Do your in-laws secretly think you're a twat?

THEY were pleasant enough to your face this weekend, but do they mean it? Or did they start doing mocking impressions of you the moment the door closed? Find out: 

How did they greet you?

A) Hugs and kisses, delight, enquiries about what’s going on in my life where they’ve remembered everything I told them last time, couldn’t be more pleased to see me
B) A polite handshake because they’re reserved like that, and then often they’ll leave me alone in a room which is fine, if I wanted a cup of tea I could ask for one

Did they cook you a meal? 

A) We tell them not to go overboard but they do every single time, a table groaning with roast lamb, all the trimmings, and homemade roulade to finish
B) Yes, well they put pizzas in, and garlic bread. They do cook but only when my wife visits without me there. I presume they worry I’ll be too judgemental

Did they get you an Easter egg? 

A) There was a whole egg hunt set up for us, running around encouraged by them to find all these clever hiding places. ‘Should have known you’d end up with more than anyone,’ my father-in-law quipped admiringly
B) Yes, and it doesn’t matter that it’s Aldi because they do really excellent eggs. Moser-Roth is actually a leading continental confectionary brand

How was conversation? 

A) Flowed beautifully. ‘I forget how you get after a few glasses of wine,’ laughed my mother-in-law as I animatedly told her about my work colleagues
B) They’re not very chatty, not even with their own flesh-and-blood, and everything I say is followed by a long silence as if they’re taking it in. Good listening is an art

Who paid for your wedding?

A) They did. Insisted on going the whole hog, big reception, live band, the lot. ‘Such a shame it had to be him,’ I thought I heard them say on the day, but actually they’d said ‘that we’ll never do it again’ and I’d misheard
B) We did. Said it would teach us a useful lesson about taking responsibility. Anyway, they’d already paid for her sister’s wedding the year before, which was massive and cost loads

Do they visit you much?

A) No, they like to give us our own space, though they’re always straight over to help when I’m away on business trips. And they make sure I leave before I get back so as not to crowd me
B) Not much. There always seems to be a reason why they can’t make it, whether it’s ‘we’re worried the dog might be ill’ or ‘we’re expecting a parcel that day unfortunately’

ANSWERS

Mostly As: Your in-laws put up a good pretence but clearly hate you, your face, your boring diatribes about the office and your selfish, greedy ways. But they’ll never admit it, so who cares?

Mostly Bs: Your in-laws barely even bother to hide how much they hate you, treating you as a weapons-grade dickhead they will resent until their dying day. Luckily the feeling is decidedly mutual and suits everyone.

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Badgers still unable to cross a f**king road

BADGERS remain utterly incapable of crossing roads while avoiding oncoming traffic, anyone who drove through a rural area over the weekend has confirmed. 

The woodland animals, despite having close to a century to get used to the idea, have evidently yet to master the art of not stopping dead directly in front of a five-tonne HGV travelling at sixty miles per hour.

Professor Henry Brubaker, of the Institute for Studies, said: “Farmers can stop asking for a badger cull. Judging by the roads, there’s one already in rapid progress.

“These animals have been around for millions of years. They’ve beaten predators, ice ages and the destruction of their habitats. Is it really too much to ask that they look both ways before strolling out onto the A34?

“Our roads are lined with their corpses. What are they even crossing for? They mainly eat invertebrates which exist in ample quantities on both sides of major highways.

“Fair enough if this was the 1950s and the Morris Minor was relatively unknown, but come on. I’m not saying they need to memorise the entire Highway Code, but a few basics might be nice.

“The rest of the Tufty Club seem to make it. You don’t see squirrels or rabbits anywhere near as often because they were taught to stop, look, listen. But do badgers bother? Do they bollocks.”

Badger Martin Bishop said: “See that big thing coming at us really fast? I reckon I can f**k it right up.”