| We don't give "gear" for Christmas. If my kid needs a new bat, its part of the cost of playing the sport. |
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I spent less than $150 on my teen. She got air pods, some mascara, and a rare beauty blush.
Two sets of grandparents and 5 aunts/uncles add a lot more gifts so I keep it small. |
But baseball isn’t a need. |
| I think people who claim to spend so little on christmas have younger kids or they just buy their kids what they need through out the year so they dont need to go overboard at christmas. |
| We only do "wants" not "needs" at Christmas and we go a little crazy. I love Christmas and this is also how my parents did Christmas. Needs for sports, clothing, school related things are purchased throughout the year. Neither grandparents are alive and we don't have extended family in the area, so it is just us. I wish it wasn't! |
Mine buys it with his own money. He works in the summers and has bought himself a gaming laptop, a gaming system, AirPods, etc. |
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I don't use Christmas as budgeting. I want kids who are old enough to have a budget to manage, even if it’s big. I never want the answer to be “maybe for Christmas” or “combined Christmas and Birthday” because I think that just becomes a way to avoid honest budgeting.
But OP, I would never say something judgmental about you doing it differently. |
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“Sorry, Larlo, you’ll have to wait nine months for your new cleats. Try not to grow out of them between December and April.” |
Ugh |
Same here- and I have an only child who very rarely asks for wants during the year. Things are usually tight financially despite both parents working full time and not taking expensive trips/buying designer things all the time, we both drive reasonable cars. We use our Christmas bonuses to top off gifts for DD. |
| We also do not give practical kid or teen gifts, so the stuff my DD ends up getting is kind of frivolous unless it is something she needs, but is more expensive than what we would normally spend. In our house sheets and broken bikes would get replaced as needed. A laptop for school would also be considered a practical item unless it were a higher end model than needed. That's why we don't spend much on gifts. But you should just do what works for your family. Everyone's finances are completely different. |
My teen’s idea of what is a need for a new bat (or hockey stick or whatever) is different than what I think of is a need. I’ll have a price point in mind and he’ll want the $250 (on sale) bat or stick. If that’s the case, the more expensive one will be given as a Christmas or birthday present. Either bought early when a stick breaks and is needed for play (then wrapped up for Christmas) or a picture is wrapped up and the item is purchased closer to the start of the season (baseball). I do think many of the people who give only a want/need/read gift buy a lot more throughout the year than I do. Or they don’t mention they have generous grandparents who buy a lot of Christmas presents. I do what works best for our family and budget and not worry about others. |
| My kids get basic needs throughout the year, like clothes and sneakers and sports gear, as they outgrow things. Christmas is for fun extras like a special soccer jersey, a nice sweater, books, board games, fitness accessories, a box of their favorite snacks. We don’t have any living grandparents or nearby family, so I tend to buy more smaller items to stay within budget and have something for them to unwrap on Christmas morning. Luckily, they never ask for anything expensive. |
I find they are usually wealthy which means they are getting big gifts all throughout the year anyway. |