Anonymous wrote:Gave my niece $1000 in October last year.
Anonymous wrote:Zero. You're not going to the wedding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When people ASK for cash, we only give $50. We will spend more on an actual gift.
Get with the times. People are getting married later in life and would rather have experiences than a pot they don’t need or some formal chins they will never use. If you accepted gifts at your wedding, you should celebrate others with gifts, too. And if they want experiences instead of junk, so be it. Honestly give nothing if you are so cheap you give $50.
They also have been working andsming good money and should be able to afford to pay for their own honeymoon . I give gifts, never cash.
We registered at Macy’s for just this type of guest and returned all gifts for store credit. We ended up getting a nice mattress and bed frame. But thanks for the “stock pot” you got us, Linda.
Anonymous wrote:Why is there so much pearl-clutching over giving cash as a wedding gift? Is it cultural? I am Indian and we always give cash, with a small token gift like a silver item. But the cash was the main gift. I remember my parents carefully noting how much each person gifted at my siblings and my wedding so they could return an equivalent amount when they were invited to those families’ weddings.
Anonymous wrote:When people ASK for cash, we only give $50. We will spend more on an actual gift.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When people ASK for cash, we only give $50. We will spend more on an actual gift.
Get with the times. People are getting married later in life and would rather have experiences than a pot they don’t need or some formal chins they will never use. If you accepted gifts at your wedding, you should celebrate others with gifts, too. And if they want experiences instead of junk, so be it. Honestly give nothing if you are so cheap you give $50.
They also have been working andsming good money and should be able to afford to pay for their own honeymoon . I give gifts, never cash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When people ASK for cash, we only give $50. We will spend more on an actual gift.
It is the height of bad manners to request cash for a gift and I refuse to give cash.