Anonymous wrote:DH is oldest of three. When his parents hit their 50th wedding anniversary and his father’s retirement in the same year, we felt responsible for doing something for them, even though we live about 500 miles away. We kept trying to engage his parents in a planning process. We were thinking we’d reserve a private event room in a restaurant and invite a couple dozen folks to join in a celebration. DH’s parents kept turning us down and not giving feedback until after final dates for making reservations had passed. Ultimately, we took them out for a casual dinner for seven family members. We came to find out later that his parents have far more money than we do and were perfectly capable of paying for a special celebration—if they had wanted one. I no longer feel exclusively responsible for making other people’s milestones feel special. For that matter, I don’t think anyone will step in and make my upcoming milestone celebration special, nor do I expect it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Debating this now in our family. Who plans milestone anniversaries and birthdays for parents? It seems like it becomes the kids responsibility but I can’t figure out why. Is there a certain year? Like you pay and plan your 50th but by your 60th your kids do it? Why not spouse? 25th anniversary is on the couple but then 50th anniversary gets paid for by kids?
Obviously I’m asking because I’m feeling a bit crushed by responsibilities recently and sandwiched between parents and my kids. Seems like older people have just boatloads of time and excess money to plan things, at least comparatively.
It's boomer entitlement. I find anniversary parties rather tacky to begin with though....
You know what's tackier than an anniversary party- a REGISTRY for an anniversary party. I kid you not!! I couldn't beleive when my cousins included a registry link on the invite for my aunt/uncle's party.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Debating this now in our family. Who plans milestone anniversaries and birthdays for parents? It seems like it becomes the kids responsibility but I can’t figure out why. Is there a certain year? Like you pay and plan your 50th but by your 60th your kids do it? Why not spouse? 25th anniversary is on the couple but then 50th anniversary gets paid for by kids?
Obviously I’m asking because I’m feeling a bit crushed by responsibilities recently and sandwiched between parents and my kids. Seems like older people have just boatloads of time and excess money to plan things, at least comparatively.
It's boomer entitlement. I find anniversary parties rather tacky to begin with though....
Anonymous wrote:Debating this now in our family. Who plans milestone anniversaries and birthdays for parents? It seems like it becomes the kids responsibility but I can’t figure out why. Is there a certain year? Like you pay and plan your 50th but by your 60th your kids do it? Why not spouse? 25th anniversary is on the couple but then 50th anniversary gets paid for by kids?
Obviously I’m asking because I’m feeling a bit crushed by responsibilities recently and sandwiched between parents and my kids. Seems like older people have just boatloads of time and excess money to plan things, at least comparatively.
Anonymous wrote:My inlaws argued BITTERLY about what to do for their 50th. This meant their 2 kids spent the time leading up to it listening to each of them being angry about what the other wanted to do. It was RIDICULOUS. I told my spouse we are NEVER expecting our children to plan a thing for OUR wedding anniversary.
It was a great example about how length of marriage isn't always something to brag about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is interesting. I don't think I've ever been to an anniversary party. When I think of anniversary celebrations, I think of the couple going on a special trip.
Yes. The only couple I know who celebrates their anniversary by throwing parties is my aunt and Godfather. They're very social, have lots of friends, and like doing that. No one else I know wants to do it, or have their kids do it![]()
Anonymous wrote:This is interesting. I don't think I've ever been to an anniversary party. When I think of anniversary celebrations, I think of the couple going on a special trip.
Anonymous wrote:This is interesting. I don't think I've ever been to an anniversary party. When I think of anniversary celebrations, I think of the couple going on a special trip.
Anonymous wrote:This is interesting. I don't think I've ever been to an anniversary party. When I think of anniversary celebrations, I think of the couple going on a special trip.