My mother & my sister are horrible with money. In general, they prefer to avoid personal finances altogether (which is a large part of their problem), so we don't talk about it much. My wife & I never force advice or judgment on them, but occasionally offer support and tell them that we'd be glad to offer assistance in the form of advice any time ... all they have to do is ask. Every once in a while they'll get a burst of motivation and ask about setting up a 401(k), budget, etc. and I gladly walk through it with them. However, these spurts never really last very long.
As the holidays approach, the DW & I are discussing x-mas and b-day presents for Mom & Sis. Our policy in the past has been to buy things they NEED around the holidays in the hopes that this will allow them to put their money toward catching up on debt and/or building savings. Examples include new tires for my sister's car, purchasing uniforms for mom's job, maybe picking up a medical bill or house repair (all in the form of payment directly to the service provider, not cash to family). However, they consistently choose to use the extra money we saved them to get themselves "something special." We try not to judge them for doing this, as we both understand that they have difficult circumstances.
This year, DW has suggested to take a "Give a man a fish, teach a man to fish" approach to gifts. She has suggested that we offer to get them a Dave Ramsey kit or a session with a personal finance counselor or something along those lines. I agree with the philosophy, but I just don't know how I feel about giving this as a gift. I would hate to offend them and this might be crossing the line of forcing it on them.
Anyone have advice or experience with a similar situation? If you think it's a feasible concept, what would provide the most help with the lowest perception of offense? We're thinking books, CD's/kits, local or in-person seminars .... open to anything.
As the holidays approach, the DW & I are discussing x-mas and b-day presents for Mom & Sis. Our policy in the past has been to buy things they NEED around the holidays in the hopes that this will allow them to put their money toward catching up on debt and/or building savings. Examples include new tires for my sister's car, purchasing uniforms for mom's job, maybe picking up a medical bill or house repair (all in the form of payment directly to the service provider, not cash to family). However, they consistently choose to use the extra money we saved them to get themselves "something special." We try not to judge them for doing this, as we both understand that they have difficult circumstances.
This year, DW has suggested to take a "Give a man a fish, teach a man to fish" approach to gifts. She has suggested that we offer to get them a Dave Ramsey kit or a session with a personal finance counselor or something along those lines. I agree with the philosophy, but I just don't know how I feel about giving this as a gift. I would hate to offend them and this might be crossing the line of forcing it on them.
Anyone have advice or experience with a similar situation? If you think it's a feasible concept, what would provide the most help with the lowest perception of offense? We're thinking books, CD's/kits, local or in-person seminars .... open to anything.

Yeah me!
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