Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We always spend $100. You sound a bit cheap, especially since you don't even have your own expensive kids.
I'm OP. I have 2 kids. One of them has medical issues that are likely to become increasingly expensive.
That said, I can afford $100 gifts. It just feels excessive for a little kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised by the number of people advocating giving a gift card to an 8 year old. I would give a gift they would seemm to like based on the list and their interests and call it a day.
Why? My kids are around that age and love gift cards - a $20 gift card is like gold to them, and they will spend an hour at Target trying to figure out what they want most and if they want three little things or one big thing. They are also much easier for out-of-town family to send in a card rather than having to wrap/box/ship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised by the number of people advocating giving a gift card to an 8 year old. I would give a gift they would seemm to like based on the list and their interests and call it a day.
Why? My kids are around that age and love gift cards - a $20 gift card is like gold to them, and they will spend an hour at Target trying to figure out what they want most and if they want three little things or one big thing. They are also much easier for out-of-town family to send in a card rather than having to wrap/box/ship.
Anonymous wrote:I am surprised by the number of people advocating giving a gift card to an 8 year old. I would give a gift they would seemm to like based on the list and their interests and call it a day.
Get a huge nerf gun. Your nephew will love it and your sister will hate it.
I kind of love this idea
Anonymous wrote:Get a huge nerf gun. Your nephew will love it and your sister will hate it.

Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks all (er, most) for reassuring me that I'm not nuts. I was starting to wonder. My sister and I have other issues between us surrounding money which makes this worse. It's not about owing each other money, but when I was a grad student I often felt that she was totally insensitive and uncompromising in terms of understanding that I was living off a $20K stipend in a much higher COL area than her.
Back to the question, at had. The list was basically all Star Wars Lego Sets. Any suggestions for sets in the $30-40 range?
Going in with my brother is not an option, since he happily spends money on expensive gifts (no kids, and he just has a different perspective on this).
Anonymous wrote:Send a gift card in the amount you want to spend to one of the stores/retailers that carries the item he wants. So, if he wants a certain toy at Toys 'R Us, that's the gift card; if he wants a video game off of Amazon, that's the gift card. Do that with something low-key but fun like a few boxes of movie-size candy or those cute flavor sprinkles you put on popcorn.