Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you can *suggest* this approach to your husband's family, but why do you feel the need to *convince* them that it's the way to go? Great that it works for your family, but that approach is not right for every family.
Don't try to come in as "an outsider" and dictate their holiday. Suggest once, and if they like the idea, great! If they don't, fine!
OP here, my husband agrees with me. Of course we will look look the bad guys but we need to stop the nonsense. Our kids are older and want for nothing. We do not even see them. It really is exchanging gift cards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not the OP, but I too would really love to hear people's advice about how, specifically, they got their families to agree to this. How did you broach the idea?
I am pretty certain my family would think we are selfish, lazy and cheap if I made this suggestion. The thinking would be, if everyone else in the family can make the effort (AND they all make less money than us) what is our problem? It doesn't help that my mom really loves shopping for gifts -- we end up with so much stuff we don't need or even like all that much. It would make her sad if we told her we didn't want to exchange gifts anymore, or even just limit it to the children.
Compounding the problem, my husband's family goes even more overboard than mine. We literally receive hundreds and hundreds of dollars worth of gifts from his side of the family, and it is embarrassing that we don't spend as much on them, even though we buy a lot of individual presents for everyone -- and this happens EVERY year. I'm getting to the point where I really hate the holidays because we have over a dozen people to shop for, and each of them has to get multiple presents. Gift cards are a no go, it would be considered lazy and thoughtless. It is ridiculous. I hate it so much.
I just would really love to hear specific advice for how to deal with this issue with families where EVERYONE else seems to love buying tons of gifts for everyone, making the person who disagrees the spoilsport.
This sounds horrid. I will pray for you.
Anonymous wrote:Not the OP, but I too would really love to hear people's advice about how, specifically, they got their families to agree to this. How did you broach the idea?
I am pretty certain my family would think we are selfish, lazy and cheap if I made this suggestion. The thinking would be, if everyone else in the family can make the effort (AND they all make less money than us) what is our problem? It doesn't help that my mom really loves shopping for gifts -- we end up with so much stuff we don't need or even like all that much. It would make her sad if we told her we didn't want to exchange gifts anymore, or even just limit it to the children.
Compounding the problem, my husband's family goes even more overboard than mine. We literally receive hundreds and hundreds of dollars worth of gifts from his side of the family, and it is embarrassing that we don't spend as much on them, even though we buy a lot of individual presents for everyone -- and this happens EVERY year. I'm getting to the point where I really hate the holidays because we have over a dozen people to shop for, and each of them has to get multiple presents. Gift cards are a no go, it would be considered lazy and thoughtless. It is ridiculous. I hate it so much.
I just would really love to hear specific advice for how to deal with this issue with families where EVERYONE else seems to love buying tons of gifts for everyone, making the person who disagrees the spoilsport.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you can *suggest* this approach to your husband's family, but why do you feel the need to *convince* them that it's the way to go? Great that it works for your family, but that approach is not right for every family.
Don't try to come in as "an outsider" and dictate their holiday. Suggest once, and if they like the idea, great! If they don't, fine!
Anonymous wrote:My H's side of the family is huge. For many years we did a Secret Santa Exchange with Christmas ornaments. But after 10+ years of ornaments we were all done.
What we now do is a Shutterfly calendar. Each part of the family gets a couple of pages to decorate. It's fun to see pictures of the family we don't get to see a lot. Plus we add in all our birthdays so now we know when to say Happy Birthday. My son, who is 3, loves it and likes to look at the pictures and name everyone. It's much better than ornaments and can be enjoyed all year.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you can *suggest* this approach to your husband's family, but why do you feel the need to *convince* them that it's the way to go? Great that it works for your family, but that approach is not right for every family.
Don't try to come in as "an outsider" and dictate their holiday. Suggest once, and if they like the idea, great! If they don't, fine!
Anonymous wrote:Not the OP, but I too would really love to hear people's advice about how, specifically, they got their families to agree to this. How did you broach the idea?
I am pretty certain my family would think we are selfish, lazy and cheap if I made this suggestion. The thinking would be, if everyone else in the family can make the effort (AND they all make less money than us) what is our problem? It doesn't help that my mom really loves shopping for gifts -- we end up with so much stuff we don't need or even like all that much. It would make her sad if we told her we didn't want to exchange gifts anymore, or even just limit it to the children.
Compounding the problem, my husband's family goes even more overboard than mine. We literally receive hundreds and hundreds of dollars worth of gifts from his side of the family, and it is embarrassing that we don't spend as much on them, even though we buy a lot of individual presents for everyone -- and this happens EVERY year. I'm getting to the point where I really hate the holidays because we have over a dozen people to shop for, and each of them has to get multiple presents. Gift cards are a no go, it would be considered lazy and thoughtless. It is ridiculous. I hate it so much.
I just would really love to hear specific advice for how to deal with this issue with families where EVERYONE else seems to love buying tons of gifts for everyone, making the person who disagrees the spoilsport.