Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Throw it out and don't worry about it.
+1 Those toys keep the attention of my kids for about 48 hours. Then they go in the trash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not above the junk disappearing. If we kept every single thing they (or we) were given our house would be riddled with crap.
I wanted to add that sometimes I save those things for road trips or traveling because I couldn't care less if they get lost during the trip. Like, I am hoping that thing falls underneath the plane seats and rolls to the back of the plane never to be seen again or shoved in a hotel drawer that gets left behind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine brings cakes, cookies, candy, etc. every single time. Told her we needed to limit that sweets for health reasons. Next time she showed up with oranges and apples. Just can't come empty handed so I give up.
LOL - you are complaining about oranges and apples? Get some help.
Anonymous wrote:I am not above the junk disappearing. If we kept every single thing they (or we) were given our house would be riddled with crap.
Anonymous wrote:Yep! ITA.
With all the expense my mil has spent on dollar toys, she could have bought a nice set of a quality toy.
She cuts of big boxes of fruit!? LOL. Well, if it were me I'd be making applesauce (SUPER easy), muffins, tossing them in salads, sharing with the neighbors or coworkers etc.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine brings cakes, cookies, candy, etc. every single time. Told her we needed to limit that sweets for health reasons. Next time she showed up with oranges and apples. Just can't come empty handed so I give up.
LOL - you are complaining about oranges and apples? Get some help.
I guess I should have explained better -- massive quantities (big Costco boxes) all cut up -- I have don't have the space to store them in my fridge and we can't possible eat that much before they go bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep! ITA.
With all the expense my mil has spent on dollar toys, she could have bought a nice set of a quality toy.
Here's my solution for those toys now: DD and I have had good talks about 'dollar toys' -- I explained to her it's the type you get that are small, from chick fila, just little breakable toys..... I told her she can have a treasure box of those things in her room. We decorated a shoe box. Whenever she brings a new toy home, DD's job is to decide what she wants to keep, my job is to decide where it goes. : treasure box or another box of toys. (If it's a doll, fine it can go with dolls. If it's a ball, it can go in the ball bucket). Otherwise... It belongs in treasure box! The last rule is if the treasure box gets too full, she will have to decide what to toss out.
We established those rules, so now I decide where they belong at nighttime. DD has been doing great with this.
This is a great idea. I love the treasure box concept.
Anonymous wrote:Stop trying to control her behavior, but at the same time, she can't control YOUR choices.
Let the kids play with the junk. The moment they lose interest, it goes in the trash or in the Goodwill donation pile. Every. Time.
If she asks where the junky toy is the next time it's at your house, "We donated it, because we keep toys and things like that to a minimum." Same answer, every time.