Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you offered her the option of making contributions to a 529 instead of making small purchases? She can make gift contributions of as little as $25.
I brought it up, but she never followed up with me. She said she wants to help us pay for our kids' college, but I guess she's waiting for us to actually get a tuition bill. I don't think she knows what a 529 is. My mother is difficult, so there is only so much I want to converse with her.
There is no dopamine hit from electronically transferring $5 to a 529. But finding a flippy sequin tee/short set for $4.27? High upon purchase and then a new one when the kid opens it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you offered her the option of making contributions to a 529 instead of making small purchases? She can make gift contributions of as little as $25.
I brought it up, but she never followed up with me. She said she wants to help us pay for our kids' college, but I guess she's waiting for us to actually get a tuition bill. I don't think she knows what a 529 is. My mother is difficult, so there is only so much I want to converse with her.
Anonymous wrote:Have you offered her the option of making contributions to a 529 instead of making small purchases? She can make gift contributions of as little as $25.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP should set a capacity for the clothes, such as one drawer or one section of closet, and then practice the the one item in, one item out policy. No need to discuss with grandma, since grandma has refused to change her behavior when asked. My mom does this, and I just donate items regularly. It's my house, not a warehouse for what grandma buys. I wish my mom would buy piano lessons or 529 contributions instead, but oh well.
LOL. Thanks everyone for sharing their stories. I have thought the same! For my kids' birthdays my mother wanted to make a charitable donation in their name. I'm sure one of her friends had been doing something like this, since that's usually where she gets her ideas from. I said, "What about their 529?"
Serioulsy!
DH and I definitely don't have the "wealthy boomer parent" problem, but one approach you could take is ask your mom to put the new clothes away in your kid's drawer and choose which clothes to donate (to make space for the new clothes). I personally wouldn't do that because I'd want to make those choices, but doing something like this might drive home the point that there isn't space. Or your mom might just stuff things in impossibly tight which doesn't really solve anybody's problem.
Would your mom feel better if you found a child in your neighborhood who is a year younger than your child that you could pass along everything (or a lot of things) to? Sometimes its just about feeling like they're making a difference in someone's life. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP should set a capacity for the clothes, such as one drawer or one section of closet, and then practice the the one item in, one item out policy. No need to discuss with grandma, since grandma has refused to change her behavior when asked. My mom does this, and I just donate items regularly. It's my house, not a warehouse for what grandma buys. I wish my mom would buy piano lessons or 529 contributions instead, but oh well.
LOL. Thanks everyone for sharing their stories. I have thought the same! For my kids' birthdays my mother wanted to make a charitable donation in their name. I'm sure one of her friends had been doing something like this, since that's usually where she gets her ideas from. I said, "What about their 529?"
Serioulsy!
DH and I definitely don't have the "wealthy boomer parent" problem, but one approach you could take is ask your mom to put the new clothes away in your kid's drawer and choose which clothes to donate (to make space for the new clothes). I personally wouldn't do that because I'd want to make those choices, but doing something like this might drive home the point that there isn't space. Or your mom might just stuff things in impossibly tight which doesn't really solve anybody's problem.
Would your mom feel better if you found a child in your neighborhood who is a year younger than your child that you could pass along everything (or a lot of things) to? Sometimes its just about feeling like they're making a difference in someone's life. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP should set a capacity for the clothes, such as one drawer or one section of closet, and then practice the the one item in, one item out policy. No need to discuss with grandma, since grandma has refused to change her behavior when asked. My mom does this, and I just donate items regularly. It's my house, not a warehouse for what grandma buys. I wish my mom would buy piano lessons or 529 contributions instead, but oh well.
LOL. Thanks everyone for sharing their stories. I have thought the same! For my kids' birthdays my mother wanted to make a charitable donation in their name. I'm sure one of her friends had been doing something like this, since that's usually where she gets her ideas from. I said, "What about their 529?"
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:OP should set a capacity for the clothes, such as one drawer or one section of closet, and then practice the the one item in, one item out policy. No need to discuss with grandma, since grandma has refused to change her behavior when asked. My mom does this, and I just donate items regularly. It's my house, not a warehouse for what grandma buys. I wish my mom would buy piano lessons or 529 contributions instead, but oh well.
Anonymous wrote: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.
+1 It's definitely a boomer thing. My mom doesn't even recognize half of what she's given to my kids. I'm constantly cleaning, organizing, or donating the things she has bought and I hate that her desire to shop creates more work for me.
Anonymous wrote:OP should set a capacity for the clothes, such as one drawer or one section of closet, and then practice the the one item in, one item out policy. No need to discuss with grandma, since grandma has refused to change her behavior when asked. My mom does this, and I just donate items regularly. It's my house, not a warehouse for what grandma buys. I wish my mom would buy piano lessons or 529 contributions instead, but oh well.