Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s the absolute worst that happens from it? DC’s room is packed with too much stuff for a few weeks until you clean it out?
It’s one day, one pile of things. A month from now you can donate it all if needed.
I’d feel differently if we lived in a tiny apartment, but DC has his own room so plenty of space to hold kiddy junk.
The worst that happens:
The gift giver asks to see it for the next two years every time they come to visit, and then throw a fit when you've trashed it. (My MIL)
The child cries every time you try to get rid of something? (my kids)
Mom is completely overwhelmed with the amount of clutter in the house and sick of picking shit up every night? (me)
Kids are spoiled and come to expect it?
Environmental reasons - total waste and plastic is ruining our world?
These are the reasons I don't like it. Sure, it's not the end of the world but usually it's the mom getting stuck with dealing with the disposal or pick up of it. It's really sucked the Christmas joy for me and made it about dealing with shit for a couple weeks afterwards.
How old is your kid? Because soon enough they won't play with toys. And get rid of the toys when they aren't looking, not right in front of them.
Anonymous wrote:PP. I replied in a similar thread. Years later and I still have some resentment towards my MIL but the kids are teens now and she’s lost interest. She spends all of our money ( we financially support her) on a younger grandchild in the family. The way I dealt with it was to know I would donate 90 percent. The boxes wouldn’t even get opened, I would rewrap them nicely, and donate the following year. It helped knowing that we were giving to a family that would truly appreciate them. I tried my best to turn her shopaholic extravagance into something closer to the true meaning of Christmas and that helped a lot. I even started to include the kids so they knew their unused toys were going to good use. We continue this tradition today except now we buy all of the toys since Grandma has a new target.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s the absolute worst that happens from it? DC’s room is packed with too much stuff for a few weeks until you clean it out?
It’s one day, one pile of things. A month from now you can donate it all if needed.
I’d feel differently if we lived in a tiny apartment, but DC has his own room so plenty of space to hold kiddy junk.
The worst that happens:
The gift giver asks to see it for the next two years every time they come to visit, and then throw a fit when you've trashed it. (My MIL)
The child cries every time you try to get rid of something? (my kids)
Mom is completely overwhelmed with the amount of clutter in the house and sick of picking shit up every night? (me)
Kids are spoiled and come to expect it?
Environmental reasons - total waste and plastic is ruining our world?
These are the reasons I don't like it. Sure, it's not the end of the world but usually it's the mom getting stuck with dealing with the disposal or pick up of it. It's really sucked the Christmas joy for me and made it about dealing with shit for a couple weeks afterwards.
Anonymous wrote:What’s the absolute worst that happens from it? DC’s room is packed with too much stuff for a few weeks until you clean it out?
It’s one day, one pile of things. A month from now you can donate it all if needed.
I’d feel differently if we lived in a tiny apartment, but DC has his own room so plenty of space to hold kiddy junk.
Anonymous wrote:Request that they contribute to the kids’ college fund instead. Send them the link. Say, Larla really doesn’t need another 400 plastic toys, but in 15 years, she’s really not going to want student loans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still struggle. MIL has said to DD, “Price is no object.” I don’t want to raise DD to think that is normal. I don’t want DD thinking up extravagant gifts and targeting MIL for them. I don’t want the best gifts coming from MIL rather than us or Santa (well, Santa is no more, but it used to be a real source of anger for DH and me that his mom would always try to give the best and biggest gifts).
MIL is incredibly superficial and a huge shopaholic. It is something I dread every Christmas and is a huge source of stress for DH and me. She knows it, doesn’t care, and carries on.
Everyone's lives would be easier if you just let it go and let MIL do this and let dd experience it. It is ok, really.
Anonymous wrote:I still struggle. MIL has said to DD, “Price is no object.” I don’t want to raise DD to think that is normal. I don’t want DD thinking up extravagant gifts and targeting MIL for them. I don’t want the best gifts coming from MIL rather than us or Santa (well, Santa is no more, but it used to be a real source of anger for DH and me that his mom would always try to give the best and biggest gifts).
MIL is incredibly superficial and a huge shopaholic. It is something I dread every Christmas and is a huge source of stress for DH and me. She knows it, doesn’t care, and carries on.