Anonymous wrote:I'll see all of your "tackiness" and raise you a friend who started a Go Fund Me account to pay for her wedding. Serious as a heart attack about this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People don't get married until late 20's and early 30's these days. They neither need nor want a toaster. I will never understand why a registry is acceptable but stating you want cash isn't. We did a registry with about 5 items on it. Most people got the idea, and the dinosaurs gave us some weird gift they decided we should have.
Maybe you should not invite the "dinosaurs" to your fundraising events in the future.
I was given a ceramic cross from my fathers great aunt wrapped in a plastic target bag. My husband and I are not Christian. We were also given 2 waffle makers, despite the fact that neither of us eat flour. These were not thoughtful gifts with us in mind. It wasn't a fundraising event, but I think gifts should be for the people you give them to, and welcome any information that helps me give them what they want. You all can stand on your soap boxes, but there really is no rhyme or reason to this antiquated rule. You want to give a gift they like right? They told you want they'd like. Where is the harm?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I was given a ceramic cross from my fathers great aunt wrapped in a plastic target bag. My husband and I are not Christian. We were also given 2 waffle makers, despite the fact that neither of us eat flour. These were not thoughtful gifts with us in mind. It wasn't a fundraising event, but I think gifts should be for the people you give them to, and welcome any information that helps me give them what they want. You all can stand on your soap boxes, but there really is no rhyme or reason to this antiquated rule. You want to give a gift they like right? They told you want they'd like. Where is the harm?
We received a Christian marriage manual from my husband's uncle and aunt. We're also not Christian. Maybe we should have put "No Religious Marriage Manuals" on our invitations.
Anonymous wrote:The registry is so that people know your china/silver patterns or it's for people who would like a suggestion. People are not required to use it, indeed they are not required to get you a gift at all! So many ungrateful, entitled people here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is a registry okay? Isn't is basically saying, "we'd like these items as gifts, if you are so inclined?" Why is it not okay to say, "we'd prefer cash as a gift, if you are so inclined?" If people don't want to give a gift, that's fine, and I might appreciate that more than the 3 waffle makers and crystal vases, and other nonsense that I don't need.
Doesn't a registry solve that problem?
It would if people bothered to follow the registry. We got several gifts that weren't on the registry. I wouldn't be surprised if a couple had been re-gifted to us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is a registry okay? Isn't is basically saying, "we'd like these items as gifts, if you are so inclined?" Why is it not okay to say, "we'd prefer cash as a gift, if you are so inclined?" If people don't want to give a gift, that's fine, and I might appreciate that more than the 3 waffle makers and crystal vases, and other nonsense that I don't need.
Doesn't a registry solve that problem?
It would if people bothered to follow the registry. We got several gifts that weren't on the registry. I wouldn't be surprised if a couple had been re-gifted to us.
But this could happen with the "no boxed gifts" stricture where people may still give boxed waffle makers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is not making South Asian cultures look good at all.
I don't think that the acceptability of registering for waffle makers makes mainstream US culture look so great either. (For what it's worth, we weren't going to register, but we did in response to several people who were offended by our non-registering.)
Anonymous wrote:I guess we will next see invitations asking for contributions towards the honeymoon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is a registry okay? Isn't is basically saying, "we'd like these items as gifts, if you are so inclined?" Why is it not okay to say, "we'd prefer cash as a gift, if you are so inclined?" If people don't want to give a gift, that's fine, and I might appreciate that more than the 3 waffle makers and crystal vases, and other nonsense that I don't need.
Doesn't a registry solve that problem?
It would if people bothered to follow the registry. We got several gifts that weren't on the registry. I wouldn't be surprised if a couple had been re-gifted to us.