Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a ton of free activities and you can drive around looking at lights. You can bake together and make new decorations. Have family movie nights to watch holiday movies. Have a special breakfast and nice dinner on Christmas. These things will make the season special. As for gifts, make a budget and stick to it. Be guided by what your kids want - if it’s a bunch of small things do that and if it’s a large gift do that.
Matching pjs are not cheap and not good present bang for the buck but o agree otherwise with the sentiment of doing fun family activities.
Agree, skip the matching PJs this year
I picked up some adult sized pajamas at Carter’s today for $10 and matching kid pj’s for $6. You can do it on the cheap.
Anonymous wrote:Let me start off by saying that we are aware of our financial mistakes and are correcting to fix it.
How do we have a good Christmas when we are in a lot of debt? We have three kids. Two are early elementary age and one is middle school. I have no idea what to do or say as Christmas is coming up. We can not afford a lot of gifts. We can not afford big gifts. We are by no means in need though. Should we do just one large gift for each kid? A lot of small little gifts for each kid? Sit them down and seriously let them know that this year will look different?
Please be kind. We know Christmas is not about gifts but we have kids that we would love to give gifts to.
Anonymous wrote:I would have a talk about the true meaning of Christmas, mass consumerism and marketing, and be blunt. "Learn from our mistakes so you don't have to deal with this when you're an adult." And then I'd set a budget (maybe $50 per kid and $50 on the family like for bagels and Christmas cookies and coco or whatever) and stick to it. Challenge the kids to come up with "acts of service" as gifts for each other. Maybe one makes another's bed every day for a week. Stuff like that.
Anonymous wrote:Facebook marketplace! So many people clean out playrooms in November and December before an avalanche of new toys comes. You can get almost news toys for next to nothing. Kids won’t notice because Santa often unboxes items and displays them under the tree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a ton of free activities and you can drive around looking at lights. You can bake together and make new decorations. Have family movie nights to watch holiday movies. Have a special breakfast and nice dinner on Christmas. These things will make the season special. As for gifts, make a budget and stick to it. Be guided by what your kids want - if it’s a bunch of small things do that and if it’s a large gift do that.
Matching pjs are not cheap and not good present bang for the buck but o agree otherwise with the sentiment of doing fun family activities.
Agree, skip the matching PJs this year