Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

The way to hell is paved with good intentions.

33 replies

WidowWadman · 28/12/2010 17:29

My brother got our daughter a wooden cart, to climb into and be pulled to the park for Christmas. It's beautiful, and what we asked for (after the daughter has seen one at her friends and cried when she had to get out.). My dad very kindly laquered it to make it more weatherproof. I should be over the moon.

Except for that it is more than twice as big as the one we had in mind, despite me sending my mother a picture, and my brother having been to visit us, so he knows how small the house is, he knows the shed is tiny, and full to the brim, he should bloody well have realised that it's too wide for our doors, and I've even got my doubts whether it'll fit down the alleyway. It's too tall for her to climb into on her own or pull it herself, too.

My family had been making jokes about it how big it was and whether it'll fit in the car for weeks (we live in UK, but spent Christmas with them in Germany), but at no point they actually stopped to think that it might be causing us a problem.

It gave me a crap christmas. I feel like an absolutely ungrateful spoilt bint, after all the daughter got what we asked for, it's beautifully made, my father put extra work in by painting it, and I've still been choking back the tears (well, pregnant, hormones, yada) about it for the past few days, as I didn't want to hurt anyone.

Stupidly I snapped today though, after yet another comment about how we're going to fit it all in the car. Now of course I managed to make them feel disappointed, and am the bad one, which makes me feel even more guilty.

And I'm stuck with a cart, which is big enough to be dragged by a small pony, and nowhere to put it, other than the garden, where it basically will go manky and rusty in no time, which kind of is not the point of what we've wanted.

And I'm still not sure whether I'm right to be annoyed, or just ungrateful.

OP posts:
thenightsky · 28/12/2010 22:43

festive LOL at flexitub... i used a laundry basket off the market.

ZombiePlanB · 29/12/2010 00:59

Let it rot in the garden or this will just be the first 'massive' present of many. They need to learn the hard way! Or have it their house.

People with big houses just don't get small spaces.

MadamDeathstare · 29/12/2010 01:38

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ontariomama · 29/12/2010 04:58

we tend to hang sleds on the sides of our garages, you screw in a couple of "u" brackets (like the type for your garden hose) side by each, and then hang the sled sideways on the wall

GotArt · 29/12/2010 05:06

Good idea ontario. I've got a few presents from one relative this year for DD's bday and Xmas that are not compatible with our space, which is his suite even in his house FGS, so I understand the frustration, (I'm 18 weeks too). I just have no where to put them. Most people think bigger/more is better but really, its the opposite.

ontariomama · 29/12/2010 05:36

lol, I hear ya : ) we always told people that if the gift was larger than the child, it had to be kept at the giver's house : )

violethill · 29/12/2010 08:56

Offer rides to all the neighbourhood kids? They'll love it and your dd will be very popular!

onmyfeet · 29/12/2010 08:57

Can someone cut it down to a smaller size for you?

We have a tarp over our patio table in winter, and it keeps it dry, I am sure the wagon will do ok if you do that. Just wrap it totally up and weigh it down with something in the winter time.
And we also use the U brackets to hang up bikes and things in our garage.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page