Anonymous wrote:Good grief. Of course you *can* ignore, but how hard is it to just say "you're right, we're sorry we didn't offer it back to you so that you could sell it on Ebay"? Who really cares if she's nuts about that? Who cares if you mean it or not?
It NOT a BFD. Just say you're sorry and will offer everything like that back in the future.
Anonymous wrote:A couple years ago at a garage sale MIL bought our DS a vintage play set from the 70s. It was already in rough shape and the plastic brittle, but he enjoyed it and in turn, played it into the ground. It was broken and made playing hard, so we tossed it. When she found out she was upset because they sell for $20-$50 on eBay and she thought we should have either tried selling it or selling it for parts. My husband agreed we should toss it, it wasn’t taken care of before we had it, played with I’m sure by other boys as much as my son. Not a collectors piece by any definition. Were we wrong for not offering the gift back to her first to sell, or for not selling it ourselves? Should we ignore this or apologize?
Anonymous wrote:A couple years ago at a garage sale MIL bought our DS a vintage play set from the 70s. It was already in rough shape and the plastic brittle, but he enjoyed it and in turn, played it into the ground. It was broken and made playing hard, so we tossed it. When she found out she was upset because they sell for $20-$50 on eBay and she thought we should have either tried selling it or selling it for parts. My husband agreed we should toss it, it wasn’t taken care of before we had it, played with I’m sure by other boys as much as my son. Not a collectors piece by any definition. Were we wrong for not offering the gift back to her first to sell, or for not selling it ourselves? Should we ignore this or apologize?