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Funny stories about family

They Understand What You Are Seine

| Related | June 11, 2013

(My sister and I are American, but she lives in Paris. I barely speak any French, so she and her friends speak English when I visit. During my first visit, I am surprised at the way men harass us on the street.)

Middle-Aged Man: *calls out to us in French*

Me: “Was he speaking to us?”

Sister: “It’s nothing; just ignore him.”

Man’s Friend: *makes obviously rude comment*

Me: “Did I do something to insult them?”

Sister’s Friend: “No, they’re just being men.”

(As the two men continue to jeer, I get increasingly uncomfortable. My sister sees this.)

Sister: “Calm down. I’ll take care of this.”

(She walks over, smiles, and speaks to them politely for a bit. They turn white, and almost run away.)

Me: “What did you just say to them?”

Sister: “I just asked them to stop being so rude, nothing major.”

(I later ask my sister’s friend what everyone was saying. Here’s a rough translation:)

Middle-Aged Man: “Hey gorgeous, come over here! Hey, do you even speak French?”

Man’s Friend: “Just listen to them! Stupid Americans; probably can’t understand us.”

Sister: “Listen, you inbred sons of syphilitic w*****. I don’t like the way you’re speaking to my baby sister. She may not understand you, but I can. And if you don’t stop, I will gladly cut off your pathetic excuses for manhood, and feed them to the pigeons. Okay?”

(I love my sister.)

Playing A Game On The Kids

| Related | June 10, 2013

(My mother and sister are visiting at my place with my roommate. Our apartment is not set up for small children, so we have to find something to occupy my sister’s kids, who are three and five years old. The three-year-old has requested to watch cartoons, and I have put in a DVD of episodes of a popular cartoon show from before they were born. The five-year-old wants to play video games. A small argument breaks out between them. I come back into the room a few minutes later to find the video running, but the kids messing with game controllers.)

Me: “What are the kids doing?”

Roommate: “They’re ‘playing’ [popular cartoon] game.”

(This takes me a minute, but everyone seems amused by it, and my sister is pleased that her kids are sitting quietly.)

Roommate: *to kids* “Keep at it; each level is about 20 minutes long!”

(It isn’t until the episode ends and the credits roll, that it dawns on the five-year-old that he’s been had. An outraged voice comes from in front of the TV.)

Five-Year-Old: “Hey! This is a video!”

World Of Walmart

| Related | June 10, 2013

(I call my brother from the parking lot at our apartment, to ask him to help carry groceries inside.)

Me: “Could you please help me carry these groceries? It will take you five minutes.”

Brother: “Don’t you see! I don’t have five minutes for petty groceries! I’m saving the world… of Warcraft!”

A Bridal Shower Of Criticism

, , , , , | Related | June 10, 2013

(My mom has a habit of being a massive control freak. My older sister is getting married, and has made it clear to my mother that she and her fiancé will be planning things the way they want to — without my mother’s input. Naturally, my mother has thrown a series of temper tantrums.)

Mom: “Oh, you need to let me know when we’re going dress shopping; I need to okay your choices. I need to know that your dress is acceptable.”

Sister: “Mom, I already picked out my dress. I went dress shopping with my friends, because they actually gave me input based on what I like, and not what they like.”

Mom: “HOW COULD YOU BUY A WEDDING DRESS WITHOUT ME? I HAVE A RIGHT TO HAVE A SAY IN WHAT DRESS YOU BUY!”

Sister: “Well, if you were chipping in for it, I’d agree with you. Since you’re not, you don’t. And once again, you tend not to respect my tastes, so I left you out. If you could respect that you and I like different things and not insult what I like, I might’ve let you come.”

Mom: “You are such an ungrateful spoiled brat!”

(Two weeks later…)

Mom: “Your sister needs to know what her maid-of-honor duties are.”

Me: “Mom, [Sister’s Best Friend] is going to be her maid of honor.”

Mom: “No, no, you are. Your sister just has to accept that she only gets so much say in how this goes.”

Sister: “Mother, you do realize that since you aren’t paying for any of this, you get absolutely zero say? If you keep acting like this, I’m going to tell the ushers not to let you in.”

Mom: “You can’t do that! I’m your mother; I have a right to attend! You have no right to keep me away!”

Sister: “See, that’s where you’re wrong. If [Fiancé] and I are paying to rent the space — and we are — then we have final word on the guest list. You might want to consider that.”

(It is the day before the wedding, and I’m helping set up the reception hall.)

Mom: “None of this is the way I wanted it!”

Sister: “Maybe you missed the part where I’m the one getting married tomorrow, Mom.”

Mom: “Well, this wouldn’t be such a disaster if you’d let me help!”

Sister: “No, if I’d let you help, then our wedding would be what you wanted, instead of what we wanted. Instead, since you had no say, it is what we wanted, and we’re going to have happy memories of the day.”

Mom: “I am your mother! I had a right to plan your wedding!”

Me: “Mom, stop it. I wanted to just stay out of this but [Sister] is right.”

(I look around the reception hall.)

Me: “And besides, this looks great. It’s classy, it’ll be beautiful, and the only reason you don’t like it is because she did it without you!”

Mom:Fine! I’m not coming!”

(She really didn’t come, and all because my sister and her fiancé planned the wedding without her. It was a beautiful ceremony and reception. Five years later, and they are still happily married.)


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Charged With Stupidity

| Related | June 10, 2013

(I receive a text from my brother, who I don’t live with.)

Brother: “You still got your old iPhone?”

Me: “What? No, I left it there when I got my new phone.”

Brother: “Where? I need to test something.”

Me: “With dad. Ask him.”

Brother: “I don’t think he’d be happy with my suggestion.”

Me: “What…?”

Brother: “I heard it’s possible to fully charge an iPhone by putting it in a microwave for one minute.”

(At this point I call him, gobsmacked.)

Me: “What? You’re an idiot!”

Brother: “Huh? Why?”

Me: “Go look up why you don’t put metal in the microwave! Now!”

Brother: “It’s not metal; it’s aluminium!”


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