24 answers

Christmas Scrooge???

I have been married to a wonderful man for 14 years. His family is also wonderful, he has 4 brothers and sisters. Two are married and one is engaged, one is single. My mother-in-law is the next best thing to my mother who I lost to cancer before I knew my husband. My children are the 2 oldest of the nieces and nephews, there are 6 others grandchildren. Since we have been married, Christmas is a huge deal, taking 6+ hours to open presents and $1,000+ to subsidise the event. Now this does not include the Christmas for my husband, myself and our kids, that is separate. When I told my friends about our Christmas, they thought we were insane. I had tried on numerous years to get them to scale back, put $$ limits on gifts, just buy for the kids, anything! Last year we put a $ limit on the drawn name gift ($20) but that was very challenging. We had girl gifts, sleigh gifts, Santa gifts, let's just say we were way out of control. We decided after Christmas last year to do a destination Christmas somewhere between the Quad Cities and Tulsa,OK. This would eliminate a long drive for any one family, less stress on the hostess and there would only be minimal gifts, yet to be determined. We chose Kansas City and even made the reservations at a nice hotel. About three weeks ago the e-mails started about changing the location, rotating between Tulsa, St. Louis and the Quad Cites each year. Our home is the only one that can sleep everyone without people forking out money for a hotel. Someone thought the cost of a banquet room where we could all assemble, was too high, ($250 divided by 5 families???) Someone wanted a Christmas tree, so it would be more festive. Now, we are having it in my sister-in-laws garage, how festive is that? And someone still has the 9+ hour drive every third year. The hostess duties are still the same for 21 people. Did everyone forget why we were doing this?? Now, they want to buy for all the nieces and nephews, and put a $10 to $15 limit on it. Now, I'm not trying to be snobby or anything, but what can you buy for a 13 year old boy for that amount that is not garbage? I am already dreading Christmas. I am not a Scrooge, I just want to not go broke and not be so stressed out. My husband agrees with me but says 'you know how my family is'. We started going on vacation at Thanksgiving time to avoid the hassles, are we going to have to leave to town for Christmas, too?

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

The first thing that I am taking away from all this is that I am not alone or crazy. I got some great responses and advice, and getting more. I think that for me, I can take a little from each of the responses and hopefully make a great Christmas for my family without making my in-laws upset. I feel so much better now, Thanks everyone.

Featured Answers

I understand the drama! I love the idea about everyone bringing something to donate.

If you want something to cherish....

Why not spend the money and hire a photographer to come in and take as many photos of everyone as possible?

My favorite gift every year are family photos that have been taken professionally (or really great photos in general).

The photographer can take each individual family's photo, one of the siblings with their mom, one of just the cousins...etc., etc., etc.

Just an idea!

More Answers

this year our family is doing something much less costly, Each adult bring a 20.00 new gift- Each child bring a gift age appropriate- We play the dice game- shake double & pick a gift each time you get doubles until gifts are gone- then open gifts and set timer and shake again & you can take away from someone else- It is fun and in the end everyone should have 1 gift. If not one person can give up 1 gift to share with someone who did not obtain one in the game- either way everyone get a gift & we have lots of food- Potluck style- Don't forget the desserts. Stress the reason for the season. It's not how much you get but the thought behind the gift. Ps the kids have their own dice game too!

2 moms found this helpful

Wow, I had this problem too but you by far have more people than me. I just told my husband that we are not giving to any child over the age of 12. If they don't like it they don't have to give our kids anything (even though my husband has been giving them gifts for many years) we are the last to have kids. I don't care if anyone gives my kids anything because I rather provide for them then get from others books/toys (OR A BATHTOWEL!!! who gives a two year old a bathtowel for christmas!!!)---that they don't like or already have. Since this is mostly coming from my husbands side, I made up step up to bat and tell everyone no gifts after 12 and no gifts for adults (except for his mother). I told him to tell everyone money is tight and thats that. It was hard for him to do but I let him even blame it on me "my wife isn't working so things are tight"- he also said that they don't have to give to our kids if money was tight for them. It worked.

1 mom found this helpful

I have an idea that may help - but you will have to do the legwork and it may not pay off...

You will need to make yourself a list of cities just off the beaten path between the areas you are looking for. What you are looking for is a resort/hotel that doesn't fill for the Christmas holiday. Once you have a list - call each one and ask to speak with a manager. Tell them briefly about your situation - including how many rooms would be rented - and ask them if they have a meeting room you could use later in the evening to gather for family time and ask whether or not it is decorated for the holiday season (and if that includes a tree). If it doesn't ask if they would mind putting one up for you (many of these places have extra decorations from previous years they could use). Also, be sure to explain that you personally would clean up the room after your family event is done.
I come from a tourist town where summer is our high season. In winter - the hotels have a hard time filling. I used to manage a resort and we had a family (split from New Jersey, Florida, and Seattle) that would come in - use the extra room for their Christmas gathering - clean afterwards and we didn't charge them as they filled 5 of our suites. (Plus they got our off season prices) and every year we got their business and the referrals all year long to their friends. It was definitely a win-win for all parties involved! Make the calls - tell the manager(s) you will get back to them. Once you have the locations and prices talk to your husband. If he supports the idea and he is responsible for communicating to his family - it may turn the tide. Good Luck!

I think most large families go through this and with the economy, it should be a given that everyone cut back. My family doesn't exchange gifts, except for the kids. Only the grandparents buy gifts for their grandchildren and parents only buy gifts for their kids. No niece/nephew exchanges. We mainly get together to, well, get together. Last year we met at a restaurant.

The good thing is, is that it sounds like everyone gets along. I don't know what everyone else posted, but you can look at it one of two ways. A hassle, or your kids will have great memories down the road to look back on. Sounds like a lot of fun. You are blessed. A lot of people don't have that.

And who cares if the gifts are 13 or 14 dollars. It's the spirit that counts. The kids will get over it. I'm sure the big gifts will come from their parents. Just take it in stride. There are people who are alone during the holidays and wish they could be in your shoes : ) Have a super fun holiday!!!!

In my very large family we draw names. At our Thanksgiving get together we put all the names in a hat and drew out a name for each member of our family (I would draw 7 because I have 5 kids). If we drew one of our children or spouse we would put it back and redraw. We put a $10 limit on it which was great, most of the family would get creative and make stuff, those who weren't creative would buy a gift card, T shirt, DVD or other great clearance item. Since there were so many of us there were plenty of presents to make it fun. We also make the meal a pot luck to take the pressure off of the host. She would usually make the ham or turkey and potatoes and leave the sides and desserts up to us.
Just an idea, hope it helps.

My side of the family is approaching the 25+ marker with engagements and new children, so I know where you're coming from. Each year is always at my mother's (Thanksgiving is one aunt, Easter is the other). Everyone pitches in by bringing a dish, and we do a gift exchange between the adults (beginning at age 16). I've asked repeatedly that my aunts and uncles not buy gifts for the children (especially this year due to finances) but no one ever listens. My husband and I decided to do the following this year to cut back on costs but still give heart-felt gifts:

Grandparents: All grandparents get home-made glass ornaments with the kids' pictures inside and the kids will decorate them (got a pack of 20 ornaments for $4 at Hobby Lobby).

Great-Grandparents: Framed photo of the kids, frame and matting decorated by the children (frames and matting came to less than $10 for two frames/mats at Wal-Mart).

My/his siblings: We have a Netflix subscription, so we're burning copies of movies for my brother and sister in law; my sister and her fiance are still in college, so we're giving them $15 gift cards to their campus book store. My little brother is 17 and LOVES video games, so we always get him gift certificates to his favorite game store where he can rent his games. ($15 is about 4 rentals for him)

Other people who are close to our family are getting gift baskets of homemade bread, banana bread and an array of cookies (I kinda go overboard at Christmas time with the baking, so it helps me keep from eating them all, too. Hehe)

Now, my mother-in-law and her family are a totally different story. She goes WAY over the top (last year spending about $4000 on Christmas) and is now screaming at everyone for wanting to do a gift exchange instead of buying gifts for EVERYONE. (we have a large family on that side too) Sadly, it has come down to us not being with her for Christmas because I am no longer welcome because I voiced the opinion that we should cut back. *shrug*

I hope you and your family are able to find a resolution so it doesn't end up the way mine did. Just remind your family that the purpose of the season is to share your love and joy as a family, not about the monetary gifts. Have a happy and blessed Christmas!!

Several years ago my family of 5 siblings decided that gift giving was not as fun when because of distance we couldn't get together to enjoy the opening so we decided on a different tack. Each family is know responsible for sending "at least" 4 12x12 scrapbook pages filled with that families activities for the past year. Then on Christmas we call each other when we open the pages and we share our year with each other. After the sharing (all the kids enjoy seeing and making the pages too) we slide them into a photo album and enjoy looking back on them for years.

Each family does it differently, most electronic scrapbook (and even the electronically challenged can do this), I'm the only one who still does it the old fashioned way although this year even I am only creating one original and then making copies for the others. We also create our pages differently. My sister does four seasons, my three daughters are all adults so each of us does one page, another brother does a sports page, then a school page and a vacation page and then a page of family pictures and the themes change yearly. The options are many and it's really allowed us to bridge the thousands of miles between us. Good luck!

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