Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since she will be a freshman -
College, new computer, cleaning service for dorm, all new wardrobe for college, spending money (5 K), uber account.
This sounds like DDs wish list.
Cleaning service???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since she will be a freshman -
College, new computer, cleaning service for dorm, all new wardrobe for college, spending money (5 K), uber account.
This sounds like DDs wish list.
Anonymous wrote:Since she will be a freshman -
College, new computer, cleaning service for dorm, all new wardrobe for college, spending money (5 K), uber account.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great-grandmother and grandmother: ring to go with the necklace they gave me when I started school and the earrings I got at 13 when my ears were pierced.
Mother, grandmother and great-grandmother: enough tp, paper towels, napkins, cleaning supplies, laundry detergent and dish soap for a year in an apartment or a dorm room. Fully outfitted a bathroom in my favorite colors (various prints in those colors, but mostly solids), no shower curtain, but everything else. Furnished enough dishcloths, dish towels and hanging towels in my favorite colors for a kitchenette, corelle ware and flatware(my great grandmother's), baking dishes (my mother's), pans (my grandmother's) and new dish drainer and cooking utensils (no knives). I knew about some of it, saw them purchase some of the things as early as freshman year, and by senior year, I knew what was going on and was helping find sales. Each got new things they wanted, I got a bathroom and kitchen almost completely outfitted, best of all it was with things I was used to using.
WTF were you going to do with a full kitchen when you're in a dorm with a one by one foot fridge and a huge meal plan>?
It was stored for me, so that I would have it for laterI was the only one who wasn't worried about how to outfit an apartment after college.
That was ridiculous. They should have just given you all that shit as a college graduation present. Instead, they gave you a gift for high school graduation that was useless to you for four years.
Anonymous wrote:my wife got a ruby ring from her dad for a high school graduation gift that seems to be her most prized and cherished possession.
My DD is graduating high school this month, she doesn't do jewelry but I would like to get her something nice like this but really don't know that first place to start. She has done an outstanding job in school , fighting to get a B- in very challenging AP chem course on same semester she switched from team taught to regular ed. Huge transition and she never gave up and did well.
where could a clueless yet cheap dad go to buy nice piece of jewelry (couple thousand say ?) for a DD ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great-grandmother and grandmother: ring to go with the necklace they gave me when I started school and the earrings I got at 13 when my ears were pierced.
Mother, grandmother and great-grandmother: enough tp, paper towels, napkins, cleaning supplies, laundry detergent and dish soap for a year in an apartment or a dorm room. Fully outfitted a bathroom in my favorite colors (various prints in those colors, but mostly solids), no shower curtain, but everything else. Furnished enough dishcloths, dish towels and hanging towels in my favorite colors for a kitchenette, corelle ware and flatware(my great grandmother's), baking dishes (my mother's), pans (my grandmother's) and new dish drainer and cooking utensils (no knives). I knew about some of it, saw them purchase some of the things as early as freshman year, and by senior year, I knew what was going on and was helping find sales. Each got new things they wanted, I got a bathroom and kitchen almost completely outfitted, best of all it was with things I was used to using.
WTF were you going to do with a full kitchen when you're in a dorm with a one by one foot fridge and a huge meal plan>?
It was stored for me, so that I would have it for laterI was the only one who wasn't worried about how to outfit an apartment after college.