Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I throw stuff in the trash the week after Christmas if it's already unboxed and torn up and a million pieces that my kids can't keep up with and don't seem interested in. It's overwhelming for them, too.
I also told my mom this year that when we were growing up, one or two wrapped gifts would arrive in the mail from relatives, and that's it. Now people send tons of stuff from Amazon that I have to unbox, follow up with to see who it's from and who it's for, and then wrap. I told her it's my holiday too and sometimes the stuff goes to Goodwill or the trash, and that the kids can't even play they are so overwhelmed with it all. It's not my job to find a place in my home for every freakin plastic piece of junk that comes from Amazon.
She looked shocked but even she couldn't deny I am right. I think next year will finally be different!
Are you raising a family of raccoons?
Anonymous wrote:I throw stuff in the trash the week after Christmas if it's already unboxed and torn up and a million pieces that my kids can't keep up with and don't seem interested in. It's overwhelming for them, too.
I also told my mom this year that when we were growing up, one or two wrapped gifts would arrive in the mail from relatives, and that's it. Now people send tons of stuff from Amazon that I have to unbox, follow up with to see who it's from and who it's for, and then wrap. I told her it's my holiday too and sometimes the stuff goes to Goodwill or the trash, and that the kids can't even play they are so overwhelmed with it all. It's not my job to find a place in my home for every freakin plastic piece of junk that comes from Amazon.
She looked shocked but even she couldn't deny I am right. I think next year will finally be different!
Anonymous wrote:I can’t stand it either. My MIL just wants to give the most amount of cheap gifts. Example- I've shared with her a line of crafts that are made by a small company that we love. Well, instead she found a Chinese counterfeit version of this woman’s products for less on Amazon and bought many instead of just one from the legitimate company’s website.
I can’t bear getting gifted cheap polyester bedding or clothing, especially when I carefully select more sustainable options for us. I don’t expect anyone to buy specific organic clothing, I just wish they would respect that we DON’T want or need any polyester pajamas etc.
Anonymous wrote:I throw stuff in the trash the week after Christmas if it's already unboxed and torn up and a million pieces that my kids can't keep up with and don't seem interested in. It's overwhelming for them, too.
I also told my mom this year that when we were growing up, one or two wrapped gifts would arrive in the mail from relatives, and that's it. Now people send tons of stuff from Amazon that I have to unbox, follow up with to see who it's from and who it's for, and then wrap. I told her it's my holiday too and sometimes the stuff goes to Goodwill or the trash, and that the kids can't even play they are so overwhelmed with it all. It's not my job to find a place in my home for every freakin plastic piece of junk that comes from Amazon.
She looked shocked but even she couldn't deny I am right. I think next year will finally be different!
Anonymous wrote:I think it helps to give “categories” or “themes” for grandparent gifts.
For example, having tons of Lego sets bothered me less than tons of random toys even if it’s all plastic. So, that’s my advice, think of the things that your kids like most and redirect the grandparents to that one category. Pokemon figures are another theme that lasted for a long time. This works because like legos, the figures are expensive and mentally don’t feel like clutter.
Anonymous wrote:My parents do this too. Complain about cheap stuff from China but then only buy massive amounts of it. I’ve done a few things that help:
-pointing out that sometimes the brand name is better and the cheap stuff frustrates kids or isn’t compatible with the brand name stuff.
-requesting specific items: “this magnet tile set because it has all the trucks he wants and connects to duplo blocks” rather than “magnet tiles”
-asking for bigger ticket items so they spend more on one good gift than a ton on cheap gifts
-remembering gifting is as much for them as the kids so keeping it in perspective that letting them give my kids tons of stuff makes them happy as well as my kids
family members, and they decided among themselves what they were attracted to. Some items had specific product links or suggested stores. Some were more like category that I left open for them to get creative or decide. Some had a line or two of story about why my kids would love that. Majority of gifts this year came from the list, and while I wish we had gift receipts for the few amazon crap we got (off-list...), it was all around a better experience.
Anonymous wrote:Hear me out. It may be a millennial parenting trope by now to complain about grandparents over gifting but I REALLY don’t remember this to be a thing when I was growing up at least.
We are so fortunate to have two sets of grandparents who adore our children. We are even lucky that they somewhat adhere to our wishes for gifts for our toddlers - experience gifts, etc. But even with our pleading to keep just to that, or to provide minimal other items so the kids can unwrap something, they inevitably can’t help themselves from buying loads of cheap plastic crap as gifts. I can’t handle the volume and I resent it, because now it’s on me to find room for it and eventually donate it. I’m also annoyed that my MIL gets more presents than we or Santa does for our kids and uncomfortable with how much they are spending. Our kids want for nothing, our planet doesn’t need more crap in a landfill and Bezos doesn’t need more money!
Rant over.