Fleurpepper
Doodledog ''it's as easy to be in trouble for 'not responding' to a message''
honestly? OK if you don't respond at all- or if it is a true emergency- but otherwise? A couple of hours surely don't matter! This is a form of bullying.
My point is that one person's view is not necessarily another's, and both participants can be insistent that theirs is right, with associated judgement - as your post has proved.
Until an etiquette has been established it isn't as simple as people saying 'I won't allow this' - well, it is, but as with other attempts at dominating social spheres it won't always end well. As the OP had been invited to visit, it is hard to believe that the niece and nephew didn't want her company, or that they would be happy for her to feel uncomfortable, so it sounds to me as though there was a mismatch of expectations, and a misunderstanding of how each of the parties felt.
FWIW, I agree that a companion being on a phone can be very irritating, but that's why I asked what was meant by 'returned to their social media'. I did some research many years ago into the impact of mobile phones (before smartphones were invented) and one of the findings was that they facilitated a shift in power from the caller to the recipient. Previously people would break off conversations to answer the phone, jump out of the bath to pick up before the caller hung up, stay in waiting for the phone to ring (the subject of many popular songs
) and so on. With the advent of mobiles, people could choose when to answer, as they could see who the caller was and ring back when it was more convenient for them. Not everyone liked it, and older* people often complained that their offspring were being rude by not dropping everything to answer - 'I know she's in, as it's Tuesday, but she clearly can't be bothered to talk to me', whilst younger people were relieved at being able to finish what they were doing before having to take a call.
There were many other findings that I won't bore you with, but the main thrust was that this shift in the balance of 'power' was perceived by some as rudeness and others as liberation, and that there was little attempt to negotiate a middle ground - basically it came down to perception and judgement. Things have moved on a lot since phones that could only be used for (expensive) calls and short texts, but the social negotiation needed when there is such a major shift in communication hasn't taken place, which can, I think, lead to misunderstandings.
*this was not exclusively an age thing - I can't remember the figures now, but whilst it cut across age and sex groups, it was mainly older people who expected instant pick-up when they'd called at a time to suit them, and didn't see the convenience of the receiver of the call as important.