Anonymous wrote:
You guys seem to have communication issues beyond religion.
How about, "Dearest, what can I do to help you prepare for Christmas?"
If he waffles, then tell him to let you know when he's decided how he is going to organize everything and you'll be happy to help out.
Then go about your day. If he doesn't take you up on your clearly communicated offer, then no Christmas and not your problem. If he starts moving and asks you to help, then offer reasonable assistance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op what's your religion? Anyway If you have an agreement in place then let him figure it out for himself. That's his problem. If it's a poor outcome then he'll learn and do better for the next holiday. For your part you continue to celebrate your religious holidays as agreed and just remind him it's his responsibility to follow through with his holiday traditions. Op you just reminded me why I absolutely will never marry someone with a different religion. I've always wondered why some couples do it especially if they plan to have kids. The complexity is just too much.
TO me, it sounds like the personality difference is the main issue - not religion.
I'd give the guy a deadline -- e.g., -- tell me by x hour what I need to do to prepare for x activities. With these instructions, I can pull off the Christmas you want your children to have. Without them, I can't.
Anonymous wrote:Op what's your religion? Anyway If you have an agreement in place then let him figure it out for himself. That's his problem. If it's a poor outcome then he'll learn and do better for the next holiday. For your part you continue to celebrate your religious holidays as agreed and just remind him it's his responsibility to follow through with his holiday traditions. Op you just reminded me why I absolutely will never marry someone with a different religion. I've always wondered why some couples do it especially if they plan to have kids. The complexity is just too much.