Anonymous wrote:OMG, DH parents just brought him a freaking EASTER BASKET. We are in our late 30s.
Anonymous wrote:op: $100. My parents are frugal and secretive about their finances, but Mom has let a few hints go that they have quite the stash.
Anonymous wrote:I'd like my parents to stop sending me a check for my birthday. There's no way to say this politely, is there?
Anonymous wrote:OP, your post made me remember smth I read a while back. The now infamous Guantanamo bay military base in Cuba is on the land that was formally leased to the US government by the Cuban government in 1903.
Despite the revolution and hostilities, every year US sends a check to Fidel for the contractual amount. He puts it in his desk. Not once since 1960s has it been cashed.
Take what you want from this story. You can draw the line in the sand by never cashing. Or you can see it as a sign that your parents in some way feel it's their obligation to you, no matter what.
It may also be automated and they forgot about it. I have a citibank feature like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's a nice gesture .. Not quite sure what the problem is.
+1000. Sounds like veiled bragging to me. Who on earth complains about something like this? Donate the money to charity if you like but stop bitching about it.
+1. I guess I'm not as rich as all you because we don't have a lot of extra money sitting around after bills are paid. My parent send me birthday checks each year and I use it for something like a new coat. They also send us anniversary checks, which we use to go to a nice dinner. It's a gift. We also send them birthdays gifts, so I suppose we all "break even" by the end of the year, but that's not the point. Maybe this is all different because we have a good and close relationship?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd like my parents to stop sending me a check for my birthday. There's no way to say this politely, is there?
I am 51 an still get them from my parents (It was $100 and then near the end of my mother's life it was $500). I do a splurge activity. It isn't about being independent or able to afford it on my own. They want to do it. My mom got one from her uncle until he died. He never increased it from 1929 to 1989 (when he died), always $5 - inflation was not in his vocabulary.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's a nice gesture .. Not quite sure what the problem is.
+1000. Sounds like veiled bragging to me. Who on earth complains about something like this? Donate the money to charity if you like but stop bitching about it.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's a nice gesture .. Not quite sure what the problem is.
Anonymous wrote:My parents always gave me the maximum gift amount allowed by law. If they wait until they die it gets taxed, as a gift no tax to a certain amount per year. It's a smart tax move.