Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:is $1800 too much for a best friends son?
Nope.
Anonymous wrote:is $1800 too much for a best friends son?
Anonymous wrote:$36 is cheap and basically the lowest amount someone should give. My kids never give less than $72.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The same you would give your DDs Catholic friends who are making confirmation / typically $100. Or whatever the $18 rule would be.
Dcum is a very privileged community. No way in heck people would give that much in my corner of MoCo. We gave a $25 gift to a neighbor for their communion and they were very appreciative.
Anonymous wrote:The same you would give your DDs Catholic friends who are making confirmation / typically $100. Or whatever the $18 rule would be.
Anonymous wrote:If you’re giving $36, is it better as check or cash?
Anonymous wrote:We're Jewish. Our family would never expect anyone to give more than what they were comfortable with. Like a wedding or birthday party, this is a celebration, not a money/gift grab although there are always some who treat it that way. I would especially never expect students (or their parents) to give large sums of money - $18 or $36 is fine.
Anonymous wrote:DD just went to a few bat mitzvahs for girls that she knows from school. I have no idea who the parents are and have never met the girls. We gave $18 each time. Would have been more if we knew the family or the kids. I seriously hope the $ we gave wasn’t considered cheap.