Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, what is your and your inlaws' ethnic/religious background?
I'm guessing you are Jewish (higher expectations when it comes to gifts and family interactions) and your inlaws are WASPs (lower maintenance/less guilt trips but downside is sometimes you don't get a gift or even phone call on your bday).
Basing this on my own family in law dynamics, maybe I'm wrong....
Holy moly. Yes all Jewish people are greedy and guilt you overly. All.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like SIL feels obligated to buy gifts for your children because you buy for hers. Hence the lies.
If you're a gift-giver then continue to give gifts with no expectations of anything in return. If SIL gives gifts, fine. If not, fine. If they're months late, whatever. If she comes up with another story, just say "Oh don't worry about it. The kids are fine. They got tons of presents for their birthdays already." That will take the pressure off.
I suspect she may not reciprocate in the way you'd like because she may not have the money. Why else would she not buy gifts for neices and nephews when she said she had?
Anonymous wrote:I 100% would LOVE to drop the gift giving. That isn't how my husband's family works. They exchange gift lists well in advance of a holiday/celebration and expect the giver to stick strictly to the gifts. Over Xmas an aunt said she stopped doing so much gift exchanging b/c it was a lot of work and SIL said she'd never want to stop and loves giving and receiving. Money isn't an issue. Again this isn't a huge deal to me, just don't of irksome. Oh well, I think the solution is that when she asks what my kids want to give her a list of things that aren't a big deal so if we get them, great. (I suggested this special digital drawing board, which isn't expensive but np know my kid would love it and now I can't get it, cant suggest it as a gift when someone else asks for an idea, and my kid doesnt have it).
Anonymous wrote:I 100% would LOVE to drop the gift giving. That isn't how my husband's family works. They exchange gift lists well in advance of a holiday/celebration and expect the giver to stick strictly to the gifts. Over Xmas an aunt said she stopped doing so much gift exchanging b/c it was a lot of work and SIL said she'd never want to stop and loves giving and receiving. Money isn't an issue. Again this isn't a huge deal to me, just don't of irksome. Oh well, I think the solution is that when she asks what my kids want to give her a list of things that aren't a big deal so if we get them, great. (I suggested this special digital drawing board, which isn't expensive but np know my kid would love it and now I can't get it, cant suggest it as a gift when someone else asks for an idea, and my kid doesnt have it).
Anonymous wrote:OP here: here is an update. Kids have a four day break from school this weekend so mother in law got tickets last week to come here. Recall sister in law previously told me the bought the present and already shipped it to me and days later said she shipped it to herself? Well, mother is law called tonight to say she asked my sister in law (her daughter) if she could swing by for the gifts since she was coming here. Sister in law said she hasn't bought them yet. WTF with the lies?
Anonymous wrote:OP here: here is an update. Kids have a four day break from school this weekend so mother in law got tickets last week to come here. Recall sister in law previously told me the bought the present and already shipped it to me and days later said she shipped it to herself? Well, mother is law called tonight to say she asked my sister in law (her daughter) if she could swing by for the gifts since she was coming here. Sister in law said she hasn't bought them yet. WTF with the lies?
Anonymous wrote:Op, what is your and your inlaws' ethnic/religious background?
I'm guessing you are Jewish (higher expectations when it comes to gifts and family interactions) and your inlaws are WASPs (lower maintenance/less guilt trips but downside is sometimes you don't get a gift or even phone call on your bday).
Basing this on my own family in law dynamics, maybe I'm wrong....
Anonymous wrote:The fact that you think about birthday presents two months in advance if you happen to be visiting tells me that you think birthday presents for cousins are very important and that you enjoy and/or feel obligated to spend lots of time thinking about things like birthday presents for cousins. The fact that she rarely even buys a gift and doesn't feel that it's all that important to get them to you on time tells me she doesn't even want to do cousin gifts and wishes you would just stop, but feels obligated since you make such a big deal about it and spend the money every year.
I am like your sister-in-law, so I understand not wanting to do gifts with everyone - especially if you live out of state and don't even know the kids well enough to pick out something they would want (her asking you for suggestions makes me think she doesn't even know them well enough to know what to get). It seems like a silly exercise to me - tell me exactly what to buy and then I'll buy your kid something and you spend the exact same money to buy my kid something. And if you don't ask, you end up with something you don't want anyway.
I personally think the fact that you're thinking about this at all and that you know every little detail about it is just looking for drama. She doesn't think gifts are that important - she's doing it because she feels obligated because you're making way too big a deal out of it. If you want to continue giving her kids gifts, do so because you enjoy gifting. If you give gifts only with the expectation of having someone feel the same way about gifts that you do and thus return in kind, then do her a favor and agree to stop exchanging gifts.
Anonymous wrote:I think 16:06 definitely got to the bottom of one part of the issue: Amazon 1 click. I have mailed so many gifts to myself instead of to the correct recipient by forgetting to change the shipping address. I don't mean to be a spaz, but I am.
Sounds like your SIL is just a little spazzy. Stop keeping score You sound like a ninny.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why you are still buying her kids presents. It really sounds to me like she'd prefer not to bother with it.