Anonymous wrote:You don't have to make it about "hosting", just say "We decided to not travel for Easter this year, we'd love for you to join us at our house if you're free!"
Anonymous wrote:This may be beside the point, but you could pick another random holiday to host gathering, so that way the stakes are lower, you can show them how gracious you all are and then you have another fun tradition that could migrate into other holidays. So maybe not Easter, but say 4th of July or (whatever other holiday you celebrate). We've starting hosting random smaller holidays, but I'm not so keen on taking over the larger ones - our house is smaller and we both work FT...
Anonymous wrote:I will never understand these people who are waiting for permission to host. If you want to do it, just do it! Invite whoever, don’t be upset if they would rather their own tradition. You do not need permission to stay home and serve dinner in your own house!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m saying this for others since it looks like you missed the boat on this:
The easiest time to change the hosting dynamic is after your first child is born. Stay home that year for Christmas and Thanksgiving.
After that if you do go to family for holidays it becomes a treat, a bonus visit, something special that you’re doing. Otherwise you get stuck in the dynamic where if you stay home one year, you’re taking something away from the grandparents or depriving them of something they’re entitled to. Also, if you never take a break after your kids are born they will never appreciate how much work and effort you’re putting into traveling to them.
Just my .02
From someone that missed the boat- I 100% agree.
They should put this advice in "what to expect when you're expecting"! For us I think it will have to be "now that we have two kids, we stay home for holidays" as the rule. wish me luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m saying this for others since it looks like you missed the boat on this:
The easiest time to change the hosting dynamic is after your first child is born. Stay home that year for Christmas and Thanksgiving.
After that if you do go to family for holidays it becomes a treat, a bonus visit, something special that you’re doing. Otherwise you get stuck in the dynamic where if you stay home one year, you’re taking something away from the grandparents or depriving them of something they’re entitled to. Also, if you never take a break after your kids are born they will never appreciate how much work and effort you’re putting into traveling to them.
Just my .02
From someone that missed the boat- I 100% agree.
Anonymous wrote:I’m saying this for others since it looks like you missed the boat on this:
The easiest time to change the hosting dynamic is after your first child is born. Stay home that year for Christmas and Thanksgiving.
After that if you do go to family for holidays it becomes a treat, a bonus visit, something special that you’re doing. Otherwise you get stuck in the dynamic where if you stay home one year, you’re taking something away from the grandparents or depriving them of something they’re entitled to. Also, if you never take a break after your kids are born they will never appreciate how much work and effort you’re putting into traveling to them.
Just my .02