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Nottingham Post
Nottingham Post
World
Danielle Kate Wroe & Lana Adkin

Angry mum wants to return daughter's Christmas gifts after she finds list

During Christmas time, it’s hard for parents to keep Christmas presents away from their children - they’ll do anything to try and take a peek at the toys they’ll be getting, despite spoiling the surprise.

One woman has taken to Mumsnet to complain her daughter who 'doesn't miss a trick' had found her notebook. The furious mum shared her daughter's notebook contained a list of all the gifts she had bought for her child. The woman was so annoyed she wanted to return the gifts, reports The Mirror.

Asking for advice, she explained: "Yesterday my daughter (six nearly seven and bright/doesn't miss a trick) was building a den with blankets around my work desk. Didn't think anything of it until this morning. She asked me a question that made me stop and double-take.

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"On my desk are many notebooks. At the back of one of these notebooks (my Christmas planning one) I have listed all the presents I have purchased for her bday and Christmas (they are close together).

"I have listed her stocking items, the items Santa is bringing, and then the presents we have got and what I have asked the wider family to get. I also have lists for wider family presents, food, and Christmas cards.

"I think she found the notebook when playing and read it based on the question she asked this morning. I'm very cross and hurt, I haven't asked her outright but I have asked her if she has anything she wants to tell me and she said no.

"I have now removed these pages from the notebook. My initial thought is to write a message for her if she returns to the book along the lines of 'I know you have read this - all presents have been returned. Please do not look in my notebooks again'.

"My husband says this is very mean and it's natural for kids to snoop etc. Any advice, please?" In the comments, people had mixed feelings about the best way to proceed.

One wrote: "Well she’s snooped and she now knows her presents. Lesson learned."

Another agreed: "She’s a child, of course she read it, she’s already ruined it enough by taking the surprise element away, this does not require a punishment!"

Someone else commented: "I genuinely accidentally found my Christmas presents at that age playing hide and seek, opened airing cupboard there they were. Mother was angry at me... but it was a cupboard we regularly open?

"You knew she was playing there, so don't keep the notebook there. But a talk about privacy won't go amiss."

One Mumsnetter said the mum should've known better than to leave her notebook lying around, writing: "That would be a very mean message to write.

"The lesson here is for you: don't leave things you don't want read lying around! You said yourself, she is bright and doesn't miss a trick. Well, she didn't miss this one!"

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