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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Flaming thank you cards

31 replies

flexiblebenefit · 13/09/2022 17:38

This has reared its head again. Happens every few years. My children are late teens. They always say thank you for birthday and Xmas grifts. When younger it was fun for them to write little cards but now at 12 16 and 18 they often say thank you via email or text. Nice texts- lengthy with punctuation as they know "old people like full stops" but an electronic thank you all the same. Sometimes for a particularly nice gift they actually call and speak to the person.

I think this is fine. They do it themselves, they're not a generation where sending cards will ever be a thing, and most importantly they are thanking the giver for the gift in a timely manner. MIL thinks that only a formal card will do, and I will no longer force then to do this or facilitate this. The older 2 have A levels and GCSEs and sport and social lives, and they are saying thank you - just not in the format prefers. Even when they call her she still expects a card!

She's grudgingly accepted that this won't happen until this week when she visited her sister. Sister is much older, in a care home. She randomly send middle child a present for their birthday. It was £5.00, a collection of the free cards and pens that you get sent unsolicited by charities and a pair of tights size L in "Barely Black" that she thought size 6 DD could use. DD was touched and realising text or email was inappropriate sent a nice little letter- in fact using a pen and the British heart foundation card from the present. MIL now fuming because, "they can do it, they just choose not to".
Thing is MIL is 20 years younger, very with it, very active online and this obsession with formal cards is just odd and I refuse to make them do it. I haven't even told them it's an issue because it's just another example of her prioritising what things look like over actually having a relationship with the children. Am I wrong?

OP posts:
Luredbyapomegranate · 13/09/2022 23:03

Well I think thanking by text is grand.

However I do get my step teens to write to the elderly rellies who care as politeness always has context.

It’s also good training to think about how to nurture other people for future personal and career relationships, even when you find it tedious. Plus hand written notes will have value for a while because they stand out - not standard present thank yous, but handwritten thanks for someone coming to give a speech or something.

But whether you do or don’t, I wouldn’t try and use A level and social lives as an excuse. Writing a card takes 2 minutes.

PolkaDotShoes · 13/09/2022 23:10

What about using a postcard printing service, eg Touchnote? The kids can design and write the card on their phone, but MIL gets a nicely printed postcard for her mantelpiece?.Sounds like a good compromise to me.

SparklingLime · 13/09/2022 23:13

And this bit stings- she always sends the vouchers electronically TO ME so I'm having to print them out.

Oh dear. The vouchers should be printed on vellum, sealed with wax and posted first class.

Your kids sound great. My mum (much older) is lucky to get a text or brief call, even when she’s given a fair bit of cash. I have had to chase my nephews/nieces up to encourage them to respond at all. It’s really sad.

GirlsTalk250 · 13/09/2022 23:21

I was with your MIL until you mentioned the gift always takes the form of an Amazon voucher sent to you.
For a minimal effort e-voucher, it is unreasonable to object to an e-thank you.

DilemmaDelilah · 14/09/2022 07:40

I would love to get a written thank you, whether card or letter. Mind you.... I would love to get a thank you of any kind! If I'm actually there when the presents are opened I get thanked, but for family that aren't local I don't even know that the present has arrived! No acknowledgement at all - and I think that is extremely rude.

Giggorata · 14/09/2022 07:52

No one else reading the thread title and getting a mental picture of opening a thank you card which bursts into flame a la Harry Potter, then?

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