Anonymous wrote:We are one and done, and each sibling has 3. I do get upset when we have to spend a ton of money in total for gifts and they each just spend $15 or $25 on my one kid. It doesn't help when they are far richer than we are. We've asked for the last 2 years to forego gifts and ironically the richest sibling refuses and insists on exchanging gifts.
Honestly, we are at the point where we don't get our own kid gifts we'd like to get her so that we can afford the cousin's gifts. And they don't get my kid gifts she'd want or what we would have gotten her.
OP, keep overcompensating
Anonymous wrote:We are one and done, and each sibling has 3. I do get upset when we have to spend a ton of money in total for gifts and they each just spend $15 or $25 on my one kid. It doesn't help when they are far richer than we are. We've asked for the last 2 years to forego gifts and ironically the richest sibling refuses and insists on exchanging gifts.
Honestly, we are at the point where we don't get our own kid gifts we'd like to get her so that we can afford the cousin's gifts. And they don't get my kid gifts she'd want or what we would have gotten her.
OP, keep overcompensating
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Not enough cousins on either side for a secret Santa exchange to make sense. I’d really like to just stop exchanging but I’ve brought it up a few times to no avail.
My advice is to chill out. You're making it an issue, when apparently it's not actually an issue.
Anonymous wrote:Can you ask your siblings to give your family a group gift? Something you all can use together--a board game, a basketball hoop, a video game, an art supply kit, whatever would be helpful? One part of my extended family does all whole-family gifts. I don't know how it started, but it's been going on for many years (through many ages and stages) and tends to work well.
Anonymous wrote:I have a similar question. My husband and I are childless (not by choice -- although I guess that's not pertinent). I'm an only child and my dad is living but my mom's dead. Husband has 2 living grandparents, mom, dad, a sister and BIL and 2 nephews (an infant and a toddler). We usually set a per person budget. Is it ok to scale back on the sister and BIL and spend more on the kids or do we just need to spend more as their family grows? I make a decent living but my husband owns a small business that's struggling. I guess I'm getting resentful that we spend a lot more $ on his family of origin than mine. Do we need to spend the same $ on the baby and toddler this year since the baby won't have any clue what's going on?
Anonymous wrote:Pp again, sorry, hit send too soon.
OP, keep overcompensating. Some may not tell you. But it may be a financial burden.
Anonymous wrote:Can you ask your siblings to give your family a group gift? Something you all can use together--a board game, a basketball hoop, a video game, an art supply kit, whatever would be helpful? One part of my extended family does all whole-family gifts. I don't know how it started, but it's been going on for many years (through many ages and stages) and tends to work well.