PDA in Front of Family?

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Blessings on you Bernadette and your dear husband.

What you recognize is the pain you have will be with you, even if your family members didn’t hold hands or show affection.

Coming to terms with your own pain is important. Allowing your friends and family members to not feel guilty expressing being a couple in front of you is important, as well.

On another note: I invite you and your dear husband to attend a World Wide Marriage Encounter Weekend. It is not a counseling program. It is a very private time between husband and wife. It is a very beautiful weekend. wwme.org/

For couples who are struggling, a Retrouvaille program may be better suited.
retrouvaille.org/
 
Blessings on you Bernadette and your dear husband.

What you recognize is the pain you have will be with you, even if your family members didn’t hold hands or show affection.

Coming to terms with your own pain is important. Allowing your friends and family members to not feel guilty expressing being a couple in front of you is important, as well.

On another note: I invite you and your dear husband to attend a World Wide Marriage Encounter Weekend. It is not a counseling program. It is a very private time between husband and wife. It is a very beautiful weekend. wwme.org/

For couples who are struggling, a Retrouvaille program may be better suited.
retrouvaille.org/
Thanks. We haven’t talked to family about this yet as they would more than likely take sides. We need a peaceful holiday season for our family this year.

We’re going to Retrouvaille at some point but due to my husband’s job it will be several months before he has a weekend off. He’s promised to try it before considering divorce.
 
If a person does not feel welcome because they see a couple holding hands, it is important for them to find the root of their issues and to find healing.

We are not called to down play our love for our spouse by avoiding holding hands, by avoiding a kiss, by avoiding sitting with our arms around our spouse.

We witness to others that marriage is about intimacy and part of that intimacy is holding hands, sharing a kiss in passing, or a good-bye kiss. Its not flaunting some thing or saying “look what I have that you don’t have”. It is normal and acceptable for spouses to hold hands, share a kiss, and share “I love you.”
I don’t get this “find the root of their issues and find healing” thing. Again, it is a simple matter of enjoying something in front of other people that they are not invited to share. Is asking married people not to do that really that much to ask? Do you not know that celibates and those who are widowed do feel left out when they see couples touching each other in sexual ways (that is, ways that they would never touch anyone else–I don’t’ know what else to call it) all of the time? Is it not a demonstration to young very-much-in-love couples that it is possible to master yourself for the comfort of others who aren’t invited into your mutual admiration society?

As far as that goes, where do you draw the line between what you get to enjoy as a married couple and what you do for the benefit of everyone else to watch? Marriage is about all kinds of intimacy, the most intimate kinds of intimacy, and most of them are shared in a privacy that it would be rude to invade, to say the very least. No one has to “witness” the marriage bed in front of other people. What makes you think anybody else wants to watch you exchange what is private, what is too sexual for you to extend to anyone else but for some reason not too sexual for you to demonstrate for others? Why don’t you care how hey feel about that? How is that not an “issue,” just because they are the ones who are uncomfortable instead of you?

I am also not talking about not touching your spouse. I’m talking about not touching your spouse in ways you would not touch your dad or your son. I’m talking about not planting a kiss on your wife that you would not plant on your mom. I’m talking about not exchanging hugs with your husband that would make your brother feel weird to get. I don’t know why that would be too restrictive; it is what my parents did their entire lives. Nobody was in any confusion about whether or not they had a strong affection or a happy friendship in their marriage.

We live in times where the Church is trying very hard to make homosexuals feel welcome and included, and yet we are in no position to welcome and include homosexual public displays of affection of anything but the fraternal sort. I don’t see why it is a problem to at least refrain from enjoying what they can never have–and you don’t know who is or is not struggling with SSA. Again: It is only refraining from those things that others who see you are not invited to share. That is fairly basic good manners. I don’t think this is a lot to ask, really. 🤷
 
We live in times where the Church is trying very hard to make homosexuals feel welcome and included, and yet we are in no position to welcome and include homosexual public displays of affection of anything but the fraternal sort. I don’t see why it is a problem to at least refrain from enjoying what they can never have–and you don’t know who is or is not struggling with SSA. Again: It is only refraining from those things that others who see you are not invited to share. That is fairly basic good manners. I don’t think this is a lot to ask, really. 🤷
So, based on this, I should only ever hold hands with my husband when we are alone. Other wise I am doing something with my husband that I wouldn’t do with someone else.

Even in my own home, my son is there. So, that makes holding hands, a quick kiss and an arm around each other off limits. I certainly wouldn’t hold hands with my 18 year old son. He would think that quite weird.

I really think you are taking this too far.

This isn’t school, where you don’t have a cupcake unless you bring enough for everyone. (Not that I agreed with that when I was in school.) This is life. Everyone has things that others don’t. Whether it be money, cars, food, a house or a spouse.

Heck, based on what you have said, no one around me should eat bread. I can’t have gluten. So how rude is it for everyone in Mass to receive when I can’t??
 
As far as that goes, where do you draw the line between what you get to enjoy as a married couple and what you do for the benefit of everyone else to watch? Marriage is about all kinds of intimacy, the most intimate kinds of intimacy, and most of them are shared in a privacy that it would be rude to invade, to say the very least. No one has to “witness” the marriage bed in front of other people. What makes you think anybody else wants to watch you exchange what is private, what is too sexual for you to extend to anyone else but for some reason not too sexual for you to demonstrate for others? Why don’t you care how hey feel about that? How is that not an “issue,” just because they are the ones who are uncomfortable instead of you?
I agree with this. Do couples really find it that hard not to touch each other constantly for a few hours? Presumably you’re at a family function to visit and interact with family, not act like you would at home alone.

I’m surprised by the amount of posters who actually don’t care whether their affection makes anyone else uncomfortable. I agree that it’s really not a lot to expect people to tone it down a bit. There are plenty of ways to be a “witness to marriage” without physically touching each other all day. People will see how you speak to your spouse, how you serve each other, how you respect each other regardless of whether you’re sitting on his lap or not.
 
I don’t get this “find the root of their issues and find healing” thing. Again, it is a simple matter of enjoying something in front of other people that they are not invited to share. Is asking married people not to do that really that much to ask?
Someone who is upset because they see spouses holding hands or standing with their arm around the other or saying “I love you” to each other has an “issue” or a “problem” with the closeness of the couple.

For example: My husband and I are holding hands. If someone is upset because we want to hold hands - they have the “issue”. We don’t have an issue or a problem with hand holding as an acceptable way of touching in public.

The person who doesn’t want to see because it causes them pain, obviously is the person with the “issue”, the “problem”, the pain. Asking the world to stop holding hands or stop walking arm and arm or stop saying “I love you”, is not realistic.

They might want to find out “why” they are hurt when they see this. They may not want to know why. They may be fine living their life being upset when they see hand holding.

When they know why seeing another couple express affection with hand holding hurts them, they may find a way to “heal” from their pain which is the source of their hurt. It is a hurt that has a source within them that is their pain - not the hand holding of the couple.

Asking couples not to hold hands, not to sit with their arm around the other, is asking too much of the married couples of the world.
Do you not know that celibates and those who are widowed do feel left out when they see couples touching each other in sexual ways (that is, ways that they would never touch anyone else–I don’t’ know what else to call it) all of the time?
A celibate priest or religious person should be able to accept that part of married life is holding hands and other small forms of affection. Single people can also recognize this, and not be hurt when they see part of being married can mean holding hands in public.

My mother was widowed at a very early age. She has never told me she is offended by couples holding hands or sharing a kiss or saying “I love you.”

For the dear person who finds them self widowed, there is a normal grieving process. It may be hard seeing someone with a spouse, but the world does not stop holding hands because your loved one has died. The widow learns to heal from the loss of their spouse, while not asking others to appear as if their spouse is not next to them, not able to hold their hand, not able to place their arm around their shoulder.
Is it not a demonstration to young very-much-in-love couples that it is possible to master yourself for the comfort of others who aren’t invited into your mutual admiration society?
We can actually teach a young or older very-much-in-love couple about proper physical contact, when they see married couples can touch in public. Married couples can hold hands. They can walk arm in arm. They can exchange a kiss. They can say, “I love you.”

The couple-in-love but not married may also choose to do that. Some couples choose not to show affection before marriage, but it is acceptable in our society for couples to touch in those ways.
As far as that goes, where do you draw the line between what you get to enjoy as a married couple and what you do for the benefit of everyone else to watch?
The OP was very specific in asking what we thought was acceptable. She described her family. I see beauty in what she described in expressing affection within her family. I don’t think couples say, “let’s hold hands so someone can watch.”
Marriage is about all kinds of intimacy, the most intimate kinds of intimacy, and most of them are shared in a privacy that it would be rude to invade, to say the very least. No one has to “witness” the marriage bed in front of other people.
Neither I nor the OP mentioned people witnessing sexual relations of the couple. That is a huge jump from what forms of affection the OP and I have written.
What makes you think anybody else wants to watch you exchange what is private, what is too sexual for you to extend to anyone else but for some reason not too sexual for you to demonstrate for others?
Do my friends want to hold my hand during our visit? Do my friends want to sit close to me and wrap their arms across my shoulder? I don’t think so. My daughter or son might want to - as I’m their mom. I don’t think my friends want to, nor do I want to hold my friends hand on our visit.
Why don’t you care how hey feel about that? How is that not an “issue,” just because they are the ones who are uncomfortable instead of you?
I did not express that I do not care about the person who hurts because they see spouses or couples-in-love holding hands. I very much care about them.

I think for them to be upset with seeing couples hold hands, they have a deep pain. I think the pain is within them and seeing couples show affection triggers their deep pain. I would want them to find out why seeing me hold hands with my dear husband triggers their pain. I would like for them to be healed of this pain.

If they have no pain and it is just their preference not to see my holding hands with my husband, I have a different preference and that is to hold my dear husband’s hand.
 
I am also not talking about not touching your spouse. I’m talking about not touching your spouse in ways you would not touch your dad or your son. I’m talking about not planting a kiss on your wife that you would not plant on your mom. I’m talking about not exchanging hugs with your husband that would make your brother feel weird to get. I don’t know why that would be too restrictive; it is what my parents did their entire lives. Nobody was in any confusion about whether or not they had a strong affection or a happy friendship in their marriage.
You are asking the world to adapt your parent’s form of displaying affection. I choose to hold my husband’s hand in public or at a family gathering. I choose to sit with my husband’s arm around my shoulder. You and I have different family of origin examples of what is acceptable and what is not.

My dear husband would not want to spend his evening with his arm around his sister’s shoulder, but it is acceptable for him to sit that way with me.
We live in times where the Church is trying very hard to make homosexuals feel welcome and included, and yet we are in no position to welcome and include homosexual public displays of affection of anything but the fraternal sort. I don’t see why it is a problem to at least refrain from enjoying what they can never have–and you don’t know who is or is not struggling with SSA. Again: It is only refraining from those things that others who see you are not invited to share. That is fairly basic good manners. I don’t think this is a lot to ask, really. 🤷
I choose not to spend my life avoiding holding my husband’s hand or giving him a kiss, because someone may be sad because they got a divorce or their spouse died or they are single or they have same sex attraction.

I also choose to still give my husband a kiss in public even though your parents were happily married and may not have chosen to do so.

There are people at Mass who can not partake of Holy Communion. The Church does not ask the rest of us to refrain from receiving Communion because some people can not. The people who can not receive Communion may feel hurt. It may make them sad, but everyone is not asked to refrain to “protect” their pains.

Neither does the Church tell us we can not hold hands with our spouse in Mass, nor stand with our arms around our spouse at the parish pot luck.

As a married woman, I am not asked by my Church to not display affection with my husband that is different than what I would share with someone else.

I do not wish to hurt anyone by holding my husband’s hand or giving him a kiss in public. Asking me and all married couples not to do so forever because it could trigger pain in someone else is asking a lot.
 
So, based on this, I should only ever hold hands with my husband when we are alone. Other wise I am doing something with my husband that I wouldn’t do with someone else.

Even in my own home, my son is there. So, that makes holding hands, a quick kiss and an arm around each other off limits. I certainly wouldn’t hold hands with my 18 year old son. He would think that quite weird.

I really think you are taking this too far.

This isn’t school, where you don’t have a cupcake unless you bring enough for everyone. (Not that I agreed with that when I was in school.) This is life. Everyone has things that others don’t. Whether it be money, cars, food, a house or a spouse.

Heck, based on what you have said, no one around me should eat bread. I can’t have gluten. So how rude is it for everyone in Mass to receive when I can’t??
a) In an earlier post, I noted that being at home alone with children is a different case.

b) Does your son really not hug you or allow you to hold his hand? He never gives you a quick kiss? My husband kissed his mom all the time, my brothers hugged my mom, my brothers give their daughters a kiss when they see them, and my husband and his brother bear-hug each other when they see each other.

You go to Mass in the knowledge that the gathering is being held precisely in order that Holy Communion can be shared, so no, it is not remotely rude for people to receive Holy Communion in front of those who cannot receive for some reason. That would be like saying you agreed to meet your friends on a outing to a restaurant but then expected them all to go without eating because you had to fast. Also, nobody is asking you to go without food. They’re asking you to keep your touching to a level that would be considered chaste to those who are not married to each other. Again: Not a lot to ask.

BTW, we have parishioners who arrange to have special hosts consecrated for them which are extremely low in gluten. Apparently all but the most gluten-intolerant can have them without a problem.
(Check it out! catholicceliacs.org/Options.html)
 
a) In an earlier post, I noted that being at home alone with children is a different case.

b) Does your son really not hug you or allow you to hold his hand? He never gives you a quick kiss? My husband kissed his mom all the time, my brothers hugged my mom, my brothers give their daughters a kiss when they see them, and my husband and his brother bear-hug each other when they see each other.
No I don’t kiss my son on his lips. And if I walked around holding his hand, he would feel pretty awkward. Of course, if something is happening, like he is donating blood or we are having a deep conversation, I will hold his hand. And of course he hugs me or will kiss my cheek. But what you are saying is that when we are out in public we shouldn’t even do that, since I won’t kiss the cheek of, lets say, my childless co-worker.
You go to Mass in the knowledge that the gathering is being held precisely in order that Holy Communion can be shared, so no, it is not remotely rude for people to receive Holy Communion in front of those who cannot receive for some reason. That would be like saying you agreed to meet your friends on a outing to a restaurant but then expected them all to go without eating because you had to fast. Also, nobody is asking you to go without food. They’re asking you to keep your touching to a level that would be considered chaste to those who are not married to each other. Again: Not a lot to ask.
What you are asking is that I keep my touching to a level as though I am NOT married. Not to what is chaste to those that aren’t married.

It is like those that think women shouldn’t show their ankles because of what some men might think. I shouldn’t kiss my husband because of what someone might think.

Well, they should think that I am married and that I love my husband.
BTW, we have parishioners who arrange to have special hosts consecrated for them which are extremely low in gluten. Apparently all but the most gluten-intolerant can have them without a problem.
(Check it out! catholicceliacs.org/Options.html)
Yep, and if you travel to a parish that doesn’t have them, you are out of luck.
 
No I don’t kiss my son on his lips. And if I walked around holding his hand, he would feel pretty awkward. Of course, if something is happening, like he is donating blood or we are having a deep conversation, I will hold his hand. And of course he hugs me or will kiss my cheek. But what you are saying is that when we are out in public we shouldn’t even do that, since I won’t kiss the cheek of, lets say, my childless co-worker.What you are asking is that I keep my touching to a level as though I am NOT married. Not to what is chaste to those that aren’t married.

It is like those that think women shouldn’t show their ankles because of what some men might think. I shouldn’t kiss my husband because of what someone might think.

Well, they should think that I am married and that I love my husband.
Yep, and if you travel to a parish that doesn’t have them, you are out of luck.
No one said a thing about “what someone might think”, as if you shouldn’t let on that you do that in private. The question is whether you should stop and think that other people might not want to see affectionate displays that seem to presume that they are not even standing there. Yes, I think that at Thanksgiving you do not have to kiss your husband on the mouth. Is that really so hard? I do not think this is overly restrictive. Unless everyone there has a kissing partner or kissing rights or had to expect they were going to see a lot of kissing when the bell rang–New Year’s Eve parties come to mind–it is just good manners.

The context of this thread is “in front of family”, like at Thanksgiving. In public, you can walk down the street and hold hands, just as you can walk down the street eating a cupcake or talking with your friend about a party that not everyone on the entire sidewalk is being invited to.
 
You are asking the world to adapt your parent’s form of displaying affection. I choose to hold my husband’s hand in public or at a family gathering. I choose to sit with my husband’s arm around my shoulder. You and I have different family of origin examples of what is acceptable and what is not.

My dear husband would not want to spend his evening with his arm around his sister’s shoulder, but it is acceptable for him to sit that way with me.

I choose not to spend my life avoiding holding my husband’s hand or giving him a kiss, because someone may be sad because they got a divorce or their spouse died or they are single or they have same sex attraction.

I also choose to still give my husband a kiss in public even though your parents were happily married and may not have chosen to do so.

There are people at Mass who can not partake of Holy Communion. The Church does not ask the rest of us to refrain from receiving Communion because some people can not. The people who can not receive Communion may feel hurt. It may make them sad, but everyone is not asked to refrain to “protect” their pains.

Neither does the Church tell us we can not hold hands with our spouse in Mass, nor stand with our arms around our spouse at the parish pot luck.

As a married woman, I am not asked by my Church to not display affection with my husband that is different than what I would share with someone else.

I do not wish to hurt anyone by holding my husband’s hand or giving him a kiss in public. Asking me and all married couples not to do so forever because it could trigger pain in someone else is asking a lot.
No, it is not asking a lot. It is what people used to do essentially universally. It is what some areas in the country still do. If other people’s feelings do not rank near your desire to do what you want when you want to because you want to and because nobody can stop you, I won’t try to stop you, either. If the reason does not move you, then the point is entirely moot. Go ahead and choose what you want to choose; nobody is stopping you.
 
Asking me and all married couples not to do so forever because it could trigger pain in someone else is asking a lot.
No, it is not asking a lot. It is what people used to do essentially universally. It is what some areas in the country still do. If other people’s feelings do not rank near your desire to do what you want when you want to because you want to and because nobody can stop you, I won’t try to stop you, either. If the reason does not move you, then the point is entirely moot. Go ahead and choose what you want to choose; nobody is stopping you.
Thank you. I accept kissing my husband on the lips in front of family at Thanksgiving to be acceptable. I accept that kissing my husband is not a rude action.

I accept that you choose not to do the same with your husband.
 
Thanks. We haven’t talked to family about this yet as they would more than likely take sides. We need a peaceful holiday season for our family this year.

We’re going to Retrouvaille at some point but due to my husband’s job it will be several months before he has a weekend off. He’s promised to try it before considering divorce.
Dearest Bernadette, Know that is okay not to talk with your families about your marriage difficulties.

Yes, most likely your family will side with you and his family will side with him. It’s natural to side with your “baby”.

Its actually very mature to be able to see where sharing your difficulties could bring a bigger divide and less peace.

I am praying you have a peaceful holiday season. Holidays often bring disruptions even in homes were both spouses are happy together.

I hope I’m not over stepping, I encourage you to take good care of yourself during this stressful time (both with the holidays approaching and the stress of your husband struggle with staying in the marriage).

Schedule your day for proper exercise, good, healthy meals, plenty of sleep, time in the sun, time with friends, and time to enjoy yourself - even if it is for just a short time. Allow yourself time to grieve.

Pray for your dear husband. You might find it helpful to speak with someone like a therapist or priest for guidance. You could do that alone or with your dear husband.

Maybe you can do something special this week for your husband. Maybe you can schedule a fun date night or couple time in the home doing something you like together.

Tonight, I will light a prayer candle for you two and for the blessings on attending Retrouvaille.

May God give you both peace. May God draw your hearts closer together. May God help heal your husband’s difficulties that causes him to think about divorce. May your home be peaceful during the holiday seasons. May you find stronger love for each other with each passing day.
 
Dearest Bernadette, Know that is okay not to talk with your families about your marriage difficulties.

Yes, most likely your family will side with you and his family will side with him. It’s natural to side with your “baby”.

Its actually very mature to be able to see where sharing your difficulties could bring a bigger divide and less peace.

I am praying you have a peaceful holiday season. Holidays often bring disruptions even in homes were both spouses are happy together.

I hope I’m not over stepping, I encourage you to take good care of yourself during this stressful time (both with the holidays approaching and the stress of your husband struggle with staying in the marriage).

Schedule your day for proper exercise, good, healthy meals, plenty of sleep, time in the sun, time with friends, and time to enjoy yourself - even if it is for just a short time. Allow yourself time to grieve.

Pray for your dear husband. You might find it helpful to speak with someone like a therapist or priest for guidance. You could do that alone or with your dear husband.

Maybe you can do something special this week for your husband. Maybe you can schedule a fun date night or couple time in the home doing something you like together.

Tonight, I will light a prayer candle for you two and for the blessings on attending Retrouvaille.

May God give you both peace. May God draw your hearts closer together. May God help heal your husband’s difficulties that causes him to think about divorce. May your home be peaceful during the holiday seasons. May you find stronger love for each other with each passing day.
Thank you so much. We are attending counseling as much as possible with his work schedule. We are starting with a new counselor who claims to be 100% pro-marriage so I’m praying we see results. Thanks for the reassurance on not talking to family. I often wonder if it’s the right thing to do and do not want any ill feelings between dh and my parents, especially with the upcoming holidays.

With that said, I am sure that both of us will probably be sad regardless of whether we see kissing or hand holding during the holidays. Our families aren’t usually the type to do huge displays of affection between couples so it wouldn’t be an issue anyway.
 
Well, they should think that I am married and that I love my husband.
BTW–I’m pretty sure that the other people at Thanksgiving know you’re married. The ones who weren’t literally at your wedding probably haven’t known you when you weren’t married to each other.

PDAs impress your spouse, and there is nothing wrong with that, but they do not impress anyone (who is not totally naïve) about the quality of your relationship. This is because the general population has cheapened them. Total strangers will exchange PDAs in bars on the night they meet, so that these actions no longer mean “I love you.” They have come to mean “I’d like to get away from these people and get you alone somewhere.” This is not something everyone wants to know, even if you are married.

The things that impress people about a marriage are when the spouses speak positively about each other, refuse to complain about or disparage each other, refrain from flirting with people not their spouse, refrain from raving about how “sexy” some member of the opposite sex looks, and so on. If you do that, people will draw positive conclusions about marriage in general and your marriage in particular. If you don’t do that, then PDAs will not enhance people’s impression of you. They will see your PDAs as something you do for yourselves, because that is what they are. (Not that there is automatically something wrong with that.)

My point is that the idea that PDAs between spouses “witness” something about marriage should not be overemphasized. Other things count for a lot more. And do I frown on fleeting PDAs between spouses? No. I’m only saying that PDAs get to be too much for everyone else long before they get to be too much for those enjoying them, and they are particularly tiresome for those who have no one present to exchange PDAs with. Restraint is in order. You don’t have to believe it, but it is.
 
My husband and I very rarely do PDA. Even when he comes home from a deployment, a chaste peck on the lips is all we do, until we are home. I think the reason why we don’t show PDA is because we are from Alabama and we are an interracial couple. A lot of folks from back home would give us dirty looks, as if we were a gay couple. Our immediate families are ok with us. My mom LOVES my husband, and my MIL has made the comment that I should have been her biological daughter, because we act so much alike. Even with the love our in-laws show towards us, we still don’t PDA around them. I have a problem when my little, teenaged sister cuddles with her boyfriend on the couch. I just don’t think it is tasteful.
I’m all for giving hugs and kisses, but usually at family gatherings I’m hugging and kissing those family members that I don’t always get to see. lol.
 
My husband and I very rarely do PDA. Even when he comes home from a deployment, a chaste peck on the lips is all we do, until we are home. I think the reason why we don’t show PDA is because we are from Alabama and we are an interracial couple. A lot of folks from back home would give us dirty looks, …

Our immediate families are ok with us.
I’m sorry people made you feel uneasy as a couple. I pray you can let their misguided thoughts not cause you harm. All people deserve to marry and love the spouse they choose without any concern for skin tone or race or culture.

May God bless you and your dear husband.
 
My husband and I very rarely do PDA. Even when he comes home from a deployment, a chaste peck on the lips is all we do, until we are home. I think the reason why we don’t show PDA is because we are from Alabama and we are an interracial couple. A lot of folks from back home would give us dirty looks, as if we were a gay couple. Our immediate families are ok with us. My mom LOVES my husband, and my MIL has made the comment that I should have been her biological daughter, because we act so much alike. Even with the love our in-laws show towards us, we still don’t PDA around them. I have a problem when my little, teenaged sister cuddles with her boyfriend on the couch. I just don’t think it is tasteful.
I’m all for giving hugs and kisses, but usually at family gatherings I’m hugging and kissing those family members that I don’t always get to see. lol.
I’m not from the US. I had no idea that mixed marriages caused anyone to raise an eyebrow these days. In my area, mixed marriages of ‘Europeans’ and Asians are quite common and completely unremarkable - as it should be.
 
Thank you. I accept kissing my husband on the lips in front of family at Thanksgiving to be acceptable.

I accept that kissing my husband is not a rude action.

I accept that you choose not to do the same with your husband.
I have to agree.

EasterJoy,
You may find it rude or not acceptable. But I see absolutely no problem with it.

And I find that your reasons don’t make sense. At least to me.
 
This is a little off topic, but this post got me wondering, because I don’t consider kissing my husband PDA. I kiss my husband on the lips at mass during the offering the sign of peace. Is this wrong to do? I never thought of it because I kiss all my family during the sign of the peace since I was a little girl.
 
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