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Christmas

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Groundhog Christmas - will it ever end?

67 replies

NotAnotherParkingFine · 14/11/2018 19:49

Feeling very down about Christmas day and just want to vent, so please bear with me. Background is I have hosted Christmas for between 9 and 12 family members for the past 25 years. This began when our youngest was 2 and we wanted to start our own family tradition rather than spend the day travelling to family. I didn't mind the effort because I was young, had a lot more energy and our DC loved having big family Christmases.

Apart from me, DH and our 2 DC, guests include; inlaws (we have a cordial but not close relationship,) my DM and her dickhead husband, my alcoholic sister who's usually pissed before she arrives, our son's partner and occasionally a niece and/or my brother will make an appearance. None of the older guests like each other but they all dote on the DC so call a truce for the day, like the soldiers playing football with the Germans on Christmas day during WWI.

I have to cater for 2 x vegetarians, 2 x steak rather than turkey, 1 x eats turkey but the stuffing and pigs in blankets can't have touched anything on the plate (making cooking/serving a pain and just something else to have to think about).

Last year we did full Christmas dinner in November as DS and his partner were going travelling. After the meal a few people said "what are you doing Christmas Day?", and I said "Well I'm not doing it all again." Nobody offered to host us apart from the inlaws, but due to MIL's health it meant me preparing and cooking everything (except veggies) at home, and then having to transport it, serve it and clear up after it at their house. Driving home we both said that's it, we're not doing Christmas again, we're both pushing 60 now and we don't have the energy or the enthusiasm. Next year we'll have the Christmas WE want. I was so excited as we talked about going away for Christmas. Could we? Could we really just go away?

I could have guessed it was all just a fantasy, we're back to Christmas groundhog day and I could cry. When it came to the crunch my DH, as always, caved in as he's an only child and has lived with the FOG all his life (that's a whole other thread). We have to have Christmas with his parents, that's the bottom line, and if we invite them, we have to invite my DM and her dickhead husband, which includes my alcoholic sister as she lives with them. Okay, so we'll go to a hotel! Cue much moaning about the expense (well don't come then!), and the waste (FIL "you're mum can't eat £80 worth of food!"). Then my niece, my lovely niece who suffers with anxiety, who's all alone as her partner left her, her mum passed away and her dad lives abroad, asks to come. How can I say no? She has a an emotional support dog (not officially but in practice). DS and partner then break the good news they're coming to ours (I think they think they're doing us a favour gracing us with their presence). They have 2 dogs, both are very destructive. We have 2 dogs. We can't take dogs to the hotel! We can happily leave ours, but niece needs her dog and the other 2 will destroy the house! So here we are again, hosting Christmas for 11.

DH says the problem is all the dogs because we could go to the hotel if it weren't for the dogs. My view is that this all stems from his sodding parents because we HAVE to spend Christmas with them and everything else snowballs from that. I feel so resentful. I didn't really want to go to a hotel for an overpriced lunch with people I don't want to be with, so it's not the dogs. My reality is that until my inlaws shuffle off this mortal coil I have to suck it up and host everyone.

This problem seems so petty I know, but I used to love Christmas and now I don't enjoy it and don't look forward to it. It's just a load of work and expense for us. It's not like our efforts are even appreciated - there's such a sense of entitlement.

Anyway, vent over. I'm not usually one for self pity, and I know lots of people are lonely at Christmas so I should be grateful people want to come to me for free food and drink . If you read all that thanks and well done.

OP posts:
Awks · 14/11/2018 19:54

I feel your pain. It's shit. Go to bed early with a bottle of cava and the latest lee child book, that's my only advice.

73kittycat73 · 14/11/2018 19:58

Could you ask each guest to bring along a part of the dinner themselves? Or ask at the beginning who's going to help you wash up and clean?

holidaylady · 14/11/2018 19:58

Oh wow. You are understandably pissed off about this.
Cancel at the last minute?
You clear off to a hotel on your own, and let dh sort it all out?

RonniePasas · 14/11/2018 20:00

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Theperfectchangeling · 14/11/2018 20:00

God Op, that sounds awful, please just say no! It sounds like you need to take a few years off, I know it’s easier said than done, but everyone is just taking advantage of you! Not fair, why shouldn’t you have a nice quiet day for a change! Failing being able to tell them no, maybe you need to have an imaginary Oven breakdown/flood etc... which would render hosting impossible. If that doesn’t work, move to a house with no room for hosting! Grin

Caselgarcia · 14/11/2018 20:02

Could you give each attendee a dish of food to prepare and bring along? Ie DM brings pigs in blankets, IL's bring Christmas pudding and brandy sauce, neice brings mince pies, son brings wine, sister brings veg etc. That way you aren't stuck in the kitchen all day and the expense is spread. It works really well and no one can cop out!

GreenTulips · 14/11/2018 20:02

Tell your DH he is shopping cooking and cleaning up

You are retiring from Christmas dinner

Just say No I'm not doing it, keep repeating.

BumbleBeee69 · 14/11/2018 20:03

Hells Bells OP, that sounds like the most awful stressful unappreciated Christmas day for you, just awful Sad

MayhemandMadness01 · 14/11/2018 20:08

I've hosted for 20 plus years, last year my sister offered. Fab, thought I, she can do the next 20 but no, its everyone back to me this year. Bucks fizz at 10am, wine from 1pm and Tia Maria from around 7pm. Day goes in a haze - tis the only way, remain passed for most of it

mummmy2017 · 14/11/2018 20:15

You go know you can hire people to come cook and clean on the day from local collage, go on treat yourself.

Alanamackree · 14/11/2018 20:23

It sounds to me that if you don’t make the changes, no one will help you.

Would you consider making it clear that you will host, but that it is now up to the younger generation to take on the shopping and cooking?

Or cook a simpler meal, and serve that instead?

Or book yourself into a hotel and leave them to it.

Only you can decide how far you’re willing to go, but doing nothing seems untenable.

They’ll all moan and groan and think they are very badly done by, but is listening to that any worse than feeling like this?

sittingonacornflake · 14/11/2018 20:28

Sorry no advice OP (other than get DH to do it all!) but just wanted to say I feel for you because that sounds shite.

Jb291 · 14/11/2018 20:45

Ugh sounds like hell OP. Can you sit your husband down and remind him of the previous years which you have both endured hosting Christmas day. Remind him of the agreement you had last year that you wouldn't have to do it again. Stand firm and make it clear that he can't just trample all over your wants and needs just to make his parents happy. If he won't budge then make clear you aren't prepared to cook / clean / run around after guests or lift a finger. If he has given in to his parents on this then he can sort out all the housework/ cooking etc while you put your feet up. Guarantee you will never have to do this again. A Christmas day spent on his feet running around after guests and doing all the work will soon make him change his mind.

Ggirl27 · 14/11/2018 21:01

I can imagine myself writing this post in a few years time, I wouldn't be brave enough to say no but I would think about shaking things up a bit. Do dinner differently - give each person who is coming something to bring with them, consider having a buffet lunch instead of a huge sit down meal. Let them know in advance that you need to do things differently as you are finding it a struggle as you get older. If you're lucky they'll hate the change so much that they'll consider doing something on there own next year without any prompting!! And Boxing Day would be mine - not one would be allowed in my house!!

chumbal · 14/11/2018 21:07

What a horrible situation for you largely caused by 'dh'

What would happen if you said no?

CrazyBaubles · 14/11/2018 21:35

I think the blame for this is split 3 ways:
1 - Your DH for giving in to his parents. Regardless of the reasons he is putting them before you.
2 - Your families for being selfish and taking advantage
3 - You for not putting your foot down.

So, you now have consider your options. For me, they would be:
1 - Tell DH if spending Christmas with his parents is so important, he can go there and you'll stay home
2 - Host but tell everyone you're doing one meal (turkey or whatever YOU prefer) and they can either like it or lump it. Hand out jobs for the day at the same time.
3 - Prepare for the fall out and cancel it all. Tell people now that you're absolutely not hosting this year.
4 - Have a repeat of previous years and spend the day feeling murderous and resentful.

It's hard to break the tradition but you need to!

AnneLovesGilbert · 14/11/2018 21:38

Very good advice from baubles.

I really feel for you OP but don’t be a mug. If DH HAS to spend it with his parents that’s fine, you don’t HAVE to host it.

The year you ended up doing it all plus getting it to the in-laws’ was the year you should have realised it had turned into a very unfunny joke and you weren’t going to do it again.

AndromedaPerseus · 14/11/2018 21:48

Dont some pubs do more reasonably priced xmas dinners, I’d go for that and sod the selfish lot of them

PizzaPlanet · 14/11/2018 22:14

Gosh you poor thing. I’d fib a bit and say that you’ve been feeling a bit low/tired lately and that if you can’t get out of hosting or go to a pub then people would have to help both practically and financially and not stay too long.
Everyone who attends should bring a bottle plus one prepared food item. The vegetarians need to bring their own turkey substitute and the person who won’t have turkey touching sausages or whatever can F off, they don’t get to dictate.
You should also make it known that hosting is over by 4pm (due to your exhaustion/bug/whatever) and than you can have a nice relaxing evening by yourself. Your family sound ungrateful buggers, to think they won’t cough up for lunch out but have saved a fortune coming to you over the past 20 years! Time to get tough!

crosstalk · 14/11/2018 22:36

OP Just say to DS and partner the destructive dogs will have to be left in kennels or caged in their car or caged in the house away from your dogs and your niece's dog if you can do that? Then you could go to the hotel or better a local pub which would be cheaper as PP have said (especially if you aren't sure who'll pay - you subbing 11 people at £80 pp isn't on). And who will drive?

I would be sending invitations out saying "The Last Hurrah" - with a menu eg what you are prepared to cook - anyone not liking what you serve brings a ready meal of their own or cooks it. Veggies I can understand, but people insisting on steak .. you're not a restaurant.

And talk throughout the day about your plans to spend next Christmas abroad. I'm presuming your DH is an only child, hence his concern?

Akire · 14/11/2018 22:47

Oh you poor thing, no wonder you have had enough, you well and truely earned a rest.
Cook yourself nice turkey meal for 2 (or you and kids) on Christmas Eve. Enjoy low key dinner. Christmas Day use rest of Turkey and make a buffet that you can mostly buy prepared, so it’s just putting it all out. Tell them all they are most welcome as usual but you are having a more low key meal and you be delighted for them to come. Anyone moaning about lack of traditional dinner can sort their own.

Pebblespony · 14/11/2018 22:51

Pull a sickle. Next year tell your husband you're going away for Christmas, it's up to him if he goes with you or not.

NotAnotherParkingFine · 14/11/2018 23:01

Thank you all for your comments, and for being so kind. Your responses have been just what I needed to hear. I'm so used to being the capable one in my family I'm really not used to people questioning why I do everything.

@RonniePasas, yes, I've decided that I'll buy as much as I can pre-prepared from M&S or Waitrose. I used to pride myself on everything prepared from scratch but I really, really can't be arsed. To be fair to DH, he does run around making drinks, handing out nibbles, clearing up, and he does the washing-up.

@Caselgarcia that's a really good idea, and I will be more assertive this year and ask for contributions.

@MayhemandMadness01 your post did make me laugh! I'm just the same - Christmas cocktails at 11am, and then prosecco, wine and Baileys. I have a 'lights on but nobody's home' expression on every picture of me on Christmas day. When the DC were younger I used to regularly fall asleep on the floor while the Doctor Who Christmas special was on Grin

@CrazyBaubles you are right, and I know you speak sense, but it's so hard. DH is conditioned to please his parents and as their health deteriorates it's getting worse. He's so stressed. He rarely gets home before 7.30pm these days as he goes to see them most evenings. I will however be expecting more help from our DC, although they are not arriving until lunch time - surprisingly!

@AnneLovesGilbert , that's the thing, last year we did realise it had become an unfunny joke and we both said 'enough is enough', but here we are again, because of DH's parents. His mother's health isn't great and he just couldn't tell them we would be doing our own thing this year. My DM's health isn't good either but she would understand if we didn't host.

Thank you all once again. I've taken all of your comments on board and I will be delegating various jobs, buying in pre-prepared as much as I can and telling everyone, on the day, that next year we will be going away!! xx

OP posts:
EmilyRosiEl · 14/11/2018 23:09

Pizza Planet's advice seems to make a lot of sense and it isn't necessarily a fib- you are feeling a bit low/stuck in a rut.

What about all meeting at a pub for a booked Christmas dinner and then all going home to respective homes afterwards? A lot of pubs allow dogs!

Asj0405 · 14/11/2018 23:10

I would definitely say to your husband that as you explained last year you are now unwilling to host every year. If he would like to take over then he is more than welcome you will help him (not do for him) with anything he is unsure of this year however he's on his own as from next year. I bet you'll be having a nice relaxing day somewhere far away next year Grin. If he wants to carry on hosting everyone then he has to be responsible for doing that you don't have to do anything you don't want to.

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