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Christmas Presents - stupid problem

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,411 ✭✭✭✭woodchuck


    OP if it's causing you this much stress, then just don't do it. The parents won't even notice/care. By all accounts from parents here, they'd actually prefer if you didn't give presents anyway! Just nip this in the bud now before the kids themselves are old enough to notice that you've stopped doing presents.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,278 ✭✭✭✭iamwhoiam


    How about a cinema voucher for each family and an extra book for the godson


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 4,077 ✭✭✭Away With The Fairies


    Is this about your mother giving out to you or your unwillingness to change by setting the bar high?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 166,006 ✭✭✭✭LegacyUser


    Penneys PJs 6 quid ish get them all the exact same ones, job done


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2, Paid Member Posts: 3,658 ✭✭✭Tork


    In my family, my parents, aunts and uncles agreed not to buy presents for each other's children once the number of kiddies started to rise. It never bothered me in the least and when my mum told me about it at some point, I thought it was a sensible idea. The grown-ups still exchanged gifts as far as I can remember but they wouldn't have been anything too expensive. Probably things like boxes of biscuits which were a bigger deal back in the day.

    Now is the time to stop the rot because these kids are young and not yet at the age where they expect individual presents. Buying for cousin's kids is a step too far in my book anyway. It doesn't matter whether you know them well or not - it isn't a normal expectation. If you feel you should give a present to them, get something that'll do the entire family and don't overdo things. Even if you don't splash out large sums of money on Christmas presents, it all adds up. By the time your family finishes growing you could be facing into a big bill at Christmas. And all for presents that people don't really want. When was the last time you got a present that really blew your socks off?

    In my opinion, kids get far too much stuff as it is and your presents are likely to be barely noticed or tossed aside. Especially if you drop your budget to a tenner per head (no offence).


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  • Administrators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,956 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭Big Bag of Chips


    We never got presents from aunties and uncles, or neighbours, or friends, or cousins growing up. It never even occurred to us that we should. Some of us had "good" godparents who always gave something (fiver in a card!) and most of us had "bad" godparents who didn't even know they were our godparents!!

    It's all well and good buying for 1 or 2 children of relatives. But before long 1-2 children turns into 10-11 children! I have 14 nieces/nephews and 5 siblings. My husband has 17 nieces nephews and 6 siblings. Imagine buying presents for all of them... Or receiving presents for my 4 children from all the aunties/uncles?

    No, OP. Trust me as a parent it's not welcome.. Or necessary. And the more children to buy for the less money can be spent on each and the more "tat" you end up with! (As Tork mentions around a tenner a head doesn't get you much!)

    Before I opted out of all the gift giving (especially on the in-laws' side) very often my recycle bin was full of cheap plastic tat by New Years that had already broken.

    Even cinema vouchers, book vouchers etc can all start to add up when the numbers start increasing.

    The children are 2-3 now, OP. Do you plan to keep giving to them, and subsequent children that arrive until they reach 18? If you're this stressed now buying for 5 preschool children how will you cope with maybe 12-15 primary/secondary children?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 540 ✭✭✭Pistachio19


    I'm stressed just reading your post. Put an end to it now. Buy your godchild a gift - a smyths voucher for €20 and leave it at that. Don't feel one bit bad for not buying their siblings a gift as no doubt those children have their own godparents who are buying them gifts. Kids simply don't need a load of presents. There's not a hope I'd get into buying cousins kids presents - sure where would it end? As for your siblings spouse - none of your concern what they do and none of their concern what you do. Liberate yourself this year. No need to give any excuses or explanation - just send a card with the voucher to your godchild and forget about it then.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,799 ✭✭✭✭Purple Mountain


    Notauser20 wrote: »
    Penneys PJs 6 quid ish get them all the exact same ones, job done

    Dont do this. It's incredibly hard to get children's sizes estimates correct unless you're the person who buys all their clothes.

    To thine own self be true



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2, Paid Member Posts: 3,658 ✭✭✭Tork


    Dont do this. It's incredibly hard to get children's sizes estimates correct unless you're the person who buys all their clothes.

    Also, kids don't appreciate clothes as a present.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,280 ✭✭✭Rubberchikken


    I agree , kids don't appreciate clothes gifts. Small kids aren't bothered and older kids prefer cash. That way they have the fun of spending some of it on something they'd like and might be encouraged to save a little which is a great life lesson.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,799 ✭✭✭✭Purple Mountain


    I agree , kids don't appreciate clothes gifts. Small kids aren't bothered and older kids prefer cash. That way they have the fun of spending some of it on something they'd like and might be encouraged to save a little which is a great life lesson.
    I would stop the cash gifts too.
    They're cousins children.
    This year is perfect excuse, with the pandemic. Many people won't be going out shopping.
    So I'd suggest to the op, send a Christmas card in the post tomorrow to the whole family and that breaks the cycle of getting a gift in person.
    Myself and my best friend are doing this, this year with our kids. She actually came out and said let's not do presents, I secretly said phew, and posted a nice card addressed to all the family so that shows that we're shifting the tradition.
    Next year, neither of us will expect gifts now, the cycle is broken.
    ETA. Hilda says it perfectly above. This year is the year to break the chain because you probably won't see them anyway. So post a card or send a nice text on Christmas eve. I wouldn't even go explaining to the parents because that's saying that they're owed an explanation. They're not.
    What your sibling and partner do are none of your business. You dont know, but if they see you dropping the tradition of buying the gifts, they might actually be relieved and feel same way too.
    So just stop, dont feel guilty or explain and spend that €100 on yourself.

    To thine own self be true



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 540 ✭✭✭Pistachio19


    I would stop the cash gifts too.
    They're cousins children.
    This year is perfect excuse, with the pandemic. Many people won't be going out shopping.
    So I'd suggest to the op, send a Christmas card in the post tomorrow to the whole family and that breaks the cycle of getting a gift in person.
    Myself and my best friend are doing this, this year with our kids. She actually came out and said let's not do presents, I secretly said phew, and posted a nice card addressed to all the family so that shows that we're shifting the tradition.
    Next year, neither of us will expect gifts now, the cycle is broken.
    ETA. Hilda says it perfectly above. This year is the year to break the chain because you probably won't see them anyway. So post a card or send a nice text on Christmas eve. I wouldn't even go explaining to the parents because that's saying that they're owed an explanation. They're not.
    What your sibling and partner do are none of your business. You dont know, but if they see you dropping the tradition of buying the gifts, they might actually be relieved and feel same way too.
    So just stop, dont feel guilty or explain and spend that €100 on yourself.

    You'd like to think the cycle is broken until someone starts it up again and you're left feeling baffled as to why they'd do that. Set a reminder on your phone for next October to reinforce to your friend what a great idea it was this year.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 245 ✭✭ElizaBennett


    I really hope you take all this good advice, OP, and just put a stop to this unnecessary stress immediately. I totally agree with the parents here also, who are pointed out how stressful it is to have more and more 'stuff' coming into your house, trying to find space for it all and I also really believe that giving kids too much takes away from the magic of Santa and makes all the other gifts less special. Less is definitely more!
    Please just take the advice, sent the card, no explanation and promise yourself you're done with this issue now. It's over.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 166,006 ✭✭✭✭LegacyUser


    OP back again - apologies for delay in replying.

    I still don't know what to do. However, I'm a lot less anxious now about it all.
    Is this about your mother giving out to you or your unwillingness to change by setting the bar high?
    Interesting question. I think I would just have gave them money and it would not have been a kerfulle. However, my mother giving off to me upset me quite a bit. She is quite deliberate with her spending in all regards and I didn't like being chastised about giving them gifts.

    I did speak about this last year with my counsellor as it was playing on my mind then. I got them all gifts and as quite at peace with myself after doing it. This year I was just going to give cash and that would remove the burden of gift getting. Just hand over some cash, walk away and let parents(kid later on) get something they want/need.

    I just feel that I'm trying to please everyone and that my 'solutions' are falling short everywhere. It's not that I'm trying to buy happiness/friendship/whatever, but I don't want to come across a favouring my godchild and omitting the other 2. It was easier just to get them something rather than leave them out. My conscious felt better for it. However, it seems everyone thinks I've made a rod for my back here.

    Not sure if cash for parents to get the 3yo something is wise or not, but I'm not going trailing around shops looking for something that might or might not suit or clutter up there house. Cash is king.

    As they live in the north is £10 fine or should it be £20...?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,239 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    Put the money all together and buy them all one big present ..like a trampoline ...or something less lethal


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,799 ✭✭✭✭Purple Mountain


    Forget the family that you have no godchild in. Send them a family card, or don't. Either way is perfectly fine.
    As for the godchild family, I'd send an envelope with a family card in it and put a small sum in the card with a note saying "buy the kids some sweets from me". £20/£30 is fine for the family.
    You definitely shouldn't be seeing them this Christmas anyway with the way things are going so this is perfect time to break cycle by post.

    To thine own self be true



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 540 ✭✭✭Pistachio19


    £10 is plenty for a small child. You wouldn't want to be sending more than that in the post anyway. I'd write 2 cards - one to the family and the other specifically to the godchild with the £10 in it. Please keep in mind that the other 2 kids have their own godparents to get money/gifts from so there is no need for you to give them anything and no need to feel a bit bad about it.

    Put both cards into a brown envelope and send it - saves on a stamp and doesn't look like a Christmas card that could have money in it. Then just send a card to the other cousins families if you want.


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