Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you, but what’s a nice way to tell them basically we don’t want to celebrate Christmas with you? Just we decided to travel this year?
Just say that you realize it has become too much and you want to spend the holiday spending more quality time with your kids. Then say you are happy to host an event for all of them but another week. People do this all the time. It is fine. It is amazing that you host all of them.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you, but what’s a nice way to tell them basically we don’t want to celebrate Christmas with you? Just we decided to travel this year?
Anonymous wrote:The easiest way to break free from this nonsense is to swing all the way in the other direction next year: plan a trip where you are gone the entire time. Spend Christmas elsewhere—Mexico, Vermont, wherever. Just don’t be home.
Then in 2025 you can be home and scale back to just hosting your immediate family or just one meal on Christmas Eve. No gifts for adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are your kids? Next Christmas take a fantastic trip and let people know a few months in advance. You have to break the cycle and do it in a fantastic way. Go to Paris! Go big or don’t go otherwise they will think you are blowing them off.
This is what I’m thinking. I’d love to go to Paris. Kids are 10/12. Is stuff open on Christmas there?
Anonymous wrote:Thank you, but what’s a nice way to tell them basically we don’t want to celebrate Christmas with you? Just we decided to travel this year?
Anonymous wrote:How old are your kids? Next Christmas take a fantastic trip and let people know a few months in advance. You have to break the cycle and do it in a fantastic way. Go to Paris! Go big or don’t go otherwise they will think you are blowing them off.
Anonymous wrote:Have Christmas Eve brunch with them instead. Make the gift exchange a name draw. Have a set time, like brunch 10-1 or whatever works for you. Have just your mom stay the rest of the day/into the next morning if that works for you, or have just her come back on Christmas Day once the presents are done, for an early dinner or something.
Catered food, paper plates and cups. Think about what you’re willing to do and communicate it very clearly.