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Christmas

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Groundhog Christmas - will it ever end?

67 replies

NotAnotherParkingFine · 14/11/2018 19:49

Feeling very down about Christmas day and just want to vent, so please bear with me. Background is I have hosted Christmas for between 9 and 12 family members for the past 25 years. This began when our youngest was 2 and we wanted to start our own family tradition rather than spend the day travelling to family. I didn't mind the effort because I was young, had a lot more energy and our DC loved having big family Christmases.

Apart from me, DH and our 2 DC, guests include; inlaws (we have a cordial but not close relationship,) my DM and her dickhead husband, my alcoholic sister who's usually pissed before she arrives, our son's partner and occasionally a niece and/or my brother will make an appearance. None of the older guests like each other but they all dote on the DC so call a truce for the day, like the soldiers playing football with the Germans on Christmas day during WWI.

I have to cater for 2 x vegetarians, 2 x steak rather than turkey, 1 x eats turkey but the stuffing and pigs in blankets can't have touched anything on the plate (making cooking/serving a pain and just something else to have to think about).

Last year we did full Christmas dinner in November as DS and his partner were going travelling. After the meal a few people said "what are you doing Christmas Day?", and I said "Well I'm not doing it all again." Nobody offered to host us apart from the inlaws, but due to MIL's health it meant me preparing and cooking everything (except veggies) at home, and then having to transport it, serve it and clear up after it at their house. Driving home we both said that's it, we're not doing Christmas again, we're both pushing 60 now and we don't have the energy or the enthusiasm. Next year we'll have the Christmas WE want. I was so excited as we talked about going away for Christmas. Could we? Could we really just go away?

I could have guessed it was all just a fantasy, we're back to Christmas groundhog day and I could cry. When it came to the crunch my DH, as always, caved in as he's an only child and has lived with the FOG all his life (that's a whole other thread). We have to have Christmas with his parents, that's the bottom line, and if we invite them, we have to invite my DM and her dickhead husband, which includes my alcoholic sister as she lives with them. Okay, so we'll go to a hotel! Cue much moaning about the expense (well don't come then!), and the waste (FIL "you're mum can't eat £80 worth of food!"). Then my niece, my lovely niece who suffers with anxiety, who's all alone as her partner left her, her mum passed away and her dad lives abroad, asks to come. How can I say no? She has a an emotional support dog (not officially but in practice). DS and partner then break the good news they're coming to ours (I think they think they're doing us a favour gracing us with their presence). They have 2 dogs, both are very destructive. We have 2 dogs. We can't take dogs to the hotel! We can happily leave ours, but niece needs her dog and the other 2 will destroy the house! So here we are again, hosting Christmas for 11.

DH says the problem is all the dogs because we could go to the hotel if it weren't for the dogs. My view is that this all stems from his sodding parents because we HAVE to spend Christmas with them and everything else snowballs from that. I feel so resentful. I didn't really want to go to a hotel for an overpriced lunch with people I don't want to be with, so it's not the dogs. My reality is that until my inlaws shuffle off this mortal coil I have to suck it up and host everyone.

This problem seems so petty I know, but I used to love Christmas and now I don't enjoy it and don't look forward to it. It's just a load of work and expense for us. It's not like our efforts are even appreciated - there's such a sense of entitlement.

Anyway, vent over. I'm not usually one for self pity, and I know lots of people are lonely at Christmas so I should be grateful people want to come to me for free food and drink . If you read all that thanks and well done.

OP posts:
girlywhirly · 15/11/2018 13:43

Is anyone else fascinated by the person who cannot have pigs in blankets or stuffing touching anything else on the plate? Is it OCD or Aspergers?

BiddyPop · 15/11/2018 13:47

There are children's plates, and even disposable paper plates, that are divided so things don't touch. Might that help dishing up that person's dinner?

DahliaDiver · 15/11/2018 13:55

girlywhirly I am more fascinated by the massive abdication of personal responsibility by whoever is demanding that someone else take responsibility for ensuring their pigs in blankets are not touching other food!

EmilyRosiEl · 15/11/2018 13:56

I did wonder girlywhirly but it could also be for religious reasons or perhaps because they really like pigs but really love eating turkey!

IrmaFayLear · 15/11/2018 13:58

That crab is absolutely pure mil present gold. It even trumps the purple vase I received... two years running.

I am hyperventilating on your behalf, OP. Word of advice, do not ask people to bring things. We did this one year and dh asked pil to bring the crackers. I am still seething. I cooked a massive Christmas dinner, but it was all, "I think the crackers made it, didn't it, Joan?" "Oh, yes, Barry, they were the highlight of the meal for me." "They were good crackers, weren't they?" "It took us a long time to choose, we couldn't make up our minds, and so...." AD INFINITUM. To top off matters, they had removed two crackers from the box for them to have on Boxing Day. They were Asda's own crackers, too, not Fortnum & Mason ones.

I would do a buffet or one meal plus vegetarian ready meal. Certainly no pandering to steak people. The cheek of asking for steak!!

girlywhirly · 15/11/2018 14:12

It may be that the Pigs and stuffing (balls?) are round the turkey in the carving plate, so likely to be touching it? I thought perhaps they could spear the pigs on cocktail sticks and poke them into a roast potato for the demanding person, and the stuffing in a ramekin so that they would be all separate? Biddy’s idea of the toddlers divided plate is funny!

NotAnotherParkingFine · 15/11/2018 16:36

It may be that the Pigs and stuffing (balls?) are round the turkey in the carving plate, so likely to be touching it? Yes that's it exactly. I have to make sure the pigs in blankets and stuffing balls don't touch the turkey, the roast potatoes, roasted parsnips etc. Sounds simple, but when you have an average size cooker, trying to find space to bung everything in around a huge turkey or in the small top oven means roasting tins and baking trays need to be shared!

I've decided that steak is off the menu! It was really for my husband (he's not a fan of turkey but will eat it) and as he was having it my FIL said he'd prefer it too. Well sod them, they can have bloody turkey and be done with it.

I'm not making Christmas cocktails either which will raise a few eyebrows. They can have prosecco, wine or beer and that's it. The spirits will be staying in the cupboard. No Baileys either! They honestly have no idea how expensive hosting Christmas is. @IrmaFayLear My sister brings the crackers and exactly as you said, we all have to coo over them while she sits there lapping up the praise with her arms folded over her enormous belly, like an inebriated Buddha.

I am a mug, I know, and things need to change. I know I said my DH is conditioned by his parents, but I have to accept I am too. Stupid I am.

OP posts:
lovesugarfreejelly63 · 15/11/2018 16:52

Why don't you start a new tradition this Christmas and do what you want to do. Be brave, take that first step, look after yourself a bit more and others a bit less.

BiddyPop · 15/11/2018 17:32

Cheers you on from the sidelines for making a stand!!

GhoulWithADragonTattoo · 15/11/2018 17:34

It sounds hideous. I would say "No, we are not having guests on Christmas day." What can they do? Turn up anyway?

girlywhirly · 15/11/2018 17:38

NotAnother, I have chicken, but it comes out of the oven to rest under a heap of towels while the roasties, sausages and stuffing go into the oven.

I’m glad you are making changes to make it easier for you. Don’t be afraid to chivvy them into the kitchen to help bring dishes to the table, clear plates and join in the big clean up and dish washing.

Castleonacloud · 15/11/2018 17:46

A friend of mine has lots of family over, although a few years back said enough was enough, but carried on hosting, although now they all bring something, meat is pre cooked, but it’s all laid out as a buffet type dinner, less formal, less stuffy and less work on the actual day. Everyone has what they like and the work (and expense) isn’t all on you.

We’re putting our feet down a bit this year too. I’m tired of being taken for granted. It’s my Christmas and I’m going to enjoy it!! GinSmile

RandomMess · 15/11/2018 17:47

Geez ditch the roast buffet from Iceland all the way!! Actually we bought slices of turkey from the deli counter, literally bought the amount of slices we need!

NWQM · 15/11/2018 19:08

Go for it! I'm so fed up about Christmas. We have hosted DH's family a few times. This year my Mum died in September. Going to tricky for everyone. PIL have booked themselves a cruise. Not heard anything from BiL. Guess they are sorted too. We'll crack on I'm guessing - it's sooo one sided.

NotAnotherParkingFine · 15/11/2018 19:30

Actually we bought slices of turkey from the deli counter, literally bought the amount of slices we need! What a great idea!

OP posts:
pinkyredrose · 16/11/2018 11:34

OP I don't know how you've put up with this for so long! I'd definitely not cook though after you agreed last year. If your DH changed his mind then surely it's his job to shop and cook. Time you started standing up for yourself.

Ooplesandbanoonoos · 16/11/2018 20:38

Good suggestion @Akire

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