this post was submitted on 16 Nov 2025
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For my birthday, my spouse got me a nicer newer expensive version of a thing I already have. The one I have is older and dented but works just fine. I use it weekly. I never complain about it. I've never asked for a newer one. The one I have was given to me by my mother in law, whom I adore. It's sentimental.

I don't like new things. When they got me a 3d printer, it was the cheapest one and it was a kit and I had to build myself. I loved it. It's perfect for me. I regularly buy things used or get things from Buy Nothing groups. I much prefer to repair old things in many ways. My car has over 100k miles. The one before did too. I don't like new things.

We got into a huge argument because I want to return it. They are so upset with me that they left the house to calm down. Why am I the bad person? Why are they mad at me? I have a very clear tendency for old broken used things. Why am I obligated to like this new thing?

We literally established a rule early in our marriage. I'm not allowed to gift nerdy t shirts. They don't like them. I love them. I thought they would like them but they do not. So they asked me to stop. This feels the same. I do not like new things. Why am I the bad guy for wanting to return the newer version of the thing I already have?

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[โ€“] Mesophar@pawb.social 4 points 12 hours ago (1 children)

Do you care about the person that gave the gift? Do you trust and believe that they love you and got the gift in good faith, trying to do well even if it was flawed? Then express gratitude for the intention, even if you don't want the gift. "Sorry, I'm happy with the one I have and don't want to replace it."

Do you care about the person you want to give a gift to? Do you trust and believe that they love you and them disliking a gift isn't an indicator that they dislike you? Then humbly accept that your gift wasn't the right one, and work together with them to find something they would prefer instead.

It isn't difficult if you just talk with each other. Sometimes people pick bad gifts. Sometimes people are sentimentally attached to items. Sometimes people are very practical and have a "if it isn't broken, it doesn't need to be replaced/fixed" mentality that supercedes other considerations. Me, I have the opposite extreme. Even if a gift I receive is nothing something I have any intention of using, I feel obligated to find a space and use for it as a show of appreciation to the person that gifted it to me, because I wasnt owed the gift in the first place and I have gratitude they were thinking of me. That can be (is) unhealthy in an entirely different way.

But even if you think a gift is dumb and wrong and it's an insult that they even gave it to you, if you love that person you swallow that pride and let them know you appreciate what they were trying to do but that they got it wrong this time. This can be done gently instead of coldly. And I am not saying OP had done it coldly, maybe the gift giving partner has insecurities they need to deal with. I don't know, I wasn't there. Understanding why the gift giving partner would be upset that their gift was snubbed only takes a hint of empathy to understand, though. On the other hand, it's also easy to understand why the receiver would be confused why the gift was chosen in the first place, with the information provided. Both are missreading each other on different points.

[โ€“] Jarix@lemmy.world 3 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago)

Do you care about the person that gave the gift? Do you trust and believe that they love you and got the gift in good faith, trying to do well even if it was flawed? Then express gratitude for the intention, even if you don't want the gift. "Sorry, I'm happy with the one I have and don't want to replace it."

Yes that's why there is a problem with the reaction wanting to return the gift. Maybe we didn't understand the same thing.

The giver was hurt because the reciever expressed that they didn't want the gift so they should return it because it won't get used. "Sorry, I'm happy with the one I have and don't want to replace it." There is no indication that how you phrased this isn't exactly what op did. Unlikely, but we don't know any more than after expressing they don't want a new version that they suggested it be returned. To me that says I'm sorry but this was a waste and I don't want your effort to be wasted.

If this was an acquaintance and not their partner I could see it differently, maybe. I'm trying not to make assumptions about anything here and using the post on its own merit. So as far as I'm concerned OP didn't do anything wrong and is confused by the hurt reaction. Coming here to try and get an outside perspective is an attempt to get a less biased perspective on the situation which is evidence that OP actually cares a great deal about why this is a problem and is literally asking us to help understand.

A lot of the comments have made wild assumptions about OP "scolding" their spouse when that's not information we know and it is being assumed.