Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are my kids favorite gifts. I understand you are just venting, but if you really hate them then exchange them.
This sewing gift is the absolute worst gift ever. Rainbow loom right there also. Science gift isn’t so bad.
Really? My STEM-oriented daughter loved sewing when she was little. It's in the same category as Legos for me. Brain-to-hand work. You ever heard of that story with action video games and surgeons?
Maybe you don't want to air your ignorance all over DCUM, PP.
It’s not that it’s sewing that’s the problem, it’s that the sewing kits for kids are sub-par and therefore difficult to use. Dull needles, fraying fabric, weak thread, etc., so parents have to help to avoid meltdown.
- NP who sews, knits, crochets and has a PhD in the hard sciences and binned all the needlecraft gifts my “future engineer” got in favor of a real sewing machine and good, but not expensive, materials.
I commiserate so much with the OP - my daughter gets so many craft kits and science kits because of my background. They require so much set-up and tweaking to get to work, it’s really frustrating. I’ve also been guilty of getting these for her and as gifts, so I don’t blame the parents - it’s the quality of the kits that’s the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are my kids favorite gifts. I understand you are just venting, but if you really hate them then exchange them.
This sewing gift is the absolute worst gift ever. Rainbow loom right there also. Science gift isn’t so bad.
Really? My STEM-oriented daughter loved sewing when she was little. It's in the same category as Legos for me. Brain-to-hand work. You ever heard of that story with action video games and surgeons?
Maybe you don't want to air your ignorance all over DCUM, PP.
Anonymous wrote:People are being too hard on OP. I get it. I felt this way about Lego set gifts when my kid was 5 or so, because she couldnt put them together herself but doing it with her was so tedious to me. I know some people enjoy it but I don't. I love reading toy kid, doing any kind of arts and crafts, but ugh Legos.
It's not like OP is being rude to the person who have the gift. She's just venting about something that is annoying her. And in the process might cause others to think harder about getting more age appropriate gifts for kids-- this happens because people give gifts that are beyond the ability of the child.
Anonymous wrote:
OP,
The No Gift Party was meant for you.
You will never be happy with any gift, since you refuse to actually interact with your child. She'll ask you to read her the book if the gift is a book; you'll be offended at a video game; your child will want to play with the toy you so rudely and unthinkingly demand... *with* you!
The reality here is that your child is craving time with you that you are not giving her.
Make your peace with that, or choose to address it, but stop blaming others for your own inadequacies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are my kids favorite gifts. I understand you are just venting, but if you really hate them then exchange them.
This sewing gift is the absolute worst gift ever. Rainbow loom right there also. Science gift isn’t so bad.
Really? My STEM-oriented daughter loved sewing when she was little. It's in the same category as Legos for me. Brain-to-hand work. You ever heard of that story with action video games and surgeons?
Maybe you don't want to air your ignorance all over DCUM, PP.
Anonymous wrote:Simple fix: “no gifts please.”