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Wedding Woes

I think you're being too hard on yourself?

Dear Prudence,

My partner and I (women in our late twenties) have been together for several years and come from very different upbringings: I’m one of three kids born to two middle-class teachers, and she’s the only child of parents employed by major tech companies in their early days (think: Apple). We visit her parents for one of the winter holidays and mine for another, and this works really well for us.

The problem: I was raised to never show up empty-handed and to contribute by helping to prepare for, execute, and recover from the celebrations. However, my partner’s very wealthy parents have extremely fine taste, and they are very … particular. They don’t actually want the help I’m offering and seem bothered that they have to find a task to assign to me. I’ve tried to attempt host gifts, but I can’t afford the wine they would like, and they don’t like most other typical host gifts (candles, soaps, chocolates, etc.). I can’t afford to take them to dinner one of the evenings as a token of gratitude, but they are extremely generous and pay for all our activities.

So far, I’ve settled with giving them a nice card at the end of each visit and being as helpful as I can while staying out of the way. But my partner gives every member of my immediate family a wonderfully thoughtful gift (without breaking the bank) every winter, and I’m jealous and disappointed that I can’t offer the same to her family simply because they’d turn their nose up at anything I could afford, and not for lack of care! How can I get through this awkward young-and-broke phase and just enjoy the holiday?

— Giving Thanks or Giving Up

Re: I think you're being too hard on yourself?

  • Can you ask you partner for advice? Have her help you figure out the right approach with her parents?  That's kind of what partners are for.  I think a nice thank you card is great.  If they're decent people they'll understand that their tastes are out of your budget and it shouldn't be a big deal. 
  • I kinda get the parents take on the help.
    when people come over, I want to prep everything, do everything and clean up for sure.  I know where things are.  And I have a system, especially with the cleaning up bit.  My motto? Just let me do it at my house, and quite honestly I don’t really expect to help at other people’s places. This is for friends places - NOT when I visit my parents. Maybe that’s why I don’t get invited anywhere? Friends notice I don’t help?

    i really get the gift thing too.  What do I bring my rich millionaire bosses when I go?!? I can’t afford their tastes either.  For christmas I do chocolates at places like Macy’s (sales galore), fannie may, and good brand name places.  They’re not too too bad and everyone likes truffles and chocolates. Or they can give them away to someone.  But it’s tough so I get it. 

  • I'm with you @CharmedPam - i want to do things at my own house. It's very annoying when people (and by people, I mean my MIL) insist on "helping" but really just rinse dishes, leave them in the sink, get in the way and then talk about how she wishes she could help more but she doesn't know how I like to load the dishwasher or where anything is in my kitchen (that she helped me organize when I moved in). At least H's siblings are chill when we say "thanks, but we're good! Have a drink and enjoy"
  • Get a Harry & David basket and call it a day. 

    I get want to help out but they clearly don’t want help and by pushing it you make it awakened. If you can’t afford their wine, then ask you partner for something else they might like (coffee, tea, fancy cookies)- like unless the parents are snotty assholes they’ll have *something* they like you can afford or at least they’ll be polite enough to pretend. 

    But just as you were brought up to be a gracious guest it’s possible they’re way of being good hosts is to not have their guests feel like they have to contribute. If you say they’re otherwise generous and welcoming, be gracious and let them. 
  • LW doesn't mention if they've talked to their partner about all this.  You'd think LW's partner would either offer suggestions or ease LW's concerns about gifts or helping. 

    I find the bit about the partner gifting their family from them only interesting.  If LW and partner have been together awhile, why isn't it from both of them?

    LW needs to start with talking to their partner since it is their family.  Furthermore, believe people if they turn down your offer to help.  (I'm like @CharmedPam, leave my kitchen alone or I will not find the shit you 'helpfully' put away.) 

    Also, all wine they like is out of your price range?  There's not a $50-75 bottle you could get that they'd like?  I mean, I live at the $8-15 per bottle price range myself, but if I'd give a more expensive bottle of wine as a gift.  

    But seriously, you're putting expectations on yourself as a guest LW that don't seem to be there from your partner's family.  That's something you need to work out. 

  • If these people are not politely accepting a candle or chocolates they are the rude ones. 
  • I think LW is feeling a class difference.  We can't tell if LW is making it up or not, but I think LW needs to relax and enjoy themselves.

    I know that my friends and I always play the "let me help, no thank you" game and we all know that 1. they're offering to help and 2. I'm not taking it, but it's all understood to be good manners.
  • If these people are not politely accepting a candle or chocolates they are the rude ones. 
    Agreed!
  • I agree with PP - why isn't the partner helping more with their own family, and shouldn't the gifts/offer of help come from both of them?

  • Thank you note and flowers. 

    But I'm picking up a vibe that LW wants to judge the in-laws for their different way of doing holidays. 
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