photobob
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2003
- Messages
- 3,552
Consider yourself lucky!![]()
I was thinking the same thing!! You have invited them, they have refused, don't have to invite them again!!
Consider yourself lucky!![]()
One of my girlfriends spent three weeks backpacking through the mountains last year. The scenery was, she says and I believe, incredible. She LOVED it - it was a dream trip. Nature, good company (her grown up daughter), little towns to get supplies, pitching a tent, endless stars in the sky, being exhausted when you crawl into your sleeping bag at night, a feeling of accomplishment. Away from phones and work.
And while I am very happy for her, and the scenery does sound lovely, it sounds like the seventh circle of hell to me.
My advice - instead of thinking that someone else's dislike of something you love (even the idea of it) is a personal insult - instead think of something that person has a passion for that you just don't "get." Fishing. Designer Shoes. Oscar winning drama. Monster truck rallies. Running marathons. And remind yourself that you enjoy them despite their passion for something you don't get - and that they likely feel the same about you. And how BORED you get when they try and share a passion with you that you aren't that into. ("A six point buck? Really? How interesting." "Yes, that is a very nice purse.")
One of my girlfriends spent three weeks backpacking through the mountains last year. The scenery was, she says and I believe, incredible. She LOVED it - it was a dream trip. Nature, good company (her grown up daughter), little towns to get supplies, pitching a tent, endless stars in the sky, being exhausted when you crawl into your sleeping bag at night, a feeling of accomplishment. Away from phones and work.
And while I am very happy for her, and the scenery does sound lovely, it sounds like the seventh circle of hell to me.
My advice - instead of thinking that someone else's dislike of something you love (even the idea of it) is a personal insult - instead think of something that person has a passion for that you just don't "get." Fishing. Designer Shoes. Oscar winning drama. Monster truck rallies. Running marathons. And remind yourself that you enjoy them despite their passion for something you don't get - and that they likely feel the same about you. And how BORED you get when they try and share a passion with you that you aren't that into. ("A six point buck? Really? How interesting." "Yes, that is a very nice purse.")
This is exactly the scenario that I worry would happen. Thanks for this info. This sounds EXACTLY like them. Except that they complain a lot even to begin with, I can't imagine how bad it would be when they got tired. Okay, I'm moving on from the acceptance step to the Thank god they said no step.
And something like that might be why the OP's parents will always love that carousel, no matter what. I have similar recollections of my kids' "home park", and I would not trade them for the world.I grew up in North Tonawanda and Lancaster. I have pictures of myself around age 6 on that carousel at Olcott. My dad's company used to hold their picnics there. And one of my brother on the toy cars. Those are the only two rides I remember there!
Oh my gosh--I had to laugh at the carousel. I grew up in North Tonawanda and Lancaster. I have pictures of myself around age 6 on that carousel at Olcott. My dad's company used to hold their picnics there. And one of my brother on the toy cars. Those are the only two rides I remember there!
On the topic at hand--I'm the in-law who always wants to have the kids come with us, so I can't imagine the other way around! My son and DIL just took the "other" mother in law--we went with them 4 years ago. I don't know if we'll ever get another "turn"--we've offered to take just the kids in a few years, but we'll see. It's hard to have this wonderful thing to offer people and have them refuse it. I'm going with my daughter, SIL and granddaughter in March. The sad thing is, I've been to Disney with my sister and her grandson way more than I've been there with my own.
One of the things that surprised me most about their refusal is that we often go on vacation with my family, at least once if not twice a year. My inlaws are constantly complaining that we never go on vacation with them. They like to play the "you like her family more than us" card. They live 0.6 miles away, we see them all the time. My parents currently live in Ghana, so we see them rarely (usually just on vacation). At least now that we've offered to take them, we can stop them short when they start ranting about us not vacationing with them.

r just imagine a really crappy carousel)

We've invited them along before and really enjoy them, not least because they're cool with everyone going their own way. I hate vacationing with them, however, because dad's a commando vacationer and I prefer things much more laid back, so it may be dad's real fear is that we'd be doing Disney in my dawdling style. 

But no one will enjoy a Disney vacation if they refuse to enjoy it, and some people are just that way when it comes to something different/they consider tacky/they weren't the ones to think of. 