Money Matters
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I've been thinking about this idea a lot over the past few weeks, the idea that you should spend less money but give more of yourself. In the "spirit of Christmas" I find myself spending a ton of cash--on my husband, kids, parents, teachers, etc. But I wonder how many of these coveted things will sit hardly used and then be donated within a few months. Looking at the kids rooms, for example, I see TONS of toys. We have so much crap, we're downing in it. What is the use of buying more other than to get the kids excited at Christmas? My kids are 2 and 4, in many ways, still young enough to be as excited to go look at Christmas lights and play with a new ball as they would be to get a leap pad, etc. I work a lot, and I feel like I barely get time with them, and when I do, it seems stressful. Do any of you pause when doing Christmas shopping? I don't think I would ever stop giving gifts, but I wonder if my approach to Christmas has become misguided over the years.
Re: Spend Less/Give More
Right now I spend $50 dollars on my mom for Christmas and $75 on H. He spends the same on me and buy presents for 7 or 8 family members and spends about $400. Our Christmas budget comes to about $600 and I cant help but cringe. We aren't even getting gifts for kids yet! What will the budget be in 5 years? $1,500?
I think Christmas should be about time spent together and small gifts. My brother and I don't exchange gifts because we are more than happy with what we get from others and just want to sit together and watch polar express once a year. Next year I am hoping to wrangle the Christmas budget to $50 on each other and $20 max on each family member. $ 260 for the year.
Love: March 2010 Marriage: July 2013 Debt Free: October 2014 TTC: May 2015
My one hope of a way out of this is that once we have kids my parents will switch to focusing on them. Le sigh. I love my parents to death but I wish there was a way to just do simpler Christmases. It's the time together that really matters to me.
You hit the nail on the head with the idea of having to match your father.
As far as saving goes we should have been able to save $2,000 this month but Christmas has seriously gotten in the way and we are at about $1,500. This is the first month since we really got strict with our money(9 months ago) that we haven't been able to pull it off. I know things come up but it is kind of a bummer. I have been picking up a shift or two a week at an old job to try and make up for it next month.
Love: March 2010 Marriage: July 2013 Debt Free: October 2014 TTC: May 2015
We don't do gifts for one another really anymore...ever. We take a trip for our anniversary and do cards and dinners out for birthdays and Valentine's. This year for Christmas DH and I are doing stocking stuffers. We dislike going crazy for kids too.
Due to our faith beliefs, I feel a desire to really reign in the "worldly" spending of money and focus on the reason we are celebrating Christmas in the first place - Jesus' Birth.
However, we still do buy for the kids. I think they are each getting a total of 4 gifts this year. One of those gifts, and their stockings, will be from Santa.
One friend I know, does this for her kids: a gift to wear, a gift to read, a gift you need, and a gift to play.
We also have grandparents on both sides who buy toys. So, we limit our own purchases there.
I loath shopping centers near Christmas time. Ick.
Ditto whichever PP mentioned buying experiences. For example, when we're out with the kids, we will pay for them to ride a toy train around together, but we won't pay for a dumb stuffed animal or toy that will get tossed on the floor immediately once we're home.
In terms of kids, we currently have the rule that they get 1 present from Santa and 1 present from us, in addition to stockings. This year we are actually breaking that rule and getting the youngest just a present from Santa because we didn't find anything we really thought she needed and she's only 2 so she won't even notice. We do have a lot of family, so there will be no shortage of presents under the tree. We might buy more ourselves if there weren't so many other givers. But maybe not.
We also have a rule in our family that everyone has to give each other at least 1 home made gift. It's been a nice tradition that allows everyone to open presents on Christmas morning (fun), but also forces us to spend some quality time with the kids helping them make presents. It also helps the kids get into the giving as well as the receiving because they are excited to see how people react to the presents they made.
Overall, I think we are fortunate because most of our family is on the same page in terms of not really being into stuff. Everyone loves buying gifts for kids, of course, but they do try not to go overboard. They may spend more on us than we spend on them, but they try to get things or experiences that we really want, and they encourage us not to spend a lot on them because they already have everything they need. I don't know what I would do if our families had different expectations.
I've gotten sort of Grinch on this whole idea, but I've vowed get simpler in this regard. It used to be spending $500-$1k on gifts, and we don't even have our own children to buy for. And for what? To buy people things they either don't need, don't want, or you can't afford?
So here's where I'm very vocal. I say to family and friends not to buy us anything and instead let's do something together. It doesn't have to be anything huge, but instead we now vow to create memories for Christmas instead of giving gifts. This just started 3 years ago and only on my mom's side of the family, but it's amazing. We had our Christmas for that side last night, and everyone had a duty to bring their own sled and snow gear. We went out back my grandparents and went sledding for almost 2 hours. We had a 17 month old and a 76 year old sledding down the hill. Then we finished it off with hot cocoa to warm back up. No presents were exchanged, and we all kept laughing and talking about how "so and so tried to fit in the sled with grandpa and they went spinning down the hill."
All it takes is one person to pipe up and say something about making new traditions that don't center around items.
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MW's side of the family does gift draws for the whole extended family so you basically buy gifts for the number of children you have, any God children you have, and if you decided to get into the adult Christmas draw. All of these we tend to set maximum spending limits of roughly $20 for adults and same for the children.
Finally, MW and I have a family that we game with and hang with that we exchange gifts with. My friend's love language is gifts so we have to do this. The past few years we have limited the dollar amount to $20 and her parents usually get our child a gift also since currently they have two children to our one.
For the past 3 years we have been doing a decent job of keeping our Christmas budget in hand. We also save up all year so we can pay cash for what we do.