Magpie
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Oct 27, 2007
- Messages
- 10,615
I'd like to just preface this by say I'm not offended.
I'm just curious.
My brother-in-law's wife's parents are in town and they've invited my brother-in-law, his wife (their daughter), and my husband out to dinner. But me? I'm not invited. I'll be staying home that night (which is actually fine with me
).
The only time we've had contact with these folks was at my BILs wedding eleven years ago. This is the first time they've ever invited my husband to dinner. My husband and I have been married for 16 years.
Now, I've always assumed that when you're issuing invitations for a family or social occasion and you invite one person, you routinely invite their partner as well. So for example, when we went out to celebrate my mother's birthday, we invited my brother-in-law AND his wife. They're a couple and they come together. Even though his wife has no connection to my mother (they've barely spoken), it wouldn't occur to us to leave her out of a social invite involving her husband.
So, I'm curious... When your family gets together for dinner, do you automatically invite their spouses? Or do you leave them out, because they're not technically family?
I'm just curious.My brother-in-law's wife's parents are in town and they've invited my brother-in-law, his wife (their daughter), and my husband out to dinner. But me? I'm not invited. I'll be staying home that night (which is actually fine with me
The only time we've had contact with these folks was at my BILs wedding eleven years ago. This is the first time they've ever invited my husband to dinner. My husband and I have been married for 16 years.
Now, I've always assumed that when you're issuing invitations for a family or social occasion and you invite one person, you routinely invite their partner as well. So for example, when we went out to celebrate my mother's birthday, we invited my brother-in-law AND his wife. They're a couple and they come together. Even though his wife has no connection to my mother (they've barely spoken), it wouldn't occur to us to leave her out of a social invite involving her husband.
So, I'm curious... When your family gets together for dinner, do you automatically invite their spouses? Or do you leave them out, because they're not technically family?



("But honey, if I'm happy with the way you look, why should it matter if everyone else is in black tie?")