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Birthdays

(109 Posts)
Razzy Sun 03-Jan-21 13:11:31

My DH and I both have birthdays in Jan. I’ve never been bothered by presents, just happy to have enough already. My DH is the opposite and a bit like a 5 year old at birthdays. He has never done anything for my birthday, quite the opposite. He gave me a book for Xmas that I didn’t want, and don’t have time to read. I thanked him of course, even though I asked for no present or a charity donation. I get that he wants to give a present. But he almost always buys what he wants. The book he got me is one he wants to read. He knows I’ve still got books from last year I’ve not read. He got our daughter something he wanted for Xmas. I’ve asked him yet again what he wants for his birthday, and he says he’ll let me know. This means he’ll tell me the day before and complain when I can’t get it in time. He then asked what I want and I told him again. He then threw all his toys out of the pram. I think it is partly because he wants to tell everyone else what he bought me - that’s fine, buy me whatever! A charity donation in my name would be lovely but he refuses.
Anyone else resolve an issue like this?

Theoddbird Mon 04-Jan-21 10:40:57

Why bother when he doesn't bother. Let him throw the toys...just don't pick them up. You are just pandering to him.

EllanVannin Mon 04-Jan-21 10:41:08

For a man who has everything, how about a shot of penicillin ?

Lewie Mon 04-Jan-21 10:41:38

Genty that made me chuckle! smile

Lewie Mon 04-Jan-21 10:43:01

EllanVannin I laughed out loud at that! grin Brilliant!!

Gingergirl Mon 04-Jan-21 10:44:20

I think there’s a communication problem here. I would give him the book he gave you at Xmas and say why ie it’s not a book you want to read but you know it’s one he wants..I would say that it is his birthday present and that ‘x’ is what you would like from him for your birthday. If he doesn’t give it, buy it for yourself ...and birthday or not, when you open your present, tell him it’s not what you want )if it isn’t. It will be hurtful, will ruin the day, but I don’t think he will do it again, If he ‘throws his toys out of the pram ’ so be it. If a,l of this sounds ridiculous, it’s because it probably is! Resolve it now....if you really want to

Rileysnana Mon 04-Jan-21 10:45:09

Regift him the book he gave you and make a donation to charity in his name.

LondonMzFitz Mon 04-Jan-21 10:48:00

I asked my (now ex) husband to not buy me "stuff", I have a house full of stuff - instead go somewhere, do something, make a memory. Although of course current situation makes that a bit tricky ...

I don't know what tier you are in but there are some places open - I learned today that London Zoo is open, Whipsnade Zoo too, some National Trust properties are open - you have a daughter, you & your partner both have Jan birthdays - how about a simple day out as a family. Picnic, flask, etc.

Angel379 Mon 04-Jan-21 10:49:34

If you love him, why worry? He loves birthdays so let him enjoy them. If he really wants to get you something, then he is going to get it wrong if you don't suggest something. Flowers are always lovely to receive. Life is short. One day you may look back on these days with nostalgia.

Ladyleftfieldlover Mon 04-Jan-21 10:54:09

We always celebrate birthdays, with extra special celebrations for things like 60ths and 70ths. I love and enjoy buying and wrapping presents. But OH dreads present buying! The only one he physically buys is mine. From a list which I must pin on the notice board in the hall! I should add that my three children buy me lovely presents and always seem to know what I want. When OH and I first met he bought me a leather satchel type handbag which I didn’t really like. He ended up giving it to the wife of a friend of his. When he used to travel abroad a lot for his job, he would bring me back beautiful souvenirs, but those days are long gone.

Totaldogsbody Mon 04-Jan-21 10:55:01

If you have everything you need why not ask him for a nice weekend away after covid of course. My husbands birthday is also in January and luckily last year I decided to do just that and took him to Amsterdam for a long weekend. We both had a great time, you could also make it a joint gift to yourselves.

NannyG123 Mon 04-Jan-21 10:55:33

I love birthdays. But it's not about the presents,its about celebrating with the people you love and care about.

Moggycuddler Mon 04-Jan-21 10:56:04

Does sound very infantile. For God's sake. Just say to him that it's hard thinking of the right presents, so from now on it will the best idea for you both to exchange a card and just buy yourselves a little present that you want and say it's your gift from the other. My DH and I usually do that anyway.

Dibbydod Mon 04-Jan-21 10:58:28

I agree with what others are saying , you are pandering to his needs , I’d have stopped his selfish behaviour years ago . Put your foot down and say enough is enough, if he sulks then let him , just ignore his infantile behaviour. How dare he buy you and others exactly what he wants . I know it’s not nice to create bad feelings in a relationship, but at the end of the day , it is you D?H that’s been creating them himself all these years .

grandtanteJE65 Mon 04-Jan-21 11:01:13

I understand your husband to a certain extent.

I like buying and giving presents. To me it is a way of saying "I love you", so I buy DH birthday and Christmas presents, although he tends to forget my birthday, never buys anything, or suggests going out on our wedding anniversary, and either refuses to buy the things I suggest for Christmas (you can buy that yourself is the standard remark) or buys me something I didn't really want.

Obviously, you don't care for reading, so tell your husband that you do not want books, and do find something other than a donation to charity that you would like.

If you give a little thought to the matter in the course of the year there is bound to be something you either would like, or something that needs replacing. I make a note of that sort of thing when it occurs to me,

If this doesn't appeal to you, the only thing you can do is not to give your husband anything and ignore his hurt - that seems unkind to me, but I am not you, after all.

I have tried to train myself not to expect presents and not to be hurt by the lack. It was hard, but taking the pressure off seems to have worked, as DH gave me a Christmas present that I did want.

I suggest you try to find a solution that works for you both, it is a pity to disagree and be annoyed about something like this.

Peasblossom Mon 04-Jan-21 11:03:12

Is it really about birthday presents? Neither of you sound very happy in this relationship. You both seem to be into scoring points off each other.

My OH perpetually gets the present thing wrong but his underlying intention is always good so it’s just funny most of the time?

Skweek1 Mon 04-Jan-21 11:08:23

For Birthdays and Christmas all the family come up with a list of things we'd like in different price ranges and each of the others decides what to give. It works fine and we know we'll get what we really want and we each buy what we can afford. If something wanted is really expensive we share the cost and also buy one of the cheap items.

eazybee Mon 04-Jan-21 11:08:31

Maidmarion

Do what Daddima says... great idea!!!!

I would say your husband clearly wants to give you a present for your birthday (you say because he wants to boast about it) and you refuse to tell him , other than a charity donation (?). He won't tell you what he wants until it is too late for you to buy it.
Something deeper going on here.
Ask for a gift voucher, then donate that amount in your name to charity, give him a voucher that will purchase the specific thing he has asked for also, then attempt to reconcile your differences.

eazybee Mon 04-Jan-21 11:10:00

Not sure why maidmarion's post has appeared at the top of my post; I didn't include it.

Classic Mon 04-Jan-21 11:11:42

He asks you what you would like, I've found that saying 'nothing' actually causes upset, it can be perceived that you would care little for a present from him... So he gets you something that he thinks is nice. Far better to be specific, Such as "I would love us to go out for afternoon tea as my birthday gift".
My husband doesn't know me well enough to know what I like and don't like, or perhaps he does but only wants to spend his money on things he likes, either way, he asks what I would like then proceeds to find me something as cheaply as he can get it, from eBay, or marketplace, or charity shop, that wouldn't be so bad but his endeavours to get as cheap presents as possible mean I get slippers and jumpers and other stuff that are too small, or already past their best. Then because he saved so much money on that present he gets me more 'bargains' he's spotted. Presents are about giving more than they are about receiving, everyone likes to feel excited about the reaction they will get to the gift they are about to present, if you take that excitement away, or deminish it by not being bothered about your presents, he will go for the easy option and buy what he likes (Or do as my husband does and get the excitement from bagging a 'bargain')

Sweetchile Mon 04-Jan-21 11:18:27

Buy him something you would like to receive. Or how about a charity gift from Oxfam . . .
A goat or a toilet the list is endless. He can stick the card on the fridge or toilet door depending where is appropriate and what you decide to buy. That way he gets a card and present to look at and you've donated to charity. You could even by a small toy goat for him if you went with that!! All happy.

justwokeup Mon 04-Jan-21 11:21:05

Perhaps he thinks the books are so good anyone would like them? He likes presents- give him one, just don’t ask what he wants. When you think of something you do want tell him then to save you the bother of buying it yourself. Don’t let it become a drama. Personally I buy myself something and give it to OH to wrap, if he doesn’t do the same he gets whatever gift I care to give him.

WOODMOUSE49 Mon 04-Jan-21 11:22:27

Aepgirl

Some of these suggestions are very negative and likely to cause problems in a marriage.

I think you should just say thank you, and put the book on your bookshelf along with the others.

Agree with your first statement aepgirl. Some GNers must think it 'amusing' to make such suggestions. Some even suggested a charity donation but Razzy's last sentence is: A charity donation in my name would be lovely but he refuses.

Razzy obviously doesn't know why he keeps behaving like this that why she has posted on here.

I don't think Razzy can change him, it's more a case of accepting or adapting to his ways.

Razzy Someone suggested a list. Good idea. Do it way before Christmas and birthday. Ask him for his list in return or arrange on a certain date to swap lists. If he doesn't come up trumps with the list, keep asking, every day till you get it.

On your list could be the donation or the things you do like (you say he doesn't always buy what he likes) so he gets it right sometimes.

Get your daughter to do the same or buy a joint present for her.

LynneH Mon 04-Jan-21 11:26:20

Maybe he would appreciate a small gift that you have thought of yourself, instead of asking him what he wants?

Lilyflower Mon 04-Jan-21 11:29:35

Put a price limit on it and each of you should buy something you want for yourselves.

montymops Mon 04-Jan-21 11:31:34

Couldn’t you think of something tangible that you might need - such as special hand cream,perfume, shower gel, a book you really would like to read etc? It sounds as if you are both determined to paddle your own canoes without any compromise!