This. OP owes it to that family to clarify. She obviously won’t offer to give it back unless it was a mistake. |
Returning a gift is rude. Write a nice thank you note. Maybe take the two boys out somewhere and use the money to pay for the activity. |
Why? Because she assumes they can't afford it. |
No, that’s really rude. Accept the gift graciously. I don’t think it’s a big deal. I carry about 15 $100 bills with me when I go out. One of the few left who likes cash. I could see forgetting to get a present and putting a bill in a card from CVS. Everyone is different. And don’t try to judge her based on car and house. It doesn’t work. |
We had a Spanish-speaking family in my kid's preK class bring their son to our daughter's 4th birthday, which was "no presents" and just for kids to play in the bounce house and eat cake and get their faces painted, and they put a $50 gift card in her bday card! I was also flummoxed and didn't want to accept it or be rude enough to return it. We had a plan to give him a $50 present for his birthday but they moved away before we had a chance. I still feel uneasy about taking the money and never making it even. |
$50 is not the stretch for everyone you think it is. Pay it forward by being generous with someone else. |
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This is OP. I did text the mom because my DH and I both felt weird about accepting it - for context, we are not a high income family ourselves, we spent $125 total on birthday gifts for our own kid from both parents and siblings. So it's not me assuming they can't afford it because they speak Spanish, it's that we feel awkward about a school friend spending that much on our kid, and are not able to reciprocate at the same scale either.
I felt horribly and painfully awkward bringing it up, she said "keep it, your son is a good friend to mine," and hopefully she doesn't feel as deeply embarrassed as I do by this interaction. Kid will write a nice thank you note and we will do our best to spring for stuff in future. |
I’m glad you asked. Now you know. Don’t feel bad, it was their choice to give the gift, you don’t have to make it equal. Maybe you’ve given him a lot of rides and they are grateful, you never know. Just accept it gracefully and don’t make it awkward by feeling the need to make some balance that is impossible. |
This turned out to be a nice story. Both mom's are great here. Your son is probably a great kid! |
| Nice job. Hope your child had a happy birthday. |
Great ending! |
| Wait. You're not a high income family yet you spent $125 on birthday gifts for your child?! I too, am "not a high income family" earning five figures and I wouldn't spend more than $30 on gifts for a birthday child. |
How is wanting to communicate racist?! Google translate is fine. I speak Spanish as my first language and many people use this. And, yes, $100 is too much. I’d assume it’s a mistake- and I’m rich myself. I give $30 to classmates and a really special friend might get a $50 gift. |
Do you understand English? She means she spent $125 on presents for her own kid, not some random child. |
I would feel horribly awkward and felt like I need to reciprocate right away. People need to realize this when they give gifts to others. It’s not cool to give expensive stuff to non-family . It makes things weird. $25-50 is the norm. Unless you are affluent family, inviting affluent kids. You would know if you are one |