a1edition
May 16, 2011, 12:28 PM
Last year my best friend moved to Nashville from Michigan. She ended up meeting a man a few months ago and recently announced she's engaged. We were very happy and excited for her up until this week.
Allow me to backtrack slightly. I'm in my 40's as is my friend. Though she is a lady, I'm a guy. We've been best friends for years to the point where she's closer than my own sister. She was best person at my wedding and her kids (boy and girl both teens) were ushers. She and my wife are extremely close friends. We've watched her kids grow up (their dad is not in the picture), have babysat the kids on a multitude of occasions when my friend had to go out of town on business.
I'd planned on flying down to Nashville not only to meet the fiancé, but to also take the kids to the last Harry Potter film. It's been a tradition, since their mom doesn't like the movies and I do, that I've taken them for the last five movies. My friend insisted that I stay at her house while in town. My wife, is working on her masters and cant' make the trip due to that time being midterms.
So I booked the flight and thought all was well. I was truly looking forward to the trip. Until this past weekend, when I received a frantic call from my friend. She's was in tears and more upset than I've ever heard her.
She was calling to explain that when she went to tell her fiancé I was coming down to meet him, he in her worked "freaked out". Though he didn't get physical he came darn close. He completely lost his temper then just left. They don't live together, she owns her own house, he his.
A couple of days later, yes he disappeared for two days, he came back and got in her face. He told her, "an engaged woman has no business visiting with a man who isn't her kin." He then explained that there was no way he would allow, a) me to stay in her house or b) her to see me even if I stayed in a hotel. So I'm clear, it's not as though she's never mentioned me. I was the first person to get a call when they became engaged. My wife and I were the first to send a huge wine basket, to the both of them for congratulations. We talk ALL the time.
Her fiancé was born and raised in the South. Nashville area to be precise. He's also Southern Baptist. He's in his 40's and has two kids of his own. Up until this week everything I'd heard about him from my friend as well as the kids, was he is a great guy. A true southern gentleman.
Does this add up? I've lived in the South growing up. It's been a few decades, but I lived in TN, LA, AR and TX. I'm a Southern Baptist myself. But this reaction completely stumps me. "Kin" to me is family you pick. Those kids are like a niece and nephew to me and truly, my friend is a sister. Should I be at all concerned about this?
My friend really doesn't know how to handle it. He apparently told her that was the way it is in the South and she needs to learn. I frankly think that sounds like a power play from a control freak.
Bottom line, is that I told her I didn't want to be the root of any issues, so I canceled the trip.
So my question is this. Did I trample all over some Southern etiquette on this or is he using that as an "excuse" for something else?
Allow me to backtrack slightly. I'm in my 40's as is my friend. Though she is a lady, I'm a guy. We've been best friends for years to the point where she's closer than my own sister. She was best person at my wedding and her kids (boy and girl both teens) were ushers. She and my wife are extremely close friends. We've watched her kids grow up (their dad is not in the picture), have babysat the kids on a multitude of occasions when my friend had to go out of town on business.
I'd planned on flying down to Nashville not only to meet the fiancé, but to also take the kids to the last Harry Potter film. It's been a tradition, since their mom doesn't like the movies and I do, that I've taken them for the last five movies. My friend insisted that I stay at her house while in town. My wife, is working on her masters and cant' make the trip due to that time being midterms.
So I booked the flight and thought all was well. I was truly looking forward to the trip. Until this past weekend, when I received a frantic call from my friend. She's was in tears and more upset than I've ever heard her.
She was calling to explain that when she went to tell her fiancé I was coming down to meet him, he in her worked "freaked out". Though he didn't get physical he came darn close. He completely lost his temper then just left. They don't live together, she owns her own house, he his.
A couple of days later, yes he disappeared for two days, he came back and got in her face. He told her, "an engaged woman has no business visiting with a man who isn't her kin." He then explained that there was no way he would allow, a) me to stay in her house or b) her to see me even if I stayed in a hotel. So I'm clear, it's not as though she's never mentioned me. I was the first person to get a call when they became engaged. My wife and I were the first to send a huge wine basket, to the both of them for congratulations. We talk ALL the time.
Her fiancé was born and raised in the South. Nashville area to be precise. He's also Southern Baptist. He's in his 40's and has two kids of his own. Up until this week everything I'd heard about him from my friend as well as the kids, was he is a great guy. A true southern gentleman.
Does this add up? I've lived in the South growing up. It's been a few decades, but I lived in TN, LA, AR and TX. I'm a Southern Baptist myself. But this reaction completely stumps me. "Kin" to me is family you pick. Those kids are like a niece and nephew to me and truly, my friend is a sister. Should I be at all concerned about this?
My friend really doesn't know how to handle it. He apparently told her that was the way it is in the South and she needs to learn. I frankly think that sounds like a power play from a control freak.
Bottom line, is that I told her I didn't want to be the root of any issues, so I canceled the trip.
So my question is this. Did I trample all over some Southern etiquette on this or is he using that as an "excuse" for something else?