I have not read all the posts on here, but I did read the first few. I sent the poster a PM with ideas about how MY big family handles Christmas and birthdays. I thought I would copy it here, in case anyone else has big family get-togethers at Christmas:
Hi,
I came across your thread randomly while looking for a post made by my friend. I did not read everyone's replies as it is after 2am here and I'm tired, so I hope my ideas were not mentioned. (Warning written after I wrote the whole PM: this is a very long message, but please read the whole thing as it took me forever to write!)
Your situation sounds very familiar! My mom's side of the family is huge: my grandparents have 4 kids, all of whom are married and have kids. The total goes like this:
2 grandparents
4 sons/daughters
4 sons/daughters in law
7 grandchildren
4 grandchildrens' spouses
3 great-grandchildren
We used to all spend Christmas at my grandparents, with some exceptions (my cousin that lives far away hardly ever came). Years ago, before there were any great-grandchildren, we used to all exchange gifts with one another. We had a problem with one of my parents' siblings and their spouse and kids. They not only bought crappy gifts, but they never said thank you, or sent a thank you note if they didn't come to Christmas and were sent gifts. One year, the family had a meeting and decided that it was too much trouble and too costly to buy everyone gifts, and there was the problem of getting a cousin or aunt or uncle something great, and getting something crappy in return or vice-versa (that particular issue was not mentioned in the meeting but it was in everyone's heads)
That year, they all decided (I was too young to be part of the meeting back then) to change the way we handled gift buying/exchanging. Each separate family (parents and kids) would have their own Christmas at home, and of course each person would buy good gifts for their parents, children, siblings, and grandparents. Then we would all meet up later in the afternoon to exchange gifts with everyone. The gift process has changed now, but the first thing we did was "dollar gifts". Everyone bought gifts that cost one dollar (from the Dollar Tree or whatever) for cousins, aunts, uncles, cousins' spouses and kids, neices, nephews, etc.) It was cheap, it was easy (all shopping could be done at the same store!), and it was fun. People still got to unwrap gifts from everyone, even if it was just a little trinket or whatever you can get from the Dollar Tree. I enjoyed that year a lot, but everyone else agreed on a different system for the following year. We have been using that system ever since. I can't remember what it's called (Chinese auction or something like that), but here's how we do it: everyone (the adults and older kids) buys one 15 to 20 dollar gift that would be suitable for anyone of any age or gender and wraps it up. When we are all together, after dinner usually, the gifts are put in a pile on the floor and everyone picks a number out of hat. The numbers go from 3 to however many gifts/people are there that year. It starts with 3 because my grandparents go first When your number is up, you either pick a new gift and unwrap it, or take someone else's gift from them and they have to pick a new present in return (or take someone else's). Any one gift can only be "taken" twice, and then it is "dead". The person who has it then gets to keep it. This goes on until everyone has a gift. Then people usually trade after it's over.
It's so much fun, good-natured arguing over the best gifts (one year the favorite was a couple bottles of wine! LOL), good family fun. We are not supposed to say what gift we bought, but we always end up doing that anyway (except one of my uncles.....he will never tell anyone what he bought!)
Now, of course this only works if your family always gets together on Christmas. Otherwise, I would say suggest to the family that there is a spending limit on gifts for non-immediate family members (a dollar would be silly b/c of shipping, so maybe 5 or 10 dollars). Say the gift has to be between 8 and 10$ or something like that, set a minimum and maximum. I'm sure you can come up with a diplomatic way of suggesting this without making anyone feel bad.
As far as birthdays, the only family members I get birthday gifts from are my sister, parents, grandparents (always money from the grandparents, same with Christmas. They always give everyone in the family money on Christmas...but they are much richer than the rest of us!), and my mom's sister (usually a card and 10 or 15 dollars). Some other aunt/uncles/cousins send me a card.
Hope my suggestions help and that they weren't already said by someone else. If your family does get together for Christmas, the "Chinese Auction" or whatever is a blast! It's really more about the interaction and fun than the gifts themselves. Plus, instead of everyone opening their gifts at the same time (and you miss out on seeing someone open their gift from you...which is my favorite part ), you get to watch each person open a gift and see if it's something you want to take from them, or open that big, interesting looking package on the floor!
I hope you work out the issues, and I totally feel you on the "cheap relatives" thing. The only thing worse than being cheap is not saying thank you, and those certain family members of mine do both.
Good luck, and early Merry Christmas to you and your family!
I wanted to share this with everyone, because the "Chinese Auction" and dollar gift ideas are so much fun, and make big family-gift buying so much easier and less expensive. And the fun of the "auction" is more pleasing to me than getting cheaper gifts from everyone, that I probably won't like anyway! Like I said, the fun is in the activity more so than the gift you end up with. I personally preffered the dollar gift idea b/c I like buying gifts for people, and I just took my list of family members' names to the Dollar Tree, and was able to pick out something special for each person. I had all the joy of "it's the thought that counts" gift-giving, and spent under 30 dollars total! Some gifts were pretty nice, like a cute little decorative box or candle holder for my aunts; some were fun (I bought two ridiculous "umbrella hats" for my two uncles that are very silly....silly referring to both the hats AND my uncles). I'm sure they probably ended up in the garbage put the picture I have of the two of them wearing the hats with their arms around each other is priceless! They were two people I had no idea what to buy for, so it was just fun. Plus it's fun giving and receiving lots of gifts, even if they are only a dollar. It's fun to unwrap them and see what someone picked out for you with a dollar limit!
thanks for reading!

Mia
