B
barhoram
Guest
I do like the idea of a hand-print of our 4 year old. Can probably get the kids to help out and make a dozen traces of his hand on blank paper to use for the notes.
I would not guess as to her thoughts, but ask her straight out.Thanks for the reply. As I think I stated in the original post, when I noticed they weren’t getting done, I worked with kids to do them (without fanfare). **My wife has not offered to help or do them and doesn’t seem to think they are necessary. **Kids are now “with Mom” in that they aren’t important or necessary. It’s like I’m going against her will teaching the kids to do it–because that’s how I was brought up. To be honest, I feel a bit weird writing thank you notes to her parents and siblings when she doesn’t think they are necessary.
Making them on the computer is easy enough and much cheaper and you can personalise them. I do this with First Communion cards … name and date etc.The last time I bought some, I had to get a box of blank cards from Hobby Lobby. They have an assortment of flower pictures on the front. The only thankyous I found were obviously for weddings.
Then do not expect your wife to be responsible for something she may not have been taught, and don’t point it out as a fault, just explain to her that you found it a helpful way to learn gratitude and you would like your children to learn that. And then, you be the one to teach them and remind them what to do. Please make it sound like something you should do because it is thoughtful to express your thanks and because it makes other people happy to receive them, just as they were happy to receive the gift. Not that you “have to,” or you are “expected to” write one. Make it pleasant, not a chore. (Like it was for me as a child.Thanks for the replies.
I agree with everything above. That’s how my mom taught me.
Will try and figure out a way to kindly and respectfully bring it up.
American Stationery has a large selection of writing paper, notes, note cards, etc., at all different price points. americanstationery.com/?gclid=CILL5LPUq84CFcxahgodtEMPkgFunny you should mention it…I was just online shopping for stationery.
One of my students just left for seminary, and asked me to write him letters…WRITE…not email. He says my penmanship makes him smile.
I wonder, do they sell boxes of stationery at Hallmark anymore? That’s where I used to buy it.
One can buy pretty computer paper, I suppose that would work. I went on Zazzle to design some personalized stationery or to buy some already done up, but it was expensive and sold by the sheet, not the box.
There’s many places where you can buy lovely journals…but I haven’t seen boxes of stationery. I should call Hallmark.![]()
Yes, unless the person who gave the gift has young kids too, and manages to send them when they are on the receiving end.You have young kids. People who are reasonable will understand this.![]()
Hm. I’m not sure I agree. I always send them, but I have zero expectation of receiving them from new moms etc. But again, I think I’m a reasonable person and not everybody has the same strengths or weaknesses I do. I can find time to write a note pretty easily and actually enjoy doing it, but I may also leave the house and not realize that I have a giant hole in the seat of my pants (yep, that happened last week.)Yes, unless the person who gave the gift has young kids too, and manages to send them when they are on the receiving end.![]()
This is exactly what I meant in my post. We send them. Normally they are hand made and the kids enjoy it. I homeschool so I have the time, and if we are in a pinch it becomes a writing/art assignment. We are in a position to get it done and we enjoy doing them. However, we’ve never received a thank you card. Most people say thank you but never have they sent a card. We don’t mind that. We don’t give a gift for the praise. We gave it because we wanted to give it. Please, try not to be judgmental of families that don’t send out thank you cards. There are many reasons that could occur. Maybe they can’t afford it, they are far to busy, they could have other cultural traditions they follow (not all countries share the idea of thank you notes), or maybe they just never were taught to send them out themselves. How many people actually keep each card or note or child’s drawing they receive? How many busy moms have time or money to devote to something that’s destined for another person’s trash can? I just don’t see the big deal.The benefit of not getting upset when you don’t get a thank-you note is that you get upset a lot less often. I, personally, prefer to enjoy the pleasure of gift-giving without getting upset over something as trivial as a card I’m only going to pitch.I just don’t have time to get mad over that.
Well, my son has actually only received one thank you note, and that child did not come to his party so he didn’t send her one, although I did manage to get the notes out after that party. He is 3, he doesn’t wonder why he didn’t get thank you notes.I don’t think it’s the thank you card–it is what it represents.
If parents have time to work on booking and planning a birthday party, they have time to teach thier children how to be grateful ansd how to appreciate others.
In normal circumstances, it is especially important if the child has received thank you’s when they attended the same kind of events.
It is called recipriocity…
This is not a judgement-it is a fact…
A few times, my children have wondered why they did not get a thank you,–was it because their friend did not like the gift?..
I agree with all of this. I don’t sit around and dwell on who sent me a thank-you note and who didn’t, but when I do receive them I consider it thoughtful, polite, and well-mannered. I don’t care if anyone throws out my thank you notes (I throw out most of the ones I receive, too); I care that they know we appreciate whatever it is they are being thanked for, whether that’s attending an event, giving a gift, did a favor for me, whatever.I don’t think it’s the thank you card–it is what it represents.
If parents have time to work on booking and planning a birthday party, they have time to teach thier children how to be grateful ansd how to appreciate others.
In normal circumstances, it is especially important if the child has received thank you’s when they attended the same kind of events.
It is called recipriocity…
This is not a judgement-it is a fact…
A few times, my children have wondered why they did not get a thank you,–was it because their friend did not like the gift?
Once I had to call someone to see if thier gift arrived after I sent it out of state.
To have to answer my child with assumptions or to embarrass myself by calling another to see if rhe gift got thete is not worth the effort for next time.
To me this is the same kind of nicetie as bringing a hostess gift when invited to dinner. I guess there are some that don’t do this either, but in my circle when they dont it just shows that a person is thoughtless and perhaps uncouth and teaching thier children to be the same.
Sometimes a casual attitude not a good thing as it expands to other things- but that another thread.
This is a good point. My husband did that for the job he was recently hired for. He was a top candidate anyway, but expressing gratitude definitely never hurts.I got a job because I was the only candidate that wrote a thank you note for the interview.