kydisneyfans
<font color=blue>It may be because they are too em
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2005
- Messages
- 4,848
You are the nicest girlfriend's mom ever!!! What a lucky young man. So kind of you to include him.Okay - so apparently I am the high. I have two grown daughters - one is 27 and the other will be 22 by Christmas. I spend around $2000 on each of them (probably a bit more). It's easy to get to that. One of them i getting a new Pandora bracelet (the jewelry store - not the theme park). That is around $1200. A Dooney Disney tote - $250. A new desk chair - $100. So that's around $1500 and it includes none of the fun small stuff. Add that in and you are at $2000 or so.
My oldest has a new boyfriend. He's been around for a year - so I am hoping to get away with $500 for him. If he is still here next year - more like $1000.
The DNA tests usually have a Black Friday deal or some sale around that timeI usually don't have a set budget... it just all depends on what gift ideas pop into my mind each year. I sock money away from each paycheck through the year and usually end up with about $1500 to spend on both daughters. Some years I stay under that, some I got a little over.
This year, it's definitely going to be an "over" year. But I'm not fretting about it. I've been a single mom for 4 years now with absolutely no help from their dad (unable to contribute, long story I'm not going to go into)... But I work hard for my money being an RN, and Christmas time is when I like to spoil my daughters.
So this year, younger daughter (freshman in HS) is going to get a MacBook 12 inch, that she'll be able to use at school. And she'll get some accessories for it to go along with that. And I've gotten her a couple pretty candle holders and will get her a giftcard to bath&body works because she loves that place.
Older daughter (Junior in HS) is getting a ticket to go see Hamilton in Chicago. We're going to make it a family weekender trip with my mom, but just older dd and I will be seeing the show.
I cannot wait for her to get that one, cause she is going to flip, lol. Even though the WOW factor on the MacBook and the ticket will be the same, I'm going to get older dd more gifts due to the price difference being so dramatic.
I try to stick with similar budget between the 2 of them, but this year it won't be quite so easy. The MacBook is going to cost about $1200, where the Hamilton ticket was only about $250. The trip cost will be on top of the of course, but I don't really count that as part of her gift since it's all of us going. So I'm planning on spending at least a couple hundred more dollars on her and calling it even. Just trying to figure out another fairly big gift for her, which could be difficult, lol.
Then their birthdays are within a couple weeks of Christmas too... they've both been asking to do a DNA test (I did one for myself, which got them interested in themselves), so thinking of either doing that for each of them at a cost of about $75... or making a giftcard tree with $5-$10 gift cards to multiple local places that they like to frequent for a cost of about $75-100 each.
But anyways, overall between Christmas and birthdays, I'll probably be spending about $2000 for both of them.
Just a suggestion. For those of you with younger kids. Cut your gift spending for them by just a bit ( $25, $50 or $100) and instead put that amount in an account for college. When grandparents ask what they want for Christmas or birthdays, ask them to buy a less expensive gift too and also contribute an amount to this account.
It doesn't sound like much. But over the years it will all add up. Plus interest! And you already admit that so many toys get played with for just a few weeks!
Imagine their surprise when they are getting ready to go to college and you say " hey guess what! Every Christmas we gave you one less present to open, which you never missed, and instead we put $100 in this account. And one set of grandparents put in $50 every Christmas. And the other grandparents put in $25 every Christmas. And aunt Jan put in $20 every Christmas. And your godparents put in $20 every Christmas. We all decided our gift could be one less student loan you will have to take out!" Have all the people who contributed sign a card. TA DAH! Perfect gift.
Just a suggestion. For those of you with younger kids. Cut your gift spending for them by just a bit ( $25, $50 or $100) and instead put that amount in an account for college. When grandparents ask what they want for Christmas or birthdays, ask them to buy a less expensive gift too and also contribute an amount to this account.
It doesn't sound like much. But over the years it will all add up. Plus interest! And you already admit that so many toys get played with for just a few weeks!
Imagine their surprise when they are getting ready to go to college and you say " hey guess what! Every Christmas we gave you one fewer present to open, which you never missed, and instead we put $100 in this account. And one set of grandparents put in $50 every Christmas. And the other grandparents put in $25 every Christmas. And aunt Jan put in $20 every Christmas. And your godparents put in $20 every Christmas. We all decided our gift could be one fewer student loan you will have to take out!" Have all the people who contributed sign a card. TA DAH! Perfect gift.