| I love receiving family newsletters with holiday cards. |
This is true. But I freaking LOVE getting them because it always seems the people who still send these are a little off their rockers and they end up being very funny, without trying. |
+1 OP, people like that, who spread negativity and rumor, they are not happy people, and they are mentally ill. They often resort to deflection ie: "SHE doesn't like ANY ONE!!......" When in truth, "SHE" is a perfectly chill, normal, content, easy to get along with type person. People know what's really going on, they are not stupid - at least not as stupid as gossipers think they are. I like the idea of sending a photo card with a short phrase or two on the back. You do you, eff them, seriously. The universe has a way of evening things out. |
DP here. Mentally ill people (like OP's family) may have ZERO contact with OP, yet still find a way to try to attack OP - it is what mentally ill people do. I do think OP needs to give it less thought. Don't let them rent space in your head for free, OP. |
| I'm team "hate these letters" |
|
The New Yorkers “Daily Shouts” title today was very applicable to this thread:
WHAT I SPENT MONEY ON TO AVOID SPENDING MONEY ON THERAPY |
| A couple of paragraphs on the back of a card are fine but most newsletters are full of stuff I don't give a damn about. I really don't care if someone spent a long weekend with a great aunt or went to their high school reunion. Compounding that is the fact that they use very small font to cram as much stupid stuff as possible into one page. |
With all due respect, this is actually very difficult to know! And they might like to get your letters while also feeling that they are braggy, or obnoxious, or dull, or ridiculous. |
+1. An acquaintence who sends long letters is a SAHM with a doctor husband. She brags about all of his accomplishments in a way that makes it sound like she is sharing half the credit. She is the type who would refer to herself as CEO of the Household. |
| Op you rock!! Md phds and kids! I want to hear about your life!! |
This sounds about right. Some of my cousins get fold out photo cards that have a bit of space for family updates in the text. |
I thought we were past this hipster mentality of "cannot like anything unironically". That seemed like a silver lining to the year 2020. |
+1 It's kind of a letdown (& a waste) to get a card with NO info added. It only tells people you are still alive and haven't moved. Handwritten and personal is best, but a mass produced family letter is better than nothing, |
It's fine to send the card in and of itself, but your family sounds drama-prone and immature, and by sending the card/newsletter with the intent of proving something, you are feeding into it. Just take a hard think about whether you would send it absent this situation. If so, go for it. If not, take a pass. |
|
Op here. Thanks to all who responded. I ended up not doing it. If I hadn’t already ordered my Christmas cards, I would have taken the suggestion of adding a few sentences (not a whole letter) to the card, but it was too late for that.
I just received a Christmas letter in the mail this week from a friend and I really loved it. It was long, a full page single spaced. I talk to this friend every week ans there was still so much in there I didn’t know about happening in her life! I kind of wish this trend would come back because I think they are delightful (or when bad/braggy, absolutely hilarious). This year I only received 2. Thank you again for all the thoughts and recommendations. |