I know. I read that thread too. But if they are asking specifically for experiences, then I am assuming they will be happy to make up the difference or may receive a bunch of cards to same “experience”. But I agree with you, gift givers can’t seem to win. |
My kids are 3 and 5. They cannot keep track of who gave them what or how many things they get. As long as they have 2-3 new things - Santa, parents, grandparents or an aunt, they are fine. There have been years where they get so much their presents from us sit under the tree, unopened for a week or more. It took us 2 weeks to open presents from the 3yr old’s BD because he would open one and play with it a lot for 1-2 days before asking to open another. |
Great. Then let’s all just stop the madness. Give to your own kids, the end! |
Neither can gift recipients. Either you suffer in silence with crap that your kid doesn’t even want or you are a vile human being for suggesting what the child would actually enjoy. |
File this under things that totally didn’t happen ![]() |
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I would prefer no gifts to the junk my in-laws insist on giving each year (in spite of us asking for no more toys for the kids). And it's not so easy to just give stuff away. I have to sort through everything, find all the missing pieces, load it up, and take it to the donation center. My labor isn't free. I'd rather take that time to play with my kids at a museum or park.
We just had a second baby, same sex as the first. We said firmly - no clothes for the baby. We're already bursting at the seams with baby clothes. Guess what MIL brought? And she said, "I know you said no clothes, but what else do you buy for a new baby?!" Yet they refuse to open a 529 or give us money to put into the 529s we already have. It's just selfish, really. They have fun watching kids open gifts and we're stuck dealing with the junk. [/quote] What an ungrateful brat. [/quote] Lol I wish my MIL would consider me ungrateful and stop buying me stuff that I explicitly ask her NOT to buy. Then she could feel morally superior and I wouldn't have to find time to get rid of the junk she buys that the kids never even look at! Win/win. |
+1 |
This is totally my kids (age 3 & 4). |
Exactly. Parents are making it about what they want or don't want, not about their kids. My SIL didn't want things. So my mom bought gifts that she would keep at her house (the grandkids are over a few times per week). At the end of Christmas last year my SIL said they could use them at home, and took everything with her. You really can't win. |
This, to an extent. One year, my parents told my kids (age 9 and 11 at the time) that they would take them out to lunch as part of their present. My kids don’t love “lunch” food. Eating out for lunch is not a treat. It is a chore for when we are traveling or shopping/running errands all day. It never even happened. My parents offered once or twice on days we had other commitments. Kids didn’t miss it. |
Yes, this is definitely true for us. Going out to movies/ice cream/museums/McDonald's are all things that we do with our kids anyway, especially around the holidays, so I would feel like it isn't much of a "gift" to give them something they would likely have done anyway. They don't pay for those things with their own money. Same with clothes and even books -- my kids know that if they ever want a book, they just have to ask and I will gladly purchase it from Amazon on the spot (to promote/encourage reading). Not that my kids don't appreciate receiving books as gifts, I just feel sort of bad about it. |
Why don't you teach them to think the best of the giver rather than the worst? |
Mother in Law gave us $$ to buy gifts for DD since we won't see them for Christmas. I was going to use it for an experience but she wanted a photo/list of the gifts purchased with the money. Wanted it to go towards a "big" pile of stuff. Then keeps sending me links of things (mostly princess/pink stuff) that my tomboy would absolutely hate. Ugh.
I wish she'd just send a few gift cards and be done with it. |
Yes, I have family that turns gifts into an endless string of attachment. You can't just receive the giftcard or toy and write a thank you. They waaaaant piiiiictures of the kid with the gift, and they keeep asking about the gift. Then they try to mainpulate...we got this gift so you need to do x, y and z. I finally had to say to one person no gifts. If you give a gift that is your choice, but we say thank you and are done. There will be no photos and endless updates on said gift. |
I'm sure we will soon have a thread griping about experience gifts, DCUM style. How dare Aunt Midge get Larla a gift certificate to an ice cream place when she knows we don't eat desserts. And so on.
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