That is great it works for you, I suppose.
Again…I’m speaking as an adult child. I can most certainly speak to what it is like to BE an adult child. Saying that I have no authority to offer my advice is incredibly dismissive and even a bit sanctimonious. I am very clear that I am on the receiving end of such a decision. I think it is fair to be absolutely honest about what the consequences to my parents would be had they made different decisions. Traveling is expensive, and if we had to add a hotel, we couldn’t have gone.
My parents would have been within their rights to do so, but again, they would of “suffered” the natural consequence of not seeing me.
And within the OP’s experience, it’s a very valid discussion. Not allowing for a college (and beyond) adult child to have visiting accommodations for themselves and their boyfriend/girlfriend (separate, of course) seems harsh and heavy-handed. The idea that a parent would refuse to accommodate distant travelers, or be upset that their adult child was accommodated as a distant traveler in perfectly moral conditions (separate rooms, even separate floors) is pertinent to this discussion. You are interjecting the opinion that it is not permissible. You have opened the topic for discussion.
My parents and my inlaws are ALL very traditional. Yet they all were more than happy to help two adults have accommodation.
Katie is a young person in this situation. She would have every right to be appalled and avoid traveling to the home of someone for holidays who refused to accommodate her traveling boyfriend (who, presumably, would be alone). It would also be terrible if her parents told her not to go solely because they were upset that she was being accommodated (in separate quarters) at their home overnight.
I, for one, have no issue with her trying to begin new holiday traditions…my issue is with the impracticality of traveling to Flordia for a winter holiday…which is a TERRIBLE idea.
I guess it also comes from the perspective of someone who’s had to miss holidays because I was 400 miles away. I haven’t been home for Easter in over a decade, and for Christmas, since I was engaged. My brothers and I are all close in age, so it’s different, but there are many things besides boyfriends–like jobs in general–that can make it impossible to travel as one establishes an adult life.
Putting any bariers in the way of that will only burn bridges.