PenPenWrites

parenting blog, memoir notes, family punchlines & more

© Penelope Lemov and Parenting Grown Children, 2025. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given.

© Penelope Lemov and Parenting Grown Children, 2025. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given.

Present

'Tis the season to receive Thank You notes. The present-giving is behind us. If we weren't present at the gift-opening moments–and that's true for those of us who live far from our children or whose children are spending their holidays elsewhere–we may be waiting for the snail-mail delivery of a much-desired  handwritten Thank You note. It's a tradition that is steeped in what our culture tells us is the proper way to acknowledge the time, trouble and affection someone–that's us–has taken to buy and deliver a gift. The note brings joy.

A lovely tradition, yes. But also one that's been disrupted by–what else?–technology. Our children and grandchildren are used to using email. texting and occasionally Iinstagram or Facebook to communicate and they also use it to let us know how much they appreciate whatever it is we've done for them. It's the thought that counts.

This year we here at Grown Children central have been lucky enough to see how that thought counted. Both of our adult children were thoughtful enough to photograph or video the opening of gifts we sent–and to text the moment to us minutes later. Oh joy.  In one photo, a Grand hugs our gift to her heart. In another–a video–our 11-year-old rips the wrapping off the present we sent and emits shrieks of delight. She then followed up with an email whose subject line read: THANK YOU SOOOOO MUCH. Other grands texted lovely and loving thank you remarks right after opening their gifts.

It was so immediate. So pleasure-filled. Do we really need formal, handwritten notes after that?

Posted in , , ,

2 responses to “Grandparenting: Getting a thanks for the gifts we give”

  1. Dee | Grammy's Grid Avatar

    Hand written notes are things of the past it seems. I do think it is necessary (if not in person) to send a thanks, these days it is usually a text but a phone call is good too. There’s a few people on our gift giving list that we never hear from. Should we continue to send them gifts? I think not! Thanks so much for linking up with me at the #UnlimitedMonthlyLinkParty 8.

    Like

  2. Jean | Delightful Repast Avatar

    I’m a fan of the written thank-you note, but a believer in giving TYs in the form the giver will most appreciate. If an adult child knows his/her parents will most appreciate a written TY, I think they should train their children to thank their grandparents in writing. But, as you discovered, the modern electronic TY can be done very nicely as well. It’s the unacknowledged gift that annoys me.

    Like

Leave a comment