Anonymous wrote:You are SO greedy. You son got two monetary gifts, which is also what you got (unless your parents were divorced but it doesn’t sound like it). As long as he’s treating all grandchildren equally that’s totally legitimate. I can’t imagine being annoyed by only getting $400 cuff links.
Most people don’t even get this money, there is no equivalent in many cultures. They might get some financial help when they get married. For god sake.
Anonymous wrote:I live this life too. My father and his wife take lavish trips, brag about how much money they spend and then stiff my kids, nieces and nephews. I have not received a gift in years
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to be grateful and move on. Don’t have your son turn out greedy…like you. Good grief.
+1. This is so gross. I thought a bar mitzvah was a religious rite not a money grab.[/quote]
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Anonymous wrote:I live this life too. My father and his wife take lavish trips, brag about how much money they spend and then stiff my kids, nieces and nephews. I have not received a gift in years
Anonymous wrote:There is no way this is real. No one could think for a second that it was OK to bring this up.
OP is a troll trying to malign Jews by leaning into antisemitic stereotypes.
Anonymous wrote:My son recently had his Bar Mitzvah and all of our family was in attendance. This is an important milestone on both sides of the family. My parents are divorced (but both remarried) and my father has been very successful and lives what most would consider a lavish life. My mom and in-laws do not have a ton of money in comparison, although both are comfortable enough.
Both my in-laws and mom gave my son a very generous financial gift for his Bar Mitzvah, which will be saved for him to use after college. My dad, in comparison, gave him a pair of monogrammed cuff links that are nice but maybe cost $400. His parents, my grandparents, gave me $1,800 for my own Bat Mitzvah in the early 90s, and he is well aware of that. We have several friends who gave more than my dad did.
I can’t help but feel annoyed and insulted that he wasn’t more thoughtful with his gift, especially since he knows how helpful the money I had saved from my own Bat Mitzvah was for me post-college when I moved to a new city and made no money. This is the same person who told me he got a new suit for the Bar Mitzvah and couldn’t believe a nice suit costs $5,000 these days (obviously you can get a suit for much less). We also hosted him and my step-mom for a full weekend which included multiple meals he didn’t have to play a dime for, and we most definitely spent more on him than that.
Do I say something without coming off as obnoxious/spoiled/greedy? Would this bother others?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no way this is real. No one could think for a second that it was OK to bring this up.
OP is a troll trying to malign Jews by leaning into antisemitic stereotypes.
And all the posters siding with OP??
Anonymous wrote:There is no way this is real. No one could think for a second that it was OK to bring this up.
OP is a troll trying to malign Jews by leaning into antisemitic stereotypes.
Anonymous wrote:You need to be grateful and move on. Don’t have your son turn out greedy…like you. Good grief.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks for all the perspectives. I agree there is probably nothing I can say that will make any different and won’t come off the wrong way.
A couple things to add - in the Jewish religion it is customary to give money as the gift for a Mitzvah, no matter how big or small, not a physical gift. I have not at all soured the gift for my son, who frankly isn’t excited about cuff link yet but I know they will be a meaningful gift when he is older. I don’t know the exact dollar amount they cost, but that was an estimate based on the fancy store they came from.
In terms of my dad not remembering what others gave me, sure he may not remember dollar amounts, but he was not a passive bystander. He took all the money and invested it for years until I graduated from college, and when I did graduate and moved to NYC he made a big show of giving me a check and telling me I was cut off financially but could use that money to supplement my income, which was very necessary since I made like $25,000 a year and couldn’t cover my rent without it. He had basically doubled the money from investing it and was very proud of that fact. So for that reason I find it hard to imagine he forgot all of that along with the lesson of learning to be financially independent/responsible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son recently had his Bar Mitzvah and all of our family was in attendance. This is an important milestone on both sides of the family. My parents are divorced (but both remarried) and my father has been very successful and lives what most would consider a lavish life. My mom and in-laws do not have a ton of money in comparison, although both are comfortable enough.
Both my in-laws and mom gave my son a very generous financial gift for his Bar Mitzvah, which will be saved for him to use after college. My dad, in comparison, gave him a pair of monogrammed cuff links that are nice but maybe cost $400. His parents, my grandparents, gave me $1,800 for my own Bat Mitzvah in the early 90s, and he is well aware of that. We have several friends who gave more than my dad did.
I can’t help but feel annoyed and insulted that he wasn’t more thoughtful with his gift, especially since he knows how helpful the money I had saved from my own Bat Mitzvah was for me post-college when I moved to a new city and made no money. This is the same person who told me he got a new suit for the Bar Mitzvah and couldn’t believe a nice suit costs $5,000 these days (obviously you can get a suit for much less). We also hosted him and my step-mom for a full weekend which included multiple meals he didn’t have to play a dime for, and we most definitely spent more on him than that.
Do I say something without coming off as obnoxious/spoiled/greedy? Would this bother others?
Jesus Christ, you’re embodying every nasty stereotype about Jews with this. You ungrateful, entitled witch.
uh, but using JC as a curse word is fine?