
My husband and I bought our granddaughter a wedding gift from her registry. She reached out and accused us of being cheap after getting the wedding present. Now, she is upset and threatens to cut us off because we didnât give her the cash gift that we presented to each of our grandkids a day before their wedding.
Iâm in my 70s, a proud grandmother to five amazing grandkids: three women and two men. I adore my grandkids and often show up for them emotionally and financially. Whenever they have celebrations or hard times, they know that they can count on me.
The youngest of grandkids, Eloise, got married last October. My husband, who is also in his 70s, and I have a tradition for our grandkids. We buy a small gift from the wedding registry, usually the cheapest item, and then, the day before the wedding, we give them a check for $40,000.
We hope theyâll use it for a house, but itâs ultimately their choice. We also ask them to keep it a secret, considering our large family. Until now, everyone has respected this request.
This time, we sent an air fryer to our youngest granddaughter, the cheapest thing on her registry. Eloise called us, livid, accusing us of being cheap. I remember picking up her call and she didnât even say hi, she just started ranting, âSeriously, Grandma? I just got your gift. An air fryer? Thatâs the cheapest thing you could find on my registry!â
I was taken aback because as much as the air fryer was the cheapest on their registry, I still thought itâd be useful to them, so I told her that. Eloise kept on complaining, âUseful? Come on, you know you can do better than that. Everyone knows you have the money. I just canât believe youâd be this cheap with me. Itâs embarrassing.â
In this heated moment, I told her, âYes, youâre right. We are cheap, old, and useless. The only thing you DIDNâT know is that the day before the wedding, we were going to gift you a check for $40,000.â
I revealed this in an attempt to explain to Eloise about the cash gift we usually give our grandkids before the wedding but she was so angry at this point, that she wasnât listening to a thing I said. I speculated that maybe she didnât believe we would gift her such an amount of money after only buying her an air fryer.
Eventually, she said, âNo, itâs clear. You just donât love me enough to show it. You know how much pressure Iâm under with the wedding. And then, this? Itâs like you donât even care,â then she hung up.
Despite my husband and Iâs shock at Eloiseâs reaction, we then bought her a China set, hoping to appease her, but decided against giving her the $40,000, feeling she hadnât earned it.
Fast forward to last week. Eloise talked to her brother and found out that we were telling her the truth about the money. After confirming it with her cousins, she, called again, accusing us of discrimination, âI just found out that itâs true you gave the money to everyone else when they got married. Why didnât I get anything?â
We stood firm, explaining our stance was due to her initial reaction, âWe felt after your reaction to the wedding gift, it wasnât right to go ahead and gift you the money.â Eloise pleaded trying to convince us otherwise, âSo, youâre punishing me? Is that it? Because I was upset about an air fryer?â
I was angry that she didnât even understand what she did wrong. âIt wasnât about the air fryer, Eloise. It was how you spoke to us, the disrespect. Thatâs not something we expected or can support,â I explained.
Eloise implored us, nearly in tears, âBut thatâs so unfair! I was stressed, Grandma. Planning a wedding is hard, and I just snapped. I didnât mean any of it.â I felt like she should have only apologized to us instead of finding excuses to justify her behavior.
However, I told her, âWe understand that itâs a stressful time, but actions and words have consequences. We hoped youâd understand the value of family and love over material things.â Full of desperation, Eloise added, âBut you donât understand! Canât we just forget all this happened? I need that money, Grandma.â
She pleaded, threatened to boycott Christmas, and accused us of cutting her off but we didnât budge. In the end, I expressed, âWe love you very much. This has nothing to do with cutting you off. We just hope youâll reflect on this and understand why we made our decision.â
Now, Eloise has followed up on her threat and sheâs boycotting Christmas. Her mother, who is our daughter-in-law, is siding with her, calling us unreasonable. However, we feel that after all we have done for Eloise, the air fryer gift, shouldnât have triggered this reaction.
For context, we had already paid for her college, and her parents covered her graduate school and half the wedding. Additionally, she and her husband are financially comfortable and do not desperately need our money.
Weâre also not upset with our grandkids for revealing the cash gift since she is among the group of family members who are allowed to know about it. Our reason for sending the air fryer earlier was that we live far away, so we always send our gifts early.