Anonymous wrote:It sort of does. It is not how grandparents usually treat grandkids, whom they are supposed to adore. Are there any other grandkids in the family, OP? Are they all treated the same? We have grandparents that give kids dollar store toys plus checks. I don't get it. When they come over for my 5 year old's birthdya party next week he'll get a check. Really? Do you think he's going to be excited by a piece of paper? My DH says it's fear of rejection (ie the gift was a bad choice so they just don't get one even though MIL spends tons of time shopping). It's not normal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have two DC's, now both out of high school. ILs were here for DC2's HS graduation, just one night. Their trip here was by car, stayed with us, so no big expenses on their part to make it here. They are nice people, I like them and we get along.
They have not given a single gift or even just a card to either DC for birthdays, Christmas, graduations, or anything really for about 8 to 10 years now. Before that, it would be dollar store stuff, or something on sale from a store we don't have here so no exchanges possible. Anyway, they are very frugal, but I am just wondering if others have this happen in their families, too. BTW, they retired in their mid-50's and that's going on 30 years now. They travel quite lavishly (cruise about 50 to 60 days/year), but otherwise live pretty bare bones.
I would love to be able to retire that early and I know it takes some discipline, but it seems to me it would be pretty easy to set aside a couple hundred bucks for each kid to cover their under 18 year old celebrations/occasions and give them a gift once in a while.
I am also somewhat skewed in my views because my mom is very generous, so it's pretty lopsided.
Baby boom generation. My parents are both like this. One is miserly and likes to spend as little as possible on people other than himself. The other spends with abandon, which is why she no longer has any money and why I partially support her.
Good times.Not too many baby boomers have grandchildren who are old enough to have graduated from HS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have two DC's, now both out of high school. ILs were here for DC2's HS graduation, just one night. Their trip here was by car, stayed with us, so no big expenses on their part to make it here. They are nice people, I like them and we get along.
They have not given a single gift or even just a card to either DC for birthdays, Christmas, graduations, or anything really for about 8 to 10 years now. Before that, it would be dollar store stuff, or something on sale from a store we don't have here so no exchanges possible. Anyway, they are very frugal, but I am just wondering if others have this happen in their families, too. BTW, they retired in their mid-50's and that's going on 30 years now. They travel quite lavishly (cruise about 50 to 60 days/year), but otherwise live pretty bare bones.
I would love to be able to retire that early and I know it takes some discipline, but it seems to me it would be pretty easy to set aside a couple hundred bucks for each kid to cover their under 18 year old celebrations/occasions and give them a gift once in a while.
I am also somewhat skewed in my views because my mom is very generous, so it's pretty lopsided.
Baby boom generation. My parents are both like this. One is miserly and likes to spend as little as possible on people other than himself. The other spends with abandon, which is why she no longer has any money and why I partially support her.
Good times.
Anonymous wrote:We have two DC's, now both out of high school. ILs were here for DC2's HS graduation, just one night. Their trip here was by car, stayed with us, so no big expenses on their part to make it here. They are nice people, I like them and we get along.
They have not given a single gift or even just a card to either DC for birthdays, Christmas, graduations, or anything really for about 8 to 10 years now. Before that, it would be dollar store stuff, or something on sale from a store we don't have here so no exchanges possible. Anyway, they are very frugal, but I am just wondering if others have this happen in their families, too. BTW, they retired in their mid-50's and that's going on 30 years now. They travel quite lavishly (cruise about 50 to 60 days/year), but otherwise live pretty bare bones.
I would love to be able to retire that early and I know it takes some discipline, but it seems to me it would be pretty easy to set aside a couple hundred bucks for each kid to cover their under 18 year old celebrations/occasions and give them a gift once in a while.
I am also somewhat skewed in my views because my mom is very generous, so it's pretty lopsided.