pick something from makes them Much Happier, particularly because then at least I don't know what I'm getting. (Previously, I'd have to all, but go and buy the gift myself.)
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Date: 2008-09-10 11:18 pm (UTC)Honestly, I just don't get that. At all. But then, my friends and I are pretty much the exact opposite. Three of us used to go out to eat about every weekend one year in college and we eventually had to just start taking turns with the tab because we'd fight each other over who was paying it each time. Not who had to pay, but who GOT to pay. XD We were, eh, kinda weird, I admit.
Still, my jaw just dropped over that article. Seriously. WTF?
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Date: 2008-09-11 12:05 am (UTC)Also, like most of the other comments, on the rare occasions I throw a party at my place, I always let people know what to bring. Usually a matter of, "I've got sausages and bread, if you want anything fancy then bring it."
And yes, I know people who had to pay for their own ugly bridesmaid dresses for their weddings. Ugh.
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Date: 2008-09-11 12:38 am (UTC)And the absolute worst horrifically rude thing I've ever heard of was when a former friend of mine was getting married, and asked a bunch of our girlfriends to be bridesmaids. The bride, having moved out west a year and a half earlier, hadn't actually physically seen two of our friends in quite some time. So when she saw at her bridal shower that they'd both gained a fairly substantial amount of weight, she was apparently horrified at the thought of them in her bridal party.
She told them that if they didn't lose weight, they couldn't be bridesmaids anymore.
YES. REALLY.
Now, you hear stuff all the time (at least here in NYC) about brides offering their entire bridal parties a day at the spa, on her, or even liposuction (!) before the wedding, for maximum picture-perfectness. But to tell these girls that they were too fat to be in her wedding anymore? SO. FUCKED. UP. It wasn't even like the bridesmaids dresses had been made and paid for already, and would need altering. She was just too vain to be seen with fat girls as friends.
I myself was not a bridesmaid for far more entertaining, and possibly even more obnoxious reasons. Hee.
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Date: 2008-09-11 12:42 am (UTC)I know that etiquette doesn't traditionally dictate this, but if I ever got married? No member of the wedding party would pay for their own dress/shoes/tuxes etc. I wouldn't allow it. The bridal party's clothing are costumes for the darned wedding--no one's ever going to wear them again--and I would count them as part of the wedding expenses. (But I know etiquette doesn't demand that.)
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Date: 2008-09-11 01:04 am (UTC)I have also brought my own food to events because I am a vegetarian and have been burned by eating the common food (I was once served veggie kabobs that had been soaked in the same marinade with raw chicken. Not only was it not veggie, but wholly unsanitary. Ewwwww!). I always bring more than I can eat, and do share if people really want to eat what I bring.
I can't understand the greed that goes along with expecting your friends to pay hundreds of dollars on your behalf. I just don't get it.
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Date: 2008-09-11 01:41 am (UTC)I also had gotten her a present- nobody else did, and I was really surprised. Then the bill came and her other friend (and everyone else) decided that we'd split the bill- covering for the birthday girl's share.
I was pissed. I had already spent $50 on her gift. Now I was expected to pay for stuff I didn't eat. I ended up doing it- but I'm still mad about it.
AND I know that the Birthday girl is so freaking stingy that if we went out for my birthday- and it was a nice place, she totally wouldn't pay for my share.
Grrrr....
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Date: 2008-09-11 02:23 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-11 02:25 am (UTC)I had a friend who was inviting people to her wedding who she knew wouldn't be able to attend (for travel reasons), just so she'd get a gift from them. She was also inviting people she didn't know that well ~ old friends of her parents, for example, who even her parents weren't close to anymore ~ for the same reason. To get a gift. WTF???
And as a rule, I don't like to share bills when I go out to eat. I don't want to pay for anyone else's meal and I don't want them to have to pay for mine. If I buy one drink and my friend buys five, how is it fair to expect me to pay for half of what she drank? You wouldn't do that if everyone went shopping for clothes together ~ you'd pay for your own and not expect anything other than that. You wouldn't throw all the clothes on the counter and say "The jeans are mine, but I'm going to pay for half of the cost of my friend's three shirts and two skirts." Why should a meal be any different???
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Date: 2008-09-11 02:26 am (UTC)I will bend over backwards and do what I can to make things easier if money's tight with friends. I haven't always been afforded the same courtesies but I am very careful who I'm friends with nowadays. It's nice being older and not giving a flying dogshit about being popular :D Quality not quantity!
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Date: 2008-09-11 02:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-11 02:49 am (UTC)I mean, that's part of why I decided not to be a bridesmaid for my best friend from elementary school and high school. The dress was both hideous AND hideously expensive. I knew how much it would have ended up costing me, and I just didn't have that kind of money to throw away. Why do people assume that people can just throw money around?
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Date: 2008-09-11 07:20 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-11 07:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-11 03:33 pm (UTC)Mum paid for my 18th party as a b'day gift; and Dad paid for the rental of the unit for my 21st and my Uncle (bouncer for the party) bought the supplies as the gift. My 21st Bday cake was supplied as the gift by one of my friends who was an apprentice pastry chef at the time.
When I've eaten out with a group of people its buy your own and then something gets sorted with tips (live in the UK now tipping is still weird to me). In Australia if we went to the pub, you either buy your own drinks, or split a jug.
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Date: 2008-09-11 05:26 pm (UTC)