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Upstaged by Grandparents
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22/12/2012, 08:39 PM
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Posts: 474
Joined: 9-May 11
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I will preface this by saying I am really happy that my children have loving and involved grandparents. I know that no malice was involved in this but I still feel a little sad.... Should I say something or will it just come accross as petty and ungrateful? We celebrated Christmas today with the in laws as we will be away Christmas Day. It was a wonderful day, lovely lunch, good laughs. And they are really lovely people. But the amount of presents the boys received was crazy. We arrived and sat down at the tree. I could see the tree was filled to the brim with presents. They each had two MASSIVE Santa sacks full of presents. These were as big as garbage bags and probably had at least 15 individual presents. MIL told the boys they were from Santa. Then there was the presents from them. A bike, helmet, a massive car garage and toy cars. But the most upsetting was the 3 Lego sets. Yep 3 Lego sets. I guess I am a little sad because it felt wrong that all the "Santa" gifts were purchased by someone else and there was so many. I have a little Santa stocking for each boy, but it has a few little toys and lollies in it, nothing to the extreme that was given today. But most sad, because the 'big' present I had bought for the boys was 2 Lego sets. Although they are not the same as the ones PILs bought, they are smaller ones and plus they have been playing with them all day already. I just feel like Christmas morning they will be totally underwhelmed by the little sets they recieve from us. Although we are not poor, we recently have had a few cash flow problems so we are not able to buy the kids Big presents, although all the things I picked for them I thought they would really like and thankfully enough they are not old enough to care about price. So WDYT? Am I just been petty or should I say something? This happens every year, but just this year as my oldest son is getting older it really bothered me. I don't want to sound like the ungrateful DIL and I know we are lucky we have such involved grandparents.
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22/12/2012, 08:46 PM
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Posts: 70
Joined: 30-July 10
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New Member
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I'd talk to your DH and get him to say something.
I think it sounds like, while your in laws are being involved and generous, they're a bit oblivious to what they are doing.
DH had to talk to his parents about this kind of thing a few years ago. When SS was hitting 'milestone' birthdays they were wanting to be the ones to give him significant gifts such as a watch, a bike or a golf set. DH pointed out to them that they had their opportunity to do all that when they were the parents and now they were the grandparents they had to respect that it was his turn to give those things, be the significant gift giver in his son's life. He pointed out that they were taking experiences away from DH as a father, despite how generous they were trying to be.
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22/12/2012, 08:49 PM
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Posts: 6,402
Joined: 10-September 04
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You will get a lot of replies telling you to suck it up and be glad they're interested, but I always disagree with those. It's not like there can't be a happy medium between completely uninterested and unloading most of a toy store on your doorstep.
I actually think overgifting is a form of selfishness. The giver is thinking about how they'll feel watching the child open the present and hasn't put a moment of thought into how it feels to be a kid who has never actually yearned for anything because all they have to do is glance at something and grandma buys it for them. Or who never feel that genuine excitement and anticipation because they're always opening something. Another day, another gift, even if they are well brought up enough to say a genuine thank you.
It's such a waste for kids to have more toys than they have free time to play with or appreciate. And yeah - when you know the grandparents gift like that you have to keep things to a minimum because there's no point adding to the overkill.
I've said something to them. I'm not worried about being upstaged. Absolutely not! But I am worried about my kids associating grandparents with stuff rather than with the pleasure of their company. I don't care if they give the most super, coolest gift every Christmas, as long as they don't give the 15 coolest gifts every Christmas.
My grandparents loved me and I loved them and the $10 we got in a card each Christmas was cool. I didn't need to unwrap 15 things every Christmas for their interest and care to be a palpable thing.
ETA: My inlaws have given my kids most of their 'milestone' presents so far - first bike, first amazing doll, first scooter etc. I don't mind this at all. They are elderly and won't be here for all of the childrens' Christmases and I love that they will have these milestone memories of their inlaws. But a bike is an amazing gift and doesn't need to be accompanied by so many other things as well.
This post has been edited by Eight.years: 22/12/2012, 08:52 PM
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22/12/2012, 09:01 PM
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Posts: 1,864
Joined: 6-October 12
From: Country Victoria
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I've got one granddaughter, her parents have separated in the last few months, and yes I have indulged her this Christmas. She's only 15 months old and will be spending Christmas Day with us (my eldest son is her dad), and because I don't get to see her very often, I've gone a wee bit overboard....but it's not mass produced department store toys, it's a handmade doll, some really nice clothes and some gorgeous baby swimwear. And a pretty, girly sippy cup that I just couldn't resist.
I wish my kids had been made to feel a bit "special" by their grandparents but they were four of many and they just got a small inexpensive gift each year, and now they're grown up they get nothing.
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