Anonymous wrote:This is my husband. He's 35 and still a bit sensitive about birthdays. (OTOH, my ILs totally sidelined him to deal with his dramatic sister.)
What about starting a strong birthday tradition that is activity based instead of object based? For example, it's a weekend away or a day trip or a thing with just mom and dad - get a sitter for sister.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly yes. DH is a holiday birthday and it's HARD. He definitely doesn't really get separate birthday and Christmas gifts. And since his is right after Christmas, no one really wants to celebrate again and are burnt out from the holidays.
Do people really have the time and inclination to add a birthday to the mix in the days leading up to Christmas, though? Just curious because I am facing a Christmas time birth soon.
Lol. It's not like you have a choice to make the bday not then.
Anonymous wrote:Yep. Make her b-day a family trip each year.
Anonymous wrote:Two strikes against her in the gift department. 1, she's the younger sister (close in age) and 2) she was born a few days after Christmas. Seriously, I have no idea what to get her. I've been told to never, ever combine birthday and Christmas gifts, which we'll do, but I feel like she's always going to get the short end of the stick. Either her sister will already have (and hand down) "big" gifts like a bike or she'll get it for Christmas (or her birthday, but then opposite is true...) DD is not really old enough to notice yet, but that day is soon coming.
Has anyone successfully mitigated this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you believe all of her "big" gifts are destined to be hand me downs? Seems crappy.
OP here - I never said I'd give her hand-me-downs as a gift, but I'm not going to go out and buy a new bike when there is a perfectly suitable one in the attic. That wouldn't be a gift, just something that we make her own when its time for her to use it. It also means that a bike, etc. is one less option for a "big" gift when it comes time for Christmas/Birthday.
You should not make every big thing a hand-me down. There is being frugal, and then there is being cheap and unfair. Every bike she owns as a child should not be a hand-me down, regardless of the status of the bike in the attic. And yes, I have two children that are 17 months apart. My youngest son always gets his own smaller bike or scooter. You will send your younger daughter a clear message if EVERYTHING she gets was new and shiny for someone else.
As for parties and such, I have a friend whose child was born a few days after Christmas. She just sends out the invites a lot earlier than usual. If we are in town, we ALWAYS go to his birthday party.