Anonymous wrote:I’m a big fan of really warm mittens and scarves - so she can wear them when she walks the dog.
What about a framed picture of her dogs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why doesn’t the son she raised put anything in her stocking? Why are you perpetuating that type of neglect from the son she raised?
Oh believe me. It’s being addressed. But I also want to do something nice for her from me.
Clarifying: Her son has gotten her variations on a theme for about eight years but sometimes forgets and tells her what is coming on Christmas instead of having a gift. I’m making sure he gets things on time, not changes his theme.
Anonymous wrote:If you have access to photos, then do a chronology of her life pre and with family. I personally like them to be the old fashioned type of photo album. Something she can sit down with and turn pages.
Another idea is to get small photos of each of her kids in elementary school or as toddlers and put them in small decorative frames that coordinate.
Maybe even do some photos of her with the FIL and make headway with him. He probably senses that you don't approve of how he treats his wife.
I would add a small tube of nice lotion to put in her purse during the winter.Anonymous wrote:Really good quality small candles. If she cooks, Penzey’s spices. For cooks I sometimes give spendy items like vanilla beans or saffron. If she drinks at all get a few mini bottles of alcohol for her stocking, even if just Baileys. If you think she likes to read books, get her a novel you liked very much. If you can get a photo of her dogs, you could order those socks with her dog photos on them (if she’s a bit of a fun type who would appreciate that). Nice quality dark chocolate. Foot mask. A cashmere scarf (very soft). An elegant Christmas ornament (even better if you can tie it to something meaningful or relevant to her).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why doesn’t the son she raised put anything in her stocking? Why are you perpetuating that type of neglect from the son she raised?
Oh believe me. It’s being addressed. But I also want to do something nice for her from me.
Clarifying: Her son has gotten her variations on a theme for about eight years but sometimes forgets and tells her what is coming on Christmas instead of having a gift. I’m making sure he gets things on time, not changes his theme.
Anonymous wrote:Really good quality small candles. If she cooks, Penzey’s spices. For cooks I sometimes give spendy items like vanilla beans or saffron. If she drinks at all get a few mini bottles of alcohol for her stocking, even if just Baileys. If you think she likes to read books, get her a novel you liked very much. If you can get a photo of her dogs, you could order those socks with her dog photos on them (if she’s a bit of a fun type who would appreciate that). Nice quality dark chocolate. Foot mask. A cashmere scarf (very soft). An elegant Christmas ornament (even better if you can tie it to something meaningful or relevant to her).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ask: What gifts have you gotten from a daughter in law or son in law that you loved and/or were meaningful?
Context: I did not grow up celebrating Christmas, and the family I married into isn’t super religious but does Christmas. Love my MIL, FIL and I have never hit it off. Last year I realized that MIL was always the “fill her own stocking” person — she got gifts for her husband and herself and signed her kids names. I want to do something special for her and have some ideas, but would love to crowdsource if you have a suggestion!
Happy to give more context if more is needed.
I'm that way, and it's because I am extremely picky and prefer not to receive gifts I don't like. I choose them myself.
Don't assume MIL is a downtrodden housewife.
You sound ungrateful.