Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The same amount you'd have given if you'd gone. I've never given less than $200.
A lot of people here are cheap though, because they're from the Midwest and they'll wear to you that $18 is totally fine.
Excuse me. Your comment about people from the Midwest is bigoted and simply untrue. Who else do you unfairly stereotype. Care to share??
I disagree. I think it is bigoted and absolutely accurate.

Anonymous wrote:We have never given more than $108 even for close family members. We are in LA and this seems to be the norm for our synagogue. Our nephew had his bar mitzvah a few months ago and he got $108 from us, and my sons got around $36 from close friends and $72-108 from closer relatives. For family and friends that live overseas, we usually got material gifts rather than money.
Anonymous wrote:We have never given more than $108 even for close family members. We are in LA and this seems to be the norm for our synagogue. Our nephew had his bar mitzvah a few months ago and he got $108 from us, and my sons got around $36 from close friends and $72-108 from closer relatives. For family and friends that live overseas, we usually got material gifts rather than money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The same amount you'd have given if you'd gone. I've never given less than $200.
A lot of people here are cheap though, because they're from the Midwest and they'll wear to you that $18 is totally fine.
Excuse me. Your comment about people from the Midwest is bigoted and simply untrue. Who else do you unfairly stereotype. Care to share??
Anonymous wrote:,Being from the midwest,I agree.This person is being a hypocrite.Anonymous wrote:What did the Midwesterners do to you?I have known many eastern natives pull out a 5 dollar bill and give it to the child being celebrated and I have also seen people from the Midwest give $500.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The same amount you'd have given if you'd gone. I've never given less than $200.
A lot of people here are cheap though, because they're from the Midwest and they'll wear to you that $18 is totally fine.
Excuse me. Your comment about people from the Midwest is bigoted and simply untrue. Who else do you unfairly stereotype. Care to share??
I disagree. I think it is bigoted and absolutely accurate.
I would agree that that is the mindset of Midwesterners being one myself, but it isn't about being cheap. It is about both valuing the correct things (people not money) and recognizing that no child of 13 needs a gift of that size for any occasion. It is vulgar especially in conjunction with a ceremony that is supposed to one that is a celebration of the spiritual.
I don't think you truly understand what a bar/bat mitzvah is. You're just pulling excuses out of your ass to justify your cheap, Midwestern ways of thinking. It's not vulgar. Kids put this money away for college - nobody's blowing it on Starbucks.
All you are doing is insulting Midwesterners just because they came from the midwest,then making anyone else that's not you look like an idiot.I can tell your the kind of person that would sell their own children if it made anyone other than you look bad.
Anonymous wrote:There's no way anyone is taking home more than the event costs - it's a religious milestone, and your suggestion that it is a money-grab is offensive.
For some perspective:. Our event (at a restaurant) for 150 people (large, easy coast family) cost $27k and the kid ended up with $6k.
,Being from the midwest,I agree.This person is being a hypocrite.Anonymous wrote:What did the Midwesterners do to you?I have known many eastern natives pull out a 5 dollar bill and give it to the child being celebrated and I have also seen people from the Midwest give $500.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The same amount you'd have given if you'd gone. I've never given less than $200.
A lot of people here are cheap though, because they're from the Midwest and they'll wear to you that $18 is totally fine.
Excuse me. Your comment about people from the Midwest is bigoted and simply untrue. Who else do you unfairly stereotype. Care to share??
I disagree. I think it is bigoted and absolutely accurate.
I would agree that that is the mindset of Midwesterners being one myself, but it isn't about being cheap. It is about both valuing the correct things (people not money) and recognizing that no child of 13 needs a gift of that size for any occasion. It is vulgar especially in conjunction with a ceremony that is supposed to one that is a celebration of the spiritual.
I don't think you truly understand what a bar/bat mitzvah is. You're just pulling excuses out of your ass to justify your cheap, Midwestern ways of thinking. It's not vulgar. Kids put this money away for college - nobody's blowing it on Starbucks.
All you are doing is insulting Midwesterners just because they came from the midwest,then making anyone else that's not you look like an idiot.I can tell your the kind of person that would sell their own children if it made anyone other than you look bad.
What did the Midwesterners do to you?I have known many eastern natives pull out a 5 dollar bill and give it to the child being celebrated and I have also seen people from the Midwest give $500.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The same amount you'd have given if you'd gone. I've never given less than $200.
A lot of people here are cheap though, because they're from the Midwest and they'll wear to you that $18 is totally fine.
Excuse me. Your comment about people from the Midwest is bigoted and simply untrue. Who else do you unfairly stereotype. Care to share??
I disagree. I think it is bigoted and absolutely accurate.
I would agree that that is the mindset of Midwesterners being one myself, but it isn't about being cheap. It is about both valuing the correct things (people not money) and recognizing that no child of 13 needs a gift of that size for any occasion. It is vulgar especially in conjunction with a ceremony that is supposed to one that is a celebration of the spiritual.
I don't think you truly understand what a bar/bat mitzvah is. You're just pulling excuses out of your ass to justify your cheap, Midwestern ways of thinking. It's not vulgar. Kids put this money away for college - nobody's blowing it on Starbucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The same amount you'd have given if you'd gone. I've never given less than $200.
A lot of people here are cheap though, because they're from the Midwest and they'll wear to you that $18 is totally fine.
Excuse me. Your comment about people from the Midwest is bigoted and simply untrue. Who else do you unfairly stereotype. Care to share??
I disagree. I think it is bigoted and absolutely accurate.
I would agree that that is the mindset of Midwesterners being one myself, but it isn't about being cheap. It is about both valuing the correct things (people not money) and recognizing that no child of 13 needs a gift of that size for any occasion. It is vulgar especially in conjunction with a ceremony that is supposed to one that is a celebration of the spiritual.
I don't think you truly understand what a bar/bat mitzvah is. You're just pulling excuses out of your ass to justify your cheap, Midwestern ways of thinking. It's not vulgar. Kids put this money away for college - nobody's blowing it on Starbucks.