Anonymous wrote:DH buys for his family. I buy for mine.
We’re both busy people
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Niece on DHs side is having a baby. I've asked him multiple times to send something from the registry. He keeps "forgetting." Same thing happens for any birthday, holiday, wedding, etc. I nag a bunch. Then either I break down and purchase the gifts. Or we end up not sending or not sending on time, and look like jerks. Same applies to birthday cards, father's day cards, etc.
Just venting, but curious how many moms buy all the gifts and cards for spouse's family.
I honestly don't understand how couples like yours last (or if they last). Stop bean counting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is his responsibility but, that's marriage. You make up for each other's shortcomings. Hopefully there are things he is doing that support you, too.
NP, and this would be a fair deal if in fact there were things he does that I don't. He earns more money than I do, but then, I do everything else to keep our household running so he's able to lean harder into his career and still have a family.
I suspect this is true for a lot of women married to men.
I make his life easier, he makes mine harder. I'm not taking on the additional responsibility of buying his family presents.
Anonymous wrote:Op here--DH and I both work equivalent jobs, so not like I have extra bandwidth. I get along enough with his family, but we aren't close. Don't see them much. In fairness, he isn't close to them either. They are traditional, though, so they will look down on us as a family (and probably more me than him) if there are no gifts/cards from us. It does create awkwardness.
Plugging all of this into his calendar sounds like a good idea.
Anonymous wrote:I honestly don’t understand why some women think they need to take charge of a grown man’s relationship with his family, and what that needs to look like.
My brother is a great person who loves his family. He shows us that by calling and texting, visiting, and inviting us over for holidays, etc. He doesn’t do gifts, but he does call for birthdays and holidays that we aren’t together. He also sends my mom flowers for Mother’s Day and usually takes my dad out to lunch or something else that’s fairly low-key.
And that’s fine. He’s a grown adult, and he’s not big into giving (or receiving) gifts. I’m glad his significant other doesn’t pressure him or wheedle or whine or “take over.” His SO is great and often joins in on the call, or sends a text, and is generally very friendly with us.
As for the argument of “well then if he doesn’t send a gift, they think we’re bad people.” First of all, so what? No one is owed a gift, and acting entitled to one makes you the bad person and not the other way around. Second, why aren’t you replying, “I guess the son you raised doesn’t send cards or gifts.”
Anonymous wrote:Niece on DHs side is having a baby. I've asked him multiple times to send something from the registry. He keeps "forgetting." Same thing happens for any birthday, holiday, wedding, etc. I nag a bunch. Then either I break down and purchase the gifts. Or we end up not sending or not sending on time, and look like jerks. Same applies to birthday cards, father's day cards, etc.
Just venting, but curious how many moms buy all the gifts and cards for spouse's family.
Anonymous wrote:Op here--DH and I both work equivalent jobs, so not like I have extra bandwidth. I get along enough with his family, but we aren't close. Don't see them much. In fairness, he isn't close to them either. They are traditional, though, so they will look down on us as a family (and probably more me than him) if there are no gifts/cards from us. It does create awkwardness.
Plugging all of this into his calendar sounds like a good idea.