Anonymous wrote:OP here. LOVE the Heifer International idea![]()
Thanks for the responses. I know I am sounding like the difficult one here, but really, this is the trickiest thing I have to do all year, every year.
The sisters blew us off on the MIL's birthday, when we emailed and texted them to join then and go out as a family. They went out with out DH. I think DH is still smarting from that, even though he should have fully expected it.
It's kind of hard to explain, when someone is rude to you for no reason. I never see them. They are insular, I guess is the best way to put it.
In fact, I encourage DH to see them, but he is not really interested. MIL doesn't really eat much (eating disorder), doesn't shop, doesn't take much pleasure in many things. I have known her for 20 years and she is less and less social. I would say coupons for therapy, but I don't think that would go over too well.
Now I sound like the nasty one. Some really good ideas here, thank you. I am open to more...
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, she doesn't like you, she doesn't want a relationship with you and anything you do is not going to be appreciated. Do you imagine there is some gift you could give that would make a lightbulb go off for her and suddenly she appreciates you? No. Not happening.
I'm sorry OP, but I think this is the case. PPs are right, give a neutral gift and move on. It is clearly hurtful to your DH, but no one gift is going to fix this dysfunction. Don't spend tons of money since it sounds like the dollar amount is irrelevant.
School photo of the kids and something generic -- fruit basket, charitable contribution in her name, magazine subscription are all great ideas. Maybe something slightly personal like new, monogrammed guest towels for the powder room or something else like that. Think hostess gift!
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't buy her clothes. I think it's weird to buy adults clothing as presents.
I would do a gift certificate.
Anonymous wrote:The one gift that seems to appeal to both my mother and MIL is an annual book of photos of the kids.
I got to Shutterfly and make an annual album of pictures of the grandkids spanning the year. I make one for each side. The last two years, I made a compilation book for us that includes all of the photos including the ones unique to one family or the other. Last year, our book was 28 pages and their books were each 20 pages.
It takes a bit of time to make the books, selecting backgrounds, fonts, writing the texts, etc and usually takes me about a week working on the project for several nights. But it's something that the grandmothers do enjoy. They love them because they can take the books to their friends and show off the grandkids to the various circles of friends (MIL takes it to her knitting club, to her board meetings. My mother takes them to her card club and her group dinners that she goes to with a set of friends, etc). Even though we started downloading some photos to their iPad/iPhone, they still prefer the printed books.