Anonymous wrote:I do believe there is such a thing as gift abuse. Giver (i.e., MIL) gets to feel generous, unloads huge amounts of gifts into recipient's house that is not as large as MIL thinks it is. Already overwhelmed mom with small children is stuck opening, recycling, finding room for, cleaning, putting away, trying to repair, sorting, lifting, and driving retired toys to Goodwill. DH of course doesn't lift a finger and doesn't tell MIL to stop.
I propose that every year, the old unwanted gifts get returned to MIL to donate. She knocks, you open the door, an avalanche of toys falls on MIL. You kindly give directions to the nearest donation site, and shut and lock the door again. If most of the plastic waste in the ocean is from Pepsi and Coca Cola, then those companies should be responsible for reducing their waste. Just like if most of the clutter in your house is from MIL, you have to cut the waste off at the source. Sure, call me a scrooge, but there are consequences to being overly "generous". This thread would not be pages long if gift giving is so joyous.
Anonymous wrote:When I was a kid, there were some friends of my parents who always gave us $10 worth of McDonald's gift certificates (I think they came in a notepad style, $1 each). I still remember that with such joy, even though I can't remember who gave them to me!
Anonymous wrote:
My grandparents led a simple, quiet life. I believe they only ever gave stocking stuffers to each of their 12 grandchildren. Still taking walks together, going window shopping, eating in a restaurant, visiting their neighbors, sitting at my grandmother's feet while she'd brush and braid my hair while we watched tv...vivid and priceless memories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD begs grandpa to take her to the car wash (she's 3). She'd die if she got a gift card to the car wash. On Saturdays grandpa takes her to the car wash, then library story time and then out to lunch. Pretty sure that's the kind of experiences people are asking for.
I love this. My grandpa used to the do the same thing. Car wash and then breakfast at the local "greasy spoon" as he would call it. I always thought that was the name of the restaurant!
Anonymous wrote:My DD begs grandpa to take her to the car wash (she's 3). She'd die if she got a gift card to the car wash. On Saturdays grandpa takes her to the car wash, then library story time and then out to lunch. Pretty sure that's the kind of experiences people are asking for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Experience gifts don’t make sense in UMC circles. It’s not like the kids would be paying for their ice cream/museum/movie entry anyway. The parents would. My kids don’t care if you pay or I do - it’s free to them either way.
This, to an extent. One year, my parents told my kids (age 9 and 11 at the time) that they would take them out to lunch as part of their present. My kids don’t love “lunch” food. Eating out for lunch is not a treat. It is a chore for when we are traveling or shopping/running errands all day.
It never even happened. My parents offered once or twice on days we had other commitments. Kids didn’t miss it.
I don't know, my UMC kids love going out to lunch at Panera and consider it a treat (ages 5 and 7). They'd think lunch out with Grandma was an awesome gift.
Agree PP. The above post made me very sad. The money spent on lunch is not necessarily the experience; it's the special time with grandparents.
Anonymous wrote:Or you could be like me and just return all gifts your kids don't like. They just don't need more. And goodwill didn't even want the new gifts. It's better for all that I return and they get something they like more. Or even new socks. My DS is obsessed with socks and characters/animals on his socks.