Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The lady has Kohl's cash burning a hole in her pocket, OP. It MUST be used. Don't be the thief of her joy.
OP here, thanks for the laugh
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm curious how your mom would know if you give something away? Does she go through your kid's closets? Because that is extremely creepy.
My mom did this, and I would donate half the stuff before my kid even saw it.
She hypes it up to my daughter ahead of time, like "Grandma's going to buy you this awesome thing! It's almost here! Grandma will bring it next time she comes over!"
Then she absolutely wants to give it to her to see the reaction (or at least get a picture of us giving it to her), so donating before the kid sees it is not an option.
Afterward, she will just say things like "Oh, I haven't seen Larla wear that unicorn sweatshirt in a while, you haven't donated it have you?"
And she does look at her closet sometimes. When she comes over to play with my daughter, say they play at home for a bit and then are going to the playground. So then she takes her to change into an outfit that's more appropriate for the playground, and then they're going through the dresser and closet and she will see what's not there and what is.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I think this is really typical wealthy boomer behavior my mom is the same and she also gets angry if anything is given away. I say just grin and bear it, by middle school she'll stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm curious how your mom would know if you give something away? Does she go through your kid's closets? Because that is extremely creepy.
My mom did this, and I would donate half the stuff before my kid even saw it.
She hypes it up to my daughter ahead of time, like "Grandma's going to buy you this awesome thing! It's almost here! Grandma will bring it next time she comes over!"
Then she absolutely wants to give it to her to see the reaction (or at least get a picture of us giving it to her), so donating before the kid sees it is not an option.
Afterward, she will just say things like "Oh, I haven't seen Larla wear that unicorn sweatshirt in a while, you haven't donated it have you?"
And she does look at her closet sometimes. When she comes over to play with my daughter, say they play at home for a bit and then are going to the playground. So then she takes her to change into an outfit that's more appropriate for the playground, and then they're going through the dresser and closet and she will see what's not there and what is.
Anonymous wrote:Give her a limit - 2 outfits per season, anything else gets donated. She asks about the unicorn sweatshirt - sorry mom, you also gave her the penguin sweatshirt and the snow man sweater and we couldn’t fit them all in the drawer so the unicorn had to go.
My ILs are the same way but with lots of random junky toys for every holiday (even minor ones -St. Patrick’s day! 4th of July!) They live far away and love to shop, so going to the dollar store every month or two and buying stuff for the grandkids is a fun activity for them and also a way to show love. It drives me nuts because I am the one who has to deal with a million toys that break immediately. I try to think of it as allowing it is my way of showing love for them. I care about them and I am glad this brings them joy. DH and I have asked them repeatedly to tone it down, and I just deal with throwing away the junk. Redirecting the generosity has been unsuccessful.
Anonymous wrote:The lady has Kohl's cash burning a hole in her pocket, OP. It MUST be used. Don't be the thief of her joy.