I’ll buy things like books whenever. I’ll by a board game if I think my kid will like it. If it’s close to Xmas or bday then I’ll save it. I’ve also saved things for rainy days, etc. |
I was raised my a mentally ill mother. As a result, I have a lot of guilt surrounding buying things for myself, to the point where I feel overly indulgent replacing threadbare socks. I was routinely told I was a spoiled brat. I’m in therapy now and have been for years. I’m genuinely trying to figure out how to act like a normal person and not screw up my kid. |
I think there’s a balance for kids that young though. I remember Christmas being sort of painful when my DS was 2 because it was a chore to get him to open all the gazillion presents from the grandparents. He just wanted to play with the ones he had already opened (but the adults did not want to sit around the tree all day waiting for him to open the rest). That said, OP, a toy kitchen and food to go with it plus some puzzles does not sound excessive. The toy kitchen may be expensive, but it is a single object, so I don’t think you are setting up extreme expectations. |
Just because someone is spoiled (which, most of us are spoiled with material possessions) does not make them a brat.
Puzzles, puppets, and a play kitchen seems like a very reasonable number/type of gifts for a 2 year old at Christmas. Our kids only get new toys at Christmas or their birthdays with rare exceptions when it seems to make sense (for example, both their bdays are in winter but last summer we bought them some new outdoor toys since they can use those in summer). We do sometimes get them new books or puzzles at other times of the year. And we replace things like art supplies, bath toys as needed. |
When they were younger like your DC, quite often. Because I believed that toys for that age are educational as well as for fun and kids that age change so much over the course of a year, I didn't want to save them only for Christmas and birthdays. One one of my DC's case, birthday and Christmas were in the same month so it would have been a lot one month then nothing for 12 months. If my 2 yo got really good at doing puzzles, I wasn't going to make him wait a year to get more.
Now my kids are older and I get them toys less often. My 7 yo can wait 6 months for more LOL dolls. |
Way too often- big / expensive toys few times a year, small/ cheap ones few times a month. My kids are 7 and 2 ... |
I buy things whenever and keep a stash in the basement to rotate through. I try to think ahead to what the next developmental stage will be and have things on hand (former preschool teacher, old habits die hard).
If I notice he’s really into something, I might pick up a random toy here or there—like this summer he was really into Rescue Bots, or when he really started liking longer books. But those aren’t gifts in my mind. Birthday (spring) and Christmas are when he gets gifts to unwrap. |