Anonymous wrote:My older sister had kids several years before I did, and our younger brother has not had kids yet. Starting from when her kids were really little (i.e. before they could possibly have had their own wish lists), she's always sent a gift wish list. In retrospect, I guess it was kind of tacky...but honestly, with no kids or many friends with kids it's kind of helpful. Nephew is now turning 8, however, and he obviously is now making his own list. I think the one she sent most recently was prefaced by saying one of us had asked for suggestions so she was sending to everyone, and I'm honestly not really bothered by her sending a list.
What I am bothered by, however, is that the cheapest thing, and the only item under $50, on the list is $45 (without tax etc), and several things are over $100. Maybe I'm cheap, but we aim to spend $30-40 on kids' gifts. It's not a money issue, it's just what feels right to me. It's also what we spend on DH's niece and nephew.
Am I crazy to feel like she should maybe be instilling a little more awareness of these things in my nephew and suggesting that if he's putting together a wish list for his relatives that it include some less expensive items? Or am I just out-of-touch level of cheap? It's very apparent that she does not spend anywhere close to this amount on our kids (which is fine with me).
First question: No, you're not crazy. She should be instilling a little more awareness and sensitivity in your nephew.
Second question: No, you're not out-of-touch cheap. $30-40 sounds about right.
And, FWIW, totally fine to go off-list. I wouldn't even ask the sister or nephew about it; just go off list. A wish list is just that -- a "wish"!