My goodness! That's taking parental meddling in relationships to a whole new level. I have an uncle who's like that. He's always wondering why me and my other college age cousin aren't bringing significant others to family functions, neglecting to consider that it's possible neither of us actually want to be in a relationship, or that there are other reasons we're not bringing people home (I'm still trying to figure out how to handle my bisexuality with my family, and I'm fairly sure my cousin's asexual). He even encourages us to set up each other up with our respective friends, which leads to us awkwardly smiling and then fleeing the room in search of food or something. It's a shame that some people can't realize that being single is not really a crime or anything to be concerned about.What's worse, my dad tried to pay a guy to take me on a date the other day. The guy declined. On one hand, I'm extremely grateful he said no, because it was terribly embarrassing and I'm sure I would not have felt very respectable knowing I was only going out because my date was being paid.
Don't you just hate it when your parents try to get involved with your "love life" like that? Brings to mind the "old days" when it was like sometimes my mom would look for ways to set me up with a girl, like when a girl I bumped into at a party I went to, I ended up bumping into again at the library, and she not-so-subtly mentioned she also works at Baskin-Robbins (like she was trying to lure me in or something), suddenly, it's lke my mom kept wanting to go to Baskin-Robbins, with ulterior motives in mind.What's worse, my dad tried to pay a guy to take me on a date the other day.
You know something? I actually hate it when someone in the family brings over a "not-quite-part-of-the-family" boyfriend/girlfriend to a family fuction (like holiday dinners and such) and suddenly the family has to act like that not-quite-part-of-the-family boyfriend/girlfriend IS part of the family... it's just really awkward. Like a few years ago, when my uncle's daughter (he's not a biological uncle, so his daughter isn't my cousin) brought her baby daddy (and their baby) to Thanksgiving... talk about awkwardness.He's always wondering why me and my other college age cousin aren't bringing significant others to family functions
I'm not a fan either, but our immediate family is so small everyone gets visibly excited when there's a new person in the mix at a function. It's like a bunch of hungry animals getting a meal for the first time in days. There are only seven children total on both my mother and father's side; one lives in Denver, so that leaves six of us at family functions. The oldest one (only 22, mind you) is engaged to be married despite having the social skills of a pile of bricks, so that leaves my cousin and I as the next focus of attention, especially since the other three are still in high school, so nobody really cares if they're in a relationship or not as long as they go to prom or whatever. There's a relative lack of space in family to hide from questions.You know something? I actually hate it when someone in the family brings over a "not-quite-part-of-the-family" boyfriend/girlfriend to a family fuction (like holiday dinners and such) and suddenly the family has to act like that not-quite-part-of-the-family boyfriend/girlfriend IS part of the family... it's just really awkward.