Anonymous wrote:Does anyone think this is the same OP as the one from the “how to tell children life as they knew it is over forever” thread?
Anonymous wrote:We are using the money we normally allocate for these festivities for a new home away from the city. The kids will not be celebrating this year. They seemed Fine with this. No decorations, no special trips, and no presents. The year has been such a bust, why celebrate it.
Anonymous wrote:OP --you are sounding scroogelike.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not us. I love the holidays. Nothing can stop them from coming. They will come without ribbons! They will come without tags!
They will come without packages, boxes, or bags!
Maybe, OP, they don't come from a store.
Maybe holidays, perhaps, mean a little bit more.
Exactly. OP’s post made me think about all the people who celebrates Christmas during wars, plagues, economic depression. Read Little House on the Prairie, Or Little Women. And wasn’t Thanksgiving basically started to give thanks for having survived a truly horrific year of illness and starvation (check out Linus’s retelling from Peanuts!). I just can’t imagine what OP thought the holidays are about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - Halloween is easy to write off (we’ll just turn off all the lights in the house and hide downstairs, may leave the dog upstairs to scare away unwanted visitors). Thanksgiving is also easy - we are going to order Chinese and tell the kids the pork is turkey and call it a day. It will be topped off with a fortune cookie. Christmas will be the hardest - as the celebration is nearly a month long. No music, no decorations, no mention of 🎅🏻
This is so weird, unnecessary and borderline emotionally abusive. Because you’ve had a shitty year, you have to take it out on your children?
Anonymous wrote:OP here - Halloween is easy to write off (we’ll just turn off all the lights in the house and hide downstairs, may leave the dog upstairs to scare away unwanted visitors). Thanksgiving is also easy - we are going to order Chinese and tell the kids the pork is turkey and call it a day. It will be topped off with a fortune cookie. Christmas will be the hardest - as the celebration is nearly a month long. No music, no decorations, no mention of 🎅🏻
Anonymous wrote:Not us. I love the holidays. Nothing can stop them from coming. They will come without ribbons! They will come without tags!
They will come without packages, boxes, or bags!
Maybe, OP, they don't come from a store.
Maybe holidays, perhaps, mean a little bit more.