52 answers

Should I Buy a Baby Shower Gift?

Hi! My husband's cousin just had a baby, and a baby shower is planned. My son was born seven months ago. Originally, family members were talking about having a shower a month or two before the birth, but I turned it down because my mother was dying of cancer. She died a month and a half before my little guy was born.

In any case, my husband's cousin, (who will be having a shower to which everyone will be invited) though she was pregnant at the time of my son's birth, didn't bother to buy a gift for our little one or even send a card. (Money wouldn't be an issue). My husband's aunt and uncle (her parents) brought a $3.99 bouquet of carnations to the hospital, but that was the extent of it. A few of my husband's extended relatives did give small gifts.

It's not that we NEED gifts for our little one -- we're fortunate enough to be able to buy everything he needs. It just annoys me that I will be expected to buy a nice gift, and that people will talk about me if I don't, when the same people didn't seem to care about our son's arrival. If the births had been further apart, I'd probably forgive it and go. But they weren't. Normally, I LOVE buying gifts, but buying a gift for this one would hold little pleasure for me. The same cousin was married last year, and I helped out a great deal with her shower, in addition to purchasing a nice gift.

Truthfully, I think the cousin is just clueless, and accustomed to her parents covering her gift-giving obligations for her. The thing is, she's about 30.

My husband and I are thinking of just sending a nice card to congratulate them.

What do you think?

2 moms found this helpful

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Thanks for you advice, everyone! I really appreciate it. Still not sure what to do though -- probably will "make nice" as usual and just do it.

I think many of you are right -- the whole issue has brought up a lot of emotional stuff for me. I've been teary five times in the past two days. I never was able to grieve properly -- I ended up at the hospital two days after my mother died with signs that I was going into premature labour. I had to take a week off of work and stay calm. Thankfully, my son was born safely a month and a half later.

As for the shower, it was my husband's stepmother and SIL who were talking about having it. Not only would the actual event have been around the time of my mother's death, but my father in law was telling my husband that they were going to be contacting my mother so she would know what to bring to the shower in terms of food. At that point, my mother was confined to her bed. Hearing about their plans, I asked my husband to tell them to cancel it.

My little guy is all the more special to me because we had to wait such a long time to have him. I had a partial molar pregnancy that forced us to wait a year before trying again, so my little one was 2 1/2 years in the making. Unfortunately, my mother never got to see him.

I guess it was hard to hear my husband's cousing blithely talking about the shower she was going to have (a mere three months into her pregnancy, and shortly after my little guy was born).

And yes, she is clueless rather than intentionally rude. I went with her to some yard sales a few years ago, and she completely embarrassed me by talking loudly about the "junk" that people were selling (with them standing there!) Sometimes I wonder, though, if she needs to be "clued in".

As for people not knowing to do around grief, well, it seems like the world falls apart when anyone passes away on my husband's side of the family. I've attended prayer services for my husband's aunts' family members, even when I don't know them. Part of my husband's family was upset when one of our wedding-related events five years ago (scheduled long in advance, and the venue booked and paid for) fell on the 40th day after his uncle's death.

Anyway, I guess it doesn't matter. I'm always into giving gifts (and so often when they're not expected), that I guess I'm being mean-spirited by thinking I shouldn't buy something for this cousin and her baby. While I love the idea about a charitable contribution, I would take far too much evil delight in making that contribution. Maybe I'll just take a bunch of food over in the next few days and just skip the shower. In the first few weeks, food was what I really wanted anyway. Teddy bears and onesies just didn't delight me much in my sleep-deprived state.

Thanks, everyone, for the advice.

Featured Answers

You could make a contribution to a charity for kids in her child's name. Then you're really doing something for someone else and there's no way she can complain about it. good luck

2 moms found this helpful

Ahh in-laws. Go to big lots, buy a cute and cheap toy and be the bigger person. This could all go away for about 15 bucks, luv big lots.
Hope this helped, my in-laws do mindless stuff all the time.

1 mom found this helpful

As long as you do the right thing that's all that matters. Even though you didn't receive a gift from these people, You be the bigger person and give a good gift. What goes around comes around.

More Answers

Hmmm ... I think a family outing was already planned for that date and time and you are sorry but you will be unable to attend the shower!.. at least that is what i would do. A card would be a nice gesture.

2 moms found this helpful

You could make a contribution to a charity for kids in her child's name. Then you're really doing something for someone else and there's no way she can complain about it. good luck

2 moms found this helpful

Many [[[hugs]]] to you. I understand how painful losing your mother is. That your family didn't support you more after she passed and surrounding your child's birth is sad. Because a shower wasn't appropriate, during that hard time in your life, doesn't mean that your precious baby's birth should have been ignored. I am so sorry that this happened to you.

If your cousin's actions make you feel this slighted, please don't go to the shower. Showers are optional. Visit her at the hospital when her baby is born and bring a small gift to your new 2nd cousin.

Hope you feel happier soon.

2 moms found this helpful

The gift is for the baby not the mother. Its not the baby's fault that people cover up for her gift giving.

So I would get the baby a gift and a card and if you don't want to be there for the shower,ship it, then you know in your hearts that you did something nice for the baby, and if you get a thank you then that's a plus, if you don't that's ok also we all teach our children it is better to give than recieve, it sounds like we as adults need a reminder of that from time to time. To tell you the truth I would loved the flowers more than anything else cause it shows she took the time to pick them out. To me homemade and God grown is the best it shows that the person took the time to make it or or pick them out (the flowers I mean).

Think back at this time when you child brings you his hand print from school pressed in clay and you get you 1st mothers day card he made.

Its not the size of the gift or how much was spent it is the thought.

1 mom found this helpful

If you attend the shower, you should buy a gift. If you had been able to have a shower, she'd have brought a gift, right?.

If you don't go, but you visit the baby later, you could just bring food.

Otherwise a card is a nice gesture.

Don't stiff the baby because the cousin is clueless. Take the high road.

1 mom found this helpful

I think you should still give a gift. Honestly it seems a little high school - ish to not give someone a gift ONLY because they didn't give you one. Be the better person and give a gift (remember the gift is not for her, it's for the baby) and go to the shower and enjoy yourself.

1 mom found this helpful

Ahh in-laws. Go to big lots, buy a cute and cheap toy and be the bigger person. This could all go away for about 15 bucks, luv big lots.
Hope this helped, my in-laws do mindless stuff all the time.

1 mom found this helpful

Be the bigger person and get her a gift. It's hard not to analyze it the way that you are (the average person would!) but don't let yourself drop to that level. You mention you can afford it so just do it. You are being petty getting them a card. Maybe she's planning on getting a really good 1st b-day gift. Who knows? But again...giving is not about what you've received. Think of it as it's for the child. My advice is to be the bigger person.

1 mom found this helpful

Required Fields

Our records show that we already have a Mamapedia or Mamasource account created for you under the email address you entered.

Please enter your Mamapedia or Mamasource password to continue signing in.

Required Fields

, you’re almost done...

Since this is the first time you are logging in to Mamapedia with Facebook Connect, please provide the following information so you can participate in the Mamapedia community.

As a member, you’ll receive optional email newsletters and community updates sent to you from Mamapedia, and your email address will never be shared with third parties.

By clicking "Continue to Mamapedia", I agree to the Mamapedia Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.