Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Adults shouldn't give other adults Xmas gifts. Xmas os for kids.
I disagree. I think it's good for kids to see their parents exchanging gifts. They don't have to be expensive. We usually just buy things we need (i.e. socks) or things we can consume (fancy grocery items, lotion, etc.). We had a lovely Christmas all around. No disappointments here. [/quote
NP
But why wait until Christmas to buy it?
The whole gift giving thing o n Christmas is silly. But kids are kids so I humor them. But goft giving adults on Jesus' birthday? Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH was so appreciative of his gifts and truly enjoyed the day. I am so happy to see him happy, he deserves it. For the DWs complaining about lack of gifts just buy yourself something and wrap it! Hope you don’t have kids who watch you martyr out and not have anything to open. So damaging.
I didn’t actually see anyone complaining about this, but this advice is so bizarre.
You buy your own gift, wrap it, and then open it in front of your husband when he opens the gifts you got him? Do you both pretend that he got it for you? Is it all a show for the kids? And why don’t your kids give you a present?
IDK. I buy my own gift, as I am very particular in what I like. It never makes it under the tree, especially because this year it’s a very well bred Dutch Warmblood foal and won’t fit!
I honestly don’t want my DH to have to try to buy me gifts. He isn’t good at it, but so am certainly no martyr. I don’t understand complaining about the same thing over and over and not doing something to change the dynamic. It is like some people enjoy the drama of it. Not me!
I don’t understand why you would say that something you bought yourself is a Christmas present from your husband. It clearly isn’t. You and he both know that. Why the weird game?
Anonymous wrote:We got into a fight a few days ago because I booked Reagan instead of Dulles. He refused to come along on our family vacation and today he didn't even call.

Anonymous wrote:I’m at the tail end of my isolation period so I’m staying alone. Met my husband, his parents, and our kids for a masked hike today. We stopped for snack and he insisted each kid eat a baby carrot. We absolutely do not force anyone to eat anything at home, I’m deeply opposed to that, and he knows it. I called him over and said “it’s really important to me not to force the kids to eat anything.” He turned around without responding, didn’t talk to me the rest of the hike, and didn’t text/call for 5 hours. When I’m alone on Christmas, and we had to miss seeing my family because I couldn’t fly.
THEN he decides he’s talking to me again, comes over to my rental and we sit outside for a while. He spent the entire time complaining about his parents, including taking about how his mom is just so angry all the time. The example he gave was she wanted DH’s dad to help make dinner, and he didn’t do it as desired, and then she didn’t speak to him for the rest of the evening. UH HELLO! Sigh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH was so appreciative of his gifts and truly enjoyed the day. I am so happy to see him happy, he deserves it. For the DWs complaining about lack of gifts just buy yourself something and wrap it! Hope you don’t have kids who watch you martyr out and not have anything to open. So damaging.
I didn’t actually see anyone complaining about this, but this advice is so bizarre.
You buy your own gift, wrap it, and then open it in front of your husband when he opens the gifts you got him? Do you both pretend that he got it for you? Is it all a show for the kids? And why don’t your kids give you a present?
IDK. I buy my own gift, as I am very particular in what I like. It never makes it under the tree, especially because this year it’s a very well bred Dutch Warmblood foal and won’t fit!
I honestly don’t want my DH to have to try to buy me gifts. He isn’t good at it, but so am certainly no martyr. I don’t understand complaining about the same thing over and over and not doing something to change the dynamic. It is like some people enjoy the drama of it. Not me!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH was so appreciative of his gifts and truly enjoyed the day. I am so happy to see him happy, he deserves it. For the DWs complaining about lack of gifts just buy yourself something and wrap it! Hope you don’t have kids who watch you martyr out and not have anything to open. So damaging.
I didn’t actually see anyone complaining about this, but this advice is so bizarre.
You buy your own gift, wrap it, and then open it in front of your husband when he opens the gifts you got him? Do you both pretend that he got it for you? Is it all a show for the kids? And why don’t your kids give you a present?
Anonymous wrote:DH was so appreciative of his gifts and truly enjoyed the day. I am so happy to see him happy, he deserves it. For the DWs complaining about lack of gifts just buy yourself something and wrap it! Hope you don’t have kids who watch you martyr out and not have anything to open. So damaging.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He totally one-upped me in gifts. I brought my A game and I thought I was going to crush it.
+1
+1. Said we had a $1,000 total limit on Christmas shopping. Then he buys me $6K diamond earrings. They are amazing and I love them. But I sure felt like a schmuck getting him a sweater, shaver, and some jelly bellies.
Anonymous wrote:We got into a fight a few days ago because I booked Reagan instead of Dulles. He refused to come along on our family vacation and today he didn't even call.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH was so appreciative of his gifts and truly enjoyed the day. I am so happy to see him happy, he deserves it. For the DWs complaining about lack of gifts just buy yourself something and wrap it! Hope you don’t have kids who watch you martyr out and not have anything to open. So damaging.
I’ll have none of this, let’s not set the bar so low! Unless you agreed to not get each other gifts, you need to get your spouse a gift for Christmas. Yeah people are going to mess up but responding normally to somebody’s actions isn’t being a martyr.