Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The one by one gift opening is solely for the benefit of the giver who needs to feel appreciated.
This. My MIL is exactly like this. The even sadder thing is that she doesn't even pick out the gifts. I buy them, mail them to her house for her to wrap and then give away. Sigh.
Ridiculous. The one-by-one is a way to take a moment to appreciate each gift instead of immediately tearing into the next one. Yes, it also allows the giver to see the recipients reaction and/or explain whatever thought went into the gift, and it teaches kids to express thanks.
Last year we went to my in-laws for my first experience with the grab approach. I was overwhelmed, as was my 1.5yr old, who cried and waited to open his gifts until the frenzy was over. I honestly felt like I was in the middle of WalMart on Black Friday. I'll also never know if the recipients cared at all about the carefully chosen gifts I gave, and thus don't know what to get them next time. Fortunately, my DH was also disappointed in how it all went down and was sorry for our son as well. Never again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The one by one gift opening is solely for the benefit of the giver who needs to feel appreciated.
This. My MIL is exactly like this. The even sadder thing is that she doesn't even pick out the gifts. I buy them, mail them to her house for her to wrap and then give away. Sigh.
Anonymous wrote:The one by one gift opening is solely for the benefit of the giver who needs to feel appreciated.
OP again -- I get why some people like this idea. But that's not the point -- the point is that she is trying to control a Christmas get together that isn't even her family! And we've been doing it this way for nearly 40 years, with all sorts of other "visitors" joining us along the way. I just don't get why we should alter a celebration that 20+ people love to appease one person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We do one-by-one too.
It's more civilized.
But I think it only works once the kids are a bit older and can temper their impulses better.
Whatever. When you have a huge group, it's incredibly time-consuming and tedious to do it this way. Heck, even in my immediate family, we all open gifts at the same time. You open your gift, catch the attention of the person who gave it to you, say "thank you," and continue. It's relaxed, but still civilized.
That's what my family does too. We have less than ten but if we had to sit through every, single, gift, and ooh and ahh over every, single, gift, it would take hours. It would take too much effort (for what gain at the end of it all?) to force everyone to sit through such an event.
As far as "civilized," for Chrissakes, they're children being children excited on Christmas, not a bunch of Huns burning a village.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does your husband feel? Has he happily adopted YOUR families way of doing Christmas or have you pretty much told him this is how it's going to be.
Husband prefers our approach -- and, to be fair, when we open gifts later in the week with his family (including MIL) we do it her way. She is with us on Christmas Day because she and her husband are passing through on the way to visit more family in another state. We meet up with them later in the week and do Christmas with his family then.
So you're graciously inviting her to your family Christmas and later doing a separate event with them their way? Yeah, she has no room to ask for changes in that scenario. Ideally, your DH would tell her so: "Mom, really. Let DW's family do things their own way. If it's too much for you, we understand if you want to take a pass on the event."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We do one-by-one too.
It's more civilized.
But I think it only works once the kids are a bit older and can temper their impulses better.
Whatever. When you have a huge group, it's incredibly time-consuming and tedious to do it this way. Heck, even in my immediate family, we all open gifts at the same time. You open your gift, catch the attention of the person who gave it to you, say "thank you," and continue. It's relaxed, but still civilized.
Anonymous wrote:We do one-by-one too.
It's more civilized.
But I think it only works once the kids are a bit older and can temper their impulses better.