Anonymous wrote:Both my mother and my aunt, in France and the USA, have told this to my kids in anticipation of a Christmas-adjacent visit.
It’s sweet of them.
I can’t imagine ever being so possessive and jealous as to be perturbed by such innocent, child-friendly, conversation.
Seriously. You are the problem here, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, it’s not normal, and I would shut that down fast. She had her turn to be Santa. Tell her on no uncertain terms that Santa is you and DH, end of list.
+1 She had her turn and now it is yours. My MIL does this as well. It gets tricky when Santa brings more or more expensive gifts to MIL's house...
1) Santa goes everywhere ( grow up)
2) If Santa gets the credit than be happy the grandparents spent more money and you got to save yours
3) Grow up!
Anonymous wrote:GROW UP!
Santa stops at houses all over the world but not at the grandparents house?
You have a Grinch heart!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a made up story; so people make up the details in different ways. I don’t see how you are losing anything if your kid believes this for a couple of years. The whole story is pretty ridiculous, so there are plenty of details the kids pick apart when they start to realize that - this is not likely to be the inconsistent detail that reveals the truth. Obviously you have deeper issues with your mom and her overstepping what you see as your role; I would focus on resolving that instead of the particular details surrounding the Santa myth.
This
Op here. Yes, this is probably the bigger issue. Thanks for the feedback. I do find my mil historically overbearing and mostly inconsiderate of boundaries. In the past she has said things like Christmas is “her” holiday to do. She also used to stop by unannounced, make plans with our kid without asking either of us, call every day for kid updates etc etc. She has invited herself to family stuff without asking like once she literally bought a plane ticket to go on vacay with us without telling us she would be there. Anyway all that stuff has ended after some messy conversations but I am def sensitive to it. Came on here for some quick feedback. Thanks to all who actually gave it to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, it’s not normal, and I would shut that down fast. She had her turn to be Santa. Tell her on no uncertain terms that Santa is you and DH, end of list.
+1 She had her turn and now it is yours. My MIL does this as well. It gets tricky when Santa brings more or more expensive gifts to MIL's house...
Anonymous wrote:Team DIL!
Overstepping. Grandma doesn’t get to play Santa unless and until you give permission. My ILs insisted for years that they were going to “outdo” our gift-giving to our DC and they did in an obnoxious way. We were all local. DH never wanted to get involved and so for years DC learned that the grandparents would give them piles of toys and gifts to unwrap whereas mom and dad would give a few meaningful gifts.
The gift giving was so excessive that my DC couldn’t keep track, much less remember the many gifts they got from grandparents, so I’d haul all home and slowly distribute back to them only if they asked where a particular something was.
At the 3 month mark, whatever remained was donated to charity. Mean maybe but was my way of decluttering and handling the situation.
Anonymous wrote:I hate it too. Especially since my kids then question why Santa doesn’t bring gifts to both grandparents houses and only one. And they want to know why they have stockings at grandmas house??