Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a single mom and an immigrant and sometimes we visit family with a more traditional setup but sometimes we don’t.
I don’t care; my son can figure out how to do holidays when he grows up. One favor I can do him is not expecting him and his family to visit me or host me. So yeah.
This is a great perspective - your son is fortunate to have a thoughtful mom like you.
Happy Thanksgiving! Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a single mom and an immigrant and sometimes we visit family with a more traditional setup but sometimes we don’t.
I don’t care; my son can figure out how to do holidays when he grows up. One favor I can do him is not expecting him and his family to visit me or host me. So yeah.
His future wife will appreciate the blank slate so she can carry on her traditions and her family will get every holiday. Good for her, I guess.
Anonymous wrote:Don't worry about it. Do what works for you. Maybe your kids will grow up to love doing these things. Or maybe they'll grow up to throw a big Thanksgiving or Christmas celebration because they decide that's what they want. Whatever.
Anonymous wrote:I am a single mom and an immigrant and sometimes we visit family with a more traditional setup but sometimes we don’t.
I don’t care; my son can figure out how to do holidays when he grows up. One favor I can do him is not expecting him and his family to visit me or host me. So yeah.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I hate the holidays, in a traditional sense. We never have a “traditional” Thanksgiving. Every other year we visit my family, but since I’m an only child whose parents are estranged from their families, it’s a small dinner that’s not unlike any other dinner. When it’s just our nuclear family every other year, we do something super casual like Chinese food and watch Planes, Trains, and Automobiles.
At Christmas, we visit extended family Christmas Eve, and on Christmas, either ILs come over for another dinner that isn’t much different from any other dinner, or it’s just the four of us and we make tons of finger food and watch movies.
We don’t have big families. It’s like we don’t know how to celebrate holidays properly. But at the same time, we hate the big to-do that surrounds celebrating holidays, so US (the adults) are just fine with it. But are we ruining things for our children in the future? Will the be ambivalent about holidays, too?
Anonymous wrote:I am a single mom and an immigrant and sometimes we visit family with a more traditional setup but sometimes we don’t.
I don’t care; my son can figure out how to do holidays when he grows up. One favor I can do him is not expecting him and his family to visit me or host me. So yeah.