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17 answers

U should alternate out every year.. Thats what my family does.. Like this year its my turn to cook so everyone will be at my place for thanksgiving and christmas.. It just makes it easier instead of always going to the same place.

2006-11-07 04:39:20 · answer #1 · answered by blue eyes 3 · 1 0

Thanksgiving at one house, Christmas at the other. Switch next year. It's miserable to do both on the same day. Who wants to spend a holiday looking at the clock?

The other option is to host one or the other holiday, but not every year, every time. One thing I've noticed is that if you have a great family and in-laws, they understand the situation. If you don't, there's no compromise that will make some people happy.

2006-11-07 05:54:25 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Find out far enough in advance when and where each event will take place and then decide which to go to. I think it's up to each couple, some alternate years, some alternate holidays, and some will go their seperate ways. This will be my first year married but as an engaged couple last year was a little hard. Fortunately we were able to go together to all but one event, and we both missed that one. My husband's family had Thanksgiving dinner at 11 am an hour away from our home. My husband had to work on Thanksgiving, and didnt get off in time. Fortunately, my family had thanksgiving at 2pm (he was off by then) and it was close so we made it. We moved his family's christmas dinner to the weekend before and went to my dad's family christmas eve. He got up early and was at my parent's house Christmas morning just after I woke up, we went back to his family for a short while that afternoon, and then drove to my mom's extended family that evening. Long story, sorry, but you have to discuss it amongst yourselves to decide. Never be afraid to speak up with your extended family and ask for a change in time or place.

2006-11-07 04:46:07 · answer #3 · answered by rdnkchic2003 4 · 0 0

Alternate.

We spend Thanksgiving with my relatives and Christmas with my spouses this year. Next year, it will flip.

If you have a place big enough to host, you can have everyone over at your place once a year. Maybe the 4th of July or something like that.

2006-11-07 04:39:50 · answer #4 · answered by stevegoryan 3 · 1 0

We go to both of our families for the holidays. This year we will be going to his dad's for Thanksgiving and my parents on the Saturday following Thanksgiving and his mom's the day after that. For Christmas, we will spend Christmas Eve at my parents and Christmas Day we will have it at his dad's house. Then we will have his mom and the rest of the family excluding his dad to have Christmas with us at our house. Christmas Day we have two, but then everybody is included and won't feel left out!

2006-11-07 05:16:31 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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2016-11-28 21:25:31 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

A lot of it depends on which set of in-laws/parents you live closer to and see the most.

The holidays should be spent with those that you see less, or at least the better part of the holidays should be spent with those you see less.

If you see both sets equally less, set up an agreement that you'll spend Thanksgiving with one set and the December holiday of your choice (Kwanzaa, Christmas, Hanukkah, Eid) with the other--especially if they live a great distance apart. You can celebrate your December holiday in Nov. with the Thanksgiving set of parents, and then you can celebrate Thanksgiving and your December holiday in December with the other set. (That's kind of confusing; what I mean is that you'll celebrate Thanksgiving and Christmas, etc. twice--once with each set of parents, once at Thanksgiving and once at Christmas, etc.)

If they're concerned about having to always have holiday shopping done at Thanksgiving, offer to rotate--one year you'll spend Thanksgiving with one and Christmas, etc. with the other--and the following year, whoever got Thanksgiving will get Christmas, etc, and vice versa.

If they live near to you or each other, then agree that you'll spend lunch with one and dinner/supper with the other on both holidays. (Or if you celebrate Christmas, one set can get Christmas Eve and the other Christmas Day.) You can even rotate who gets which meal--that's what my in-laws do: this year for Thanksgiving, we'll have lunch, and Christmas Day, we'll have dinner/supper. Next year we'll have Thanksgiving dinner/supper and Christmas Day lunch.

2006-11-08 13:44:12 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

We always spend Thanksgiving Day with my family. Then we get together with his the Sunday of that weekend.

For Christmas my family always does Christmas Eve. We spend Christmas Day with his.

My brother and his wife who live in another state alternate between Thanksgiving with us, Christmas with her family and Thanksgiving with her family, Christmas with us.

You just need to compromise.

2006-11-07 05:43:18 · answer #8 · answered by Sherry 4 · 0 0

Flip a coin.

Or make a logical decision. Try alternating. Or have one for Thanksgiving and one for Christmas.

Or do what I do, I invite both my family and the in-laws to my house. That way if they do not come it is on them, not me.

2006-11-07 05:40:43 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If they live away from each other .. Alternate.. One home Christmas.. the other Thanksgiving. If they all live in the same town as you.. Have Christmas at YOUR home and invite everyone to be together as one big family!

2006-11-07 06:42:53 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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