Anonymous wrote:This happened to me with my brother. One year, “we” gave my parents a present and my dad turned to my brother and said “pay back your sister.” Your parents know your sister is a cheapskate without you telling them. Just stop signing her name to the card. There’s no need to “cover” for her. (If fee differently if she were struggling financially, but you indicate this isn’t the case.)
Anonymous wrote:Give her a deadline: "Larlo, we're getting this gift for parents. If you want to be part of it, your share is $xxx. If we don't have the money from you by xx/xx date, we'll assume you're not participating this time."
Anonymous wrote:Just sign the card from the three of you, leave out Mary. And when your parents say "Wait, why isn't Mary on the card?" you can say "Because Mary never pays her share and we're all sick of it. So we're doing a group gift without her. Happy anniversary!"
Anonymous wrote:She doesn't want to do the joint gifts and you shouldn't dictate how she spends her money.
Anonymous wrote:She doesn't want to do the joint gifts and you shouldn't dictate how she spends her money.
Anonymous wrote:I have an uncle that can't afford as much as my mom and her siblings (or he's just cheap, probably that). He gets my grandparents his own gifts and the others go in on a big gift. It doesn't hurt anyone's feelings.