Anonymous wrote:Ten bucks in a card is perfect. Well done.

Anonymous wrote:OP I am sure you are nothing like this, but I have a sister who isn't showering my kids with gifts. I did send thank you notes, but that never seemed to be enough. I got frequently asked about the kids playing with/wearing the gifts. I was asked for photos with the gift. It stopped feeling like a gift to us because thank you wasn't enough. Plus, if she got something too small we still thanked her, but when she requested a photo and there was no receipt to return and get the bigger size it got annoying.
We finally told her, her visits were the gift and we prefer that the children not be showered with material things (which were never the material things they wanted, but we didn't say that). She ignored that, kept giving gifts and then when we started only giving a verbal thank you she got in a tizzy.
My point with all this is giving should be a totally selfless act. It's annoying and shows poor manners when people don't send thank you notes, but it's not worth obsessing over. If you want to make sure you get things they want, ask for suggestions. If you expect thank you notes, don't give.
Anonymous wrote:No way. Gift only to the birthday kid. Cut down to birthday and maybe Christmas with cards for other occasions. I also agree with the experiences idea: movies, ice cream shop, afternoon tea, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Ten bucks in a card is perfect. Well done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks. On birthdays, is it ok for me to only send gifts to the kids whose birthday it is?
Whaaaaaaaat? Why would you send anything to the other kids?
Op here. Because in one of the families one time when I gave presents to just the birthday boy, his older sibling (6) got really upset and accused me of not giving her a present for her birthday (which was not true, I had given her one, but it was a few weeks late since I brought it in person). Her parents seem to think that you should give a big gift to the birthday boy and small ones to the other kids to stave off jealousy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks. On birthdays, is it ok for me to only send gifts to the kids whose birthday it is?
Whaaaaaaaat? Why would you send anything to the other kids?
Op here. Because in one of the families one time when I gave presents to just the birthday boy, his older sibling (6) got really upset and accused me of not giving her a present for her birthday (which was not true, I had given her one, but it was a few weeks late since I brought it in person). Her parents seem to think that you should give a big gift to the birthday boy and small ones to the other kids to stave off jealousy.
I'm sorry, but these kids sound incredibly spoiled. First of all, the parents should have reprimanded the kid for even saying anything to you. Gifts are gifts -- not expectations, not dues, not requirements. A child needs to be taught that.
Agree! This poster said everything I was thinking, but too lazy to write!
I would scale back dramatically with the gifts. It's not that you should expect anything in return. It's that it's obvious these kids are spoiled, and you need to stop contributing to that.
And if you send a birthday gift, just send it to the birthday kid. If other kids complain when you see them, then you explain, "well, when it is your birthday, you will get a gift." And leave it at that. If the parents have an issue with that, then, personally, I would stop giving birthday gifts.