| You buy stuff and then whine about it. Got it. |
| Instead of buying gifts that would be useless and unwanted, I started a savings account for DC and deposited all of the small but generous Christmas and birthday checks given to DC by family (grandparents, uncle, etc). It's all added up and DC is graduating college and has the cash to buy a very nice new car. Just make sure they have presents to unwrap, but the key is not in excess! |
owning a car and driving to work/groceries etc have a much greater impact than public transit. realistically most people could take the bus and train almost anywhere, but would take 2x or 3x the time |
Yes. Money saves time. The poor spend much longer commuting, going to medical appointments than the well off do. |
I don't think other adults should ask kids directly what they want, they should ask the parents. Kids might ask for things that you don't think they should have, or kids will tell the same thing to multiple people and wind up with duplicates. Ultimately, you should have a say in what comes into your home and what your children should be allowed to have. |
| Ditto. My in laws love to give a lot of small cute but useless gifts. We agree every year not to do this, but then they do it anyway. |
I get it, op. I live in a small apartment while my in laws live in a suburban McMansion. They are always buying me things I literally can’t fit in my space. They - and apparently other people on this thread- don’t understand that not all of us have an extra basement or garage to put things in. |
Most families don’t give $ |
| ^ my family would be horrified by it |
| You're not a minimalist; you are a recovering shopaholic. |
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We are approaching retirement and trying to downsize our household and most of these gifts are just more clutter. I feel guilty donating gifts. I have shelves of boxed gadgets, small appliances, candles and bowls, glasses - unused. All gifts. Wasted money. Future landfill.
We want to stop the gift exchanges except for grand children, but there are too many compulsive shoppers that love to shop. Stop the insanity! |
This. I added random consumable treats to the gifts like a couple of those individual cereal boxes and other individual serving sizes of snacks they like. |
| We constantly ask my ILs not to buys us stuff for the house because we have way too much stuff and are constantly battling clutter with young kids who are constantly bringing home school papers, goody bags etc. We just unwrapped a set of LARGE animal figurines that our children are in love with and immediately named. My MIL also gave my husband a large personalized and sentimental gift that he is so mad about. I don’t think we could be more clear. I am pretty comfortable tossing stuff (if the alternative is being mad) but my husband has not yet reached that stage. |
| I told my family and friends in September that I would not be doing gift exchanges with them going forward unless we happened to be local. Nonetheless, three of them (women) decided to send us gifts anyway. Now I have candy and cookies (they all know we are dieting), home decor items, gadgets and ornaments I need to figure out what to do with because they like to shop. It's inconsiderate and I am expected to acknowledge and thank them for their gifts. |
Respectfully, as a fellow Catholic, the fact that gifts are not discussed and then everyone brings gifts, means that the default and expected standard in your family is to give gifts, even without discussion Yes, the work gifts were a surprise, that’s fair, but family gifts are expected of everyone in your family. There are plenty of gifts that fall within Laudato Si, you have to make an effort to get them |