We spent it with my dads side and these adorable babies above!
Since Easter has come and gone, I have been reminded of something I had to learn after getting married.
Splitting Holidays between families ahhh!!!
The hubby and I both come from families that get together for pretty much all of the holidays so it is a task deciding what we will do each holiday. I come from a divorced family so we also have to split between my two parents. I am used to having to split my holidays, but my husband is not. I will tell you making everything fair and equal is a separate job in itself!
Think about how many holidays there are in a year not counting birthdays and anniversarys.
New Years, Valentine's Day, Easter, Mother's Day, Father's Day, Memorial Day, Halloween, Thanksgiving, and Christmas.
Thats 9 Holiday's our families celebrate!!
Important questions to ask yourself and your partner:
- Is the Holiday one we are wanting to spend with family?
- Economic means and how important the Holiday is effect our decision.
- Who is using the Holiday to celebrate it and who is just having a get together?
- The difference I see is that a celebration is where traditional activities related to the holiday will take place. Get-together's are when everyone gets together to catch up and talk but do not really focus on traditional parts of the holiday.
- Which parents have seen us more recently?
- This one does not always apply with bigger holidays
- What is your true reasoning for wanting to spend it with one family vs the other
- Always be honest with each other on where you stand, trust me holding anything back with the small things will just cause bitterness.
- Is this something we can host or can we bring both families together?
- Understand that some families will not feel comfortable with either idea
- Compromise?
- If the Holiday is important to both of you, then try to figure out a schedule to see both families.
Final tips
- Remember, compromise is the key
- You and your spouse are the only opinions that should matter (otherwise it gets very complicated)
- Respect each other's views and opinions
- Try to make everything fair
- Stay firm but respectful with your parents and inlaws
- If all else fails, just stay home