Anonymous wrote:I am American and find the family photo Christmas cards really distasteful. Christmas is about celebrating the birth of Jesus, not your family. The cards are staged and depict life as perfect and feel like an extension of social media. We are already exposed to people's family photos regularly through social media. I also find cards to be insensitive as many people who are single, widowed, divorced, childless, estranged from their family and children, lonely and grieving recent losses find them to be hurtful and actually make Christmas more painful than it already is. If a single person sent out a photo Christmas card it would be seen as bizarre and self-absorbed (which it is). Please stop sending these cards. It is time for the tradition of the family photo Christmas card to end.
Anonymous wrote:Our kids are grown and we update Facebook enough so that it would be nothing new for our friends. So, I don’t send. And, we take a quick glance at the picture and then throw. I don’t read the letter or any text sent. No time.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in uk and France and this is one American thing that just baffles me.. people sending photos of their family as a Christmas card. Am I the only one who finds this weird? Like - why do you think i want to display a photo of YOUR family? It feels like people have wildly misjudged how much other people care about their stuff. If a French or British person did this I think everyone would find it so awkward. Enlighten me Americans - what am I missing here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even before I clicked I knew you must be French lol
I hate to say this but I agree. The French are not the barometer I use for kindness or friendliness.
Anonymous wrote:American here. No, you are not the only one to find it weird. I find it weird, too. And a little look-at-me distasteful.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone does this all over the world
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US is large. We often don’t see friends and family for a year or even longer. It’s nice to see a picture or two of what the kids look like imo!
Are there many cards that show updates you can't get from social media?
Many sane people never splash their kids on SM. These pics are the only ones our family sees in between visits.
Anonymous wrote:I love displaying all the photos from friends and family! I have a special display holder for them. Everyone who visits during December stops to see the photos. I haven’t seen many of those people in years so the photos show babies I have yet to meet, teenagers with their braces, new pets and new spouses. I love all of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The US is large. We often don’t see friends and family for a year or even longer. It’s nice to see a picture or two of what the kids look like imo!
Are there many cards that show updates you can't get from social media?
Many sane people never splash their kids on SM. These pics are the only ones our family sees in between visits.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in uk and France and this is one American thing that just baffles me.. people sending photos of their family as a Christmas card. Am I the only one who finds this weird? Like - why do you think i want to display a photo of YOUR family? It feels like people have wildly misjudged how much other people care about their stuff. If a French or British person did this I think everyone would find it so awkward. Enlighten me Americans - what am I missing here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up in uk and France and this is one American thing that just baffles me.. people sending photos of their family as a Christmas card. Am I the only one who finds this weird? Like - why do you think i want to display a photo of YOUR family? It feels like people have wildly misjudged how much other people care about their stuff. If a French or British person did this I think everyone would find it so awkward. Enlighten me Americans - what am I missing here?
Having lived in France it baffles me why the French believe they are the arbiters of all that is proper and superior. Why don't you enlighten us!