Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I totally disagree. It's not a gift for you.
As the parent and the homeowner, I get a say in what comes into my house.
Exactly. I'm going to look at it first before giving it to my child. If it makes noise, will cause fights, or will cause unnecessary clutter.....well, the child may never see it. So just get them a parent-approved gift already.
Op here. Yes, that is exactly why I'm going with cash/gift card.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I totally disagree. It's not a gift for you.
As the parent and the homeowner, I get a say in what comes into my house.
Exactly. I'm going to look at it first before giving it to my child. If it makes noise, will cause fights, or will cause unnecessary clutter.....well, the child may never see it. So just get them a parent-approved gift already.
Op here. Yes, that is exactly why I'm going with cash/gift card.
actually, OP, it's not. you're fed up with your sister and want to send cash to prove a point - the point being that it's rude for her to send you a list so you'd rather put no effort into it. don't change your tune and act like you want to send cash to be helpful
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I totally disagree. It's not a gift for you.
As the parent and the homeowner, I get a say in what comes into my house.
Exactly. I'm going to look at it first before giving it to my child. If it makes noise, will cause fights, or will cause unnecessary clutter.....well, the child may never see it. So just get them a parent-approved gift already.
Op here. Yes, that is exactly why I'm going with cash/gift card.
Anonymous wrote:OP, maybe it is your sister's tone that is upsetting you? Otherwise I don't really get the issue. My son is 6, and so is my nephew, but they are just totally different people - DS is kind of a nerdy kid, into science and pokemon, my nephew is sporty. I always ask my sister what my nephew would like and she asks me what DS would like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I am totally on your side in concept. But you shared a link saying that a blanket mermaid tail or some shark-thingy is cute? Ooh, that's a rough one.
Are you a 4 year old girl with an ocean theme room? Then your opinion is probably not valid here.
Different poster, but I would have wanted to nix that particular gift because it's the kind of thing my four-year-old would have thought was great when she opened it, immediately climbed into it, and then never ever used again. It would sit around her room as clutter and she'd refuse to let me donate it, but she'd never use it because she never just sits still, she's always moving.
So seriously, what is the big deal? I don't get it. Surely things you have purchased for her have not been all "hits." Are we not allowed to get things for children to see if they may like it? You are assuming that, what if you're wrong?
Is it that much of an issue to guess wrong and give a child something that their parent didn't think of?
Hell, I've bought myself things I thought I would like/use that turned out to be flops.
But it seems excessive to micromanage gift giving and instruct people on what to give.
Especially for little kids who have not been exposed to the thousands of gift options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I totally disagree. It's not a gift for you.
As the parent and the homeowner, I get a say in what comes into my house.
Exactly. I'm going to look at it first before giving it to my child. If it makes noise, will cause fights, or will cause unnecessary clutter.....well, the child may never see it. So just get them a parent-approved gift already.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I totally disagree. It's not a gift for you.
As the parent and the homeowner, I get a say in what comes into my house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I totally disagree. It's not a gift for you.
As the parent and the homeowner, I get a say in what comes into my house.
Anonymous wrote:
I totally disagree. It's not a gift for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Different poster, but I would have wanted to nix that particular gift because it's the kind of thing my four-year-old would have thought was great when she opened it, immediately climbed into it, and then never ever used again. It would sit around her room as clutter and she'd refuse to let me donate it, but she'd never use it because she never just sits still, she's always moving.
I have the male version of this. It's awful, and if you aren't living with it, you have no idea how awful.
I suspect my sister thinks I'm a total meanie for discouraging certain presents, but I think it's totally reasonable to consider not just whether a kid will like it but whether it works well for the family as a whole. (The converse is true, too. If I want to buy my kid a drum and I don't let him play it in other people's houses, spare me the eyeroll, which I DID INDEED SEE.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I am totally on your side in concept. But you shared a link saying that a blanket mermaid tail or some shark-thingy is cute? Ooh, that's a rough one.
Are you a 4 year old girl with an ocean theme room? Then your opinion is probably not valid here.
Different poster, but I would have wanted to nix that particular gift because it's the kind of thing my four-year-old would have thought was great when she opened it, immediately climbed into it, and then never ever used again. It would sit around her room as clutter and she'd refuse to let me donate it, but she'd never use it because she never just sits still, she's always moving.
Anonymous wrote:
Different poster, but I would have wanted to nix that particular gift because it's the kind of thing my four-year-old would have thought was great when she opened it, immediately climbed into it, and then never ever used again. It would sit around her room as clutter and she'd refuse to let me donate it, but she'd never use it because she never just sits still, she's always moving.