This. So many factors. How much travel, who has kids, how old are the kids, do elderly relatives have travel issues, other family dynamics. There’s no one right answer. |
NP here. This is kind of what happens to us. MIL visits for Thanksgiving. My parents come for Christmas. Then FIL and Step MIL expect us to fly to them after Christmas. They are the ones that expect us to travel at the holidays and are the ones who never visit us, despite the fact that they travel nearly every weekend somewhere. It’s really frustrating but I want my kids to know their grandparents so away we go. |
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My brother and SIL do easter & Christmas with one family, new years and Thanksgiving with the other. The next year they switch it. 5 hours apart and they have friends in both places.
It works well. |
We ended up with Christmas together with my sister’s family day mine because it was fun to have the whole family together- every other year. On the other, we sometimes had Christmas with DH’s family and sometimes not. As things went on, we ended up doing New Year’s with one of DH’s sisters and spent Christmas with my parents so they would not be alone (preferred choice by SIL and DH’s parents were out of the picture at that point). |
We exchanged gifts with my parents at Thanksgiving. They got my daughter’s unicorn robes and slippers, so it was fun to see them wear them for movie night at home and around the house. Sometimes, we mail gifts. |
We buy online and have them shipped. No one waits to see each other in person and now it involves air travel. |
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It does *not* mean duplicates for us!
And that did take a little enforcing--beware the "but you could just, but we could just" etc kinds of comments. Our families are both at a distance, but my parents are much further away than my ILs. My MIL wanted to do essentially an extra Christmas event on the years they have Thanksgiving and my parents come for Christmas. Our answer has always been, "Let's pick a weekend in January for you guys to come down." We did the "let's travel to both sides over Christmas" routine for the first couple years we had a child, but once we were expecting our second, we established the rotation. It allows us to have some down time in our own home. |
This situation can be fixed, for sure. Consider doing gift exchanges at Thanksgiving for the side that has Thanksgiving that year--or establish that you'll visit/invite the side that doesn't get Christmas at a later weekend in January. Say outright: We really prefer to stay home for New Year's after hosting the holiday. Set the expectation that that's not an option. |
This is what we do. Except my inlaws are annoying and almost always try to force a 2nd Christmas when it's not their year. Drives me nuts, but everyone is local so I don't really have a good reason to be so annoyed. Except that my family does NOT schedule a 2nd Christmas on my inlaws years. |
Before kids we would do TG with one of the in-laws and Xmas with the other, then switch the next year. The glitch there was the one side was divorced and only one parent was remarried. Instead of splitting the time in half we'd do 3-4 hours at one house and then switch. it was a nightmare and the one parent who was alone would call if we were ten minutes late (no exaggeration). It felt more stressful than like joyful family time. After our kids got to be about 5 we still switched off for TG but stayed at home for Xmas. Our kids wanted Santa to come to our house. Extended family was and is welcome to come and stay with us for Xmas. |
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Our "rotation" is the following:
Thanksgiving we do at home - it is too short a holiday and the worst travel time. Christmas - one year with my family, one year with DH's family, one year at home, rinse and repeat. For Thanksgiving and the Christmas we spend at home, we invite anyone to join us. They never have. Typically, for the year we go to my family for Christmas, we try to visit DH's family at some point during the year and vice versa. For the year we stay home for Christmas, if we have time/enough leave we'll try to visit both families at some point during the year. "TRY" is the operative word here. I do not feel obligated to do so and do not see these trips as replacement for Christmas - they are just trips to see family and frequently line up with another holiday or family celebration (i.e., wedding, birthday, etc.). My family is in Louisiana and DH's family is in Florida. |