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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

'Not doing presents' but still accepting gifts...

311 replies

tiddlerandtea · 21/12/2019 15:02

I have name changed as my aunts gift is very specific.

My aunt collects and loves Royal Albert Tea Sets. She asks for a particular style from my siblings and I every year and it's not always the full set but sometimes a style of tea pot or whatever.

This year she asked if all families would team up and buy her the Miranda Kerr for Royal Albert Tea set. We said yes and she asked for lists of gifts back for the families that roughly totaled the price we paid for the tea set.

That was fine.

I am the last house that she visits every year out of my siblings and I am the one who always presents her the gift and then leaves her home after. She turned up at my sisters house last night announcing that she wasn't doing gifts this year and my sister text me immediately to tell me.

She then came to my house and announced the same and while we were giving gifts to other family members who had arrived with her I purposely left her gift in another room ready to be returned Monday morning. My aunt said she was looking forward to showing everyone her new set and I said no, if she wasn't doing gifts she should have mentioned at the end of November when lists were being swapped instead of us spending a lot of money to receive nothing in return.

My cousin messaged me this morning to say that the whole thing was very embarrassing and we could have just handed the set over and decided that from now on we weren't doing gifts at all instead of 'punishing' my aunt as she is really really keen on the set. My siblings are all happy for the gift to be returned and us to all receive our money back.

I have apologised and said that I appreciate it was probably embarrassing but I am not handing out a £400 gift on behalf of my siblings and I when my aunt is coming with her arms the one length and fully willing to accept the gift. The money is better being shared back out and spent on our own families.

I am ready to be told I am unreasonable and it all sounds petty but I am sick to death of people claiming they aren't doing presents but not vocalising it with anyone else. It makes you look grabby and like a right old scrounge.

I also don't care about the 'act of giving'. People can say all day long it's about the feeling you get when someone opens a present they love but 9/10 it's just about keeping up appearances and being seen to play the Christmas game in my eyes.

OP posts:
BMW6 · 22/12/2019 14:52

Well done indeed OP!!

It is so refreshing to hear someone stand up to such awful behaviour!

VestaTilley · 22/12/2019 15:04

YANBU

FruitcakeOfHate · 22/12/2019 15:26

You're my hero, tea

AlpacaGoodnight · 22/12/2019 19:42

What a CF! Well done OP!

katy1213 · 22/12/2019 19:51

£400 for an aunt! Mine would faint from shock if they got a Christmas card. Well done for thinking on your feet and not being embarrassed into handing it over.
But it all sounds very calculated. Demands and wishlists and reciprocating to the exact penny. Why bother?

bananasandwicheseveryday · 22/12/2019 21:11

@MAFIL

We were in your ILs situation many years ago when our dcs were young. It was all we could do to pay the bills and to give dcs a few small presents for Christmas. We wrote to all the people with whom we normally exchanged gifts and explained our situation and that regretfully, for that one year, we would not be able to buy for anyone else. I sent the letters at the beginning of October, hopefully giving enough notice that people wouldn't have already bought anything. Out of all our relatives and close friends, only one person chose not to give a gift, St least to our DCs and that was MIL! We were so touched to think that everybody else at least gave the dcs a gift and many of them gave dh and I something - a tin of biscuits, a box of sweets, a bottle of wine. It really showed us who understood the meaning of giving and who only gave if they thought they'd get something in return.
May I suggest that you do something similar for your ILs? It doesn't have to be big, just something to show you love them and see thinking of them.

fedup21 · 23/12/2019 12:53

What did your cousin buy your parents, just out of interest?

RowenaMud · 24/12/2019 01:41

I'm not surprised your cousin wanted you to give the teaset to your aunt. A nice little heirloom for them!

You handled the situation perfectly OP.

Motoko · 30/12/2019 15:36

I think I’d have been tempted to wrap a box of chocolates or something in a box a similar size to the box she was expecting!

Yes, me too! It would be so much fun to see the look on her face when she realised it wasn't the tea set, yet she couldn't complain, because she'd still have been given a gift. And then the cousin couldn't complain either.

Greenpolkadot · 30/12/2019 16:01

Yes she was cheeky but you did the right thing so well done.
I can't believe that she thought she could recieve the tea set yet not give gifts herself. Cheeky mare

ReanimatedSGB · 30/12/2019 16:31

Wonder if the family put so much pressure on the OP to give in and hand over the tea set to the greedy aunt that she caved? Or did OP get the money back and all the siblings buy themselves some naice teacups instead?

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