Anonymous wrote:I know this is annoying. Every year on Christmas morning I we open up presents and there are basically none for me - because I buy all of the presents. On the few occasions that my husband has tried and bought me something, the gifts have been so completely random that I wonder who he really thinks I am.
That being said, he is a great husband in every other way so I look on this with amusement. He is bad at picking out gifts for everyone, not just me, so I know that it is not a personal slight. I now feel free to get myself a few nice things that I like, wrap them up, put them under the tree, and when I open them declare, "I love it, honey. Its just what I wanted." We laugh and I get what I want.
Anonymous wrote:Just read this whole thread out of curiosity and I will state the obvious. This has nothing to do with gifts, and everything to do with feeling appreciated. It would probably be a lot less complicated for everyone involved to try to separate the emotional connection from the material manifestation of it.
My husband and I both suck at gift giving, but neither of us cares about it and neither of us feels that the quality of our relationship hinges on whether we've accurately anticipated each other's material desires. Seems like all the misery on this thread is from people who have conflated these things.
Anonymous wrote:Just read this whole thread out of curiosity and I will state the obvious. This has nothing to do with gifts, and everything to do with feeling appreciated. It would probably be a lot less complicated for everyone involved to try to separate the emotional connection from the material manifestation of it.
My husband and I both suck at gift giving, but neither of us cares about it and neither of us feels that the quality of our relationship hinges on whether we've accurately anticipated each other's material desires. Seems like all the misery on this thread is from people who have conflated these things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, Do you have children? Assuming they are old enough, could you enlist them to help DH come up with something more thoughtful?
I would leave the kids out of this. It's between OP and her husband. DH and I don't like to waste a cent, so we decided early on to just be open about what things we want as gifts. Also, we keep Christmas and Chanukah for kid gift giving only. A month before his (or my) birthday I ask him (or he asks me) what he wants. I also come up with a bunch of stuff I was considering getting him and he is honest about what I should cross off the list. Open communication works for us. Some may consider this unromantic. We both end up happy. I think there is too much room for hurt feelings when anyone expects another person to be a mind reader. My husband's parents and sibs always give him gifts he has no use for or that are not his taste at all and they have known him his whole life. He told me I was the 1st person who cared to get him something he actually wanted.