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- bestusername ( @bestusername@aussie.zone ) 9•10 months ago
Play Lego with the kids while she goes for a nap or walk.
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- Chozo ( @Chozo@kbin.social ) 10•10 months ago
Maybe you could get her something she can enjoy with the kids, like a board game or something.
- Spaghetti_Hitchens ( @Spaghetti_Hitchens@kbin.social ) 8•10 months ago
Food is love.
My vote is for hot soup.
- Blackout ( @Blackout@kbin.social ) 2•10 months ago
Yes but cookies
- IDontHavePantsOn ( @IDontHavePantsOn@lemm.ee ) 7•10 months ago
If you found out she has gestational diabetes from anyone else but her, and that she’s having a hard time, let it be. If she told you herself in an honest moment of comfort, tell her “I’m so sorry. That sucks.” And let her vent. The last thing she wants is for anyone to make a big deal about it, solve her problems, or choose her diet.
Bring in donuts again. Seriously. She’s an adult and can choose to eat them.
Bring in a more health conscious option. Once again, she can choose to eat it or not.
You’re trying to find an option when most likely you shouldn’t know about her personal health issues in the first place. Unless you have a very close relationship that you aren’t letting us know about, you shouldn’t be trying to figure out something to give her to make her feel better. She could very easily feel ostracized for her pregnancy in the first place. Employers arent super cool with pregnancies, let alone pregnancies that are in any magnitude more difficult.
What makes will make her feel better is a coworker that respects her space and private health matters. Don’t treat her as special. Treat her as human.
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- Chicagoz ( @Chicagoz@lemm.ee ) 5•10 months ago
Is she a tea-drinker? Maybe a bag of some really nice tea from a proper tea shop, herbal or otherwise. My experience is that tea drinkers really appreciate a nice artisan-style brew. It’s an understated but thoughtful gesture.
- CaptObvious ( @CaptObvious@literature.cafe ) 4•10 months ago
Maybe a new journal and pen? A coffee or tea? A gift card to treat herself?
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- CaptObvious ( @CaptObvious@literature.cafe ) 3•10 months ago
Some people don’t want gifts like that, and I’d say respect their wishes. It might make the situation worse otherwise.
Maybe just play it as “I’m running out for a coffee. Let me get you one too.”
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- Empricorn ( @Empricorn@feddit.nl ) English4•10 months ago
I can’t read the original text, so I’m mostly replying to your edit.
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Doing something nice isn’t an asshole move
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Doing nothing isn’t an asshole move
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It’s not a lose-lose scenario
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You’re not an asshole
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This planet is better with you on it
Okay now that I’ve got the obvious stuff out of the way, DON’T LISTEN TO THE HATERS! The vast amount of replies were positive and encouraging. You obviously edited your post, which is a bit of an overreaction, but I get it. I’m sensitive too and I genuinely think it’s a good thing (mostly when I see that quality in others 🤷♂️). Empathetic people like you literally improve the world, for everyone. But ignore the bitter people who do the opposite and want everyone else to be miserable too. Even if you had no impact, you should do good things because they are true and pure and worth it, no matter how the recipient responds and no matter how other people view it. They’ll also make you feel good! Just keep being you…
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- IDontHavePantsOn ( @IDontHavePantsOn@lemm.ee ) 2•10 months ago
A boy is throwing rocks into a lake. With each splash he worries that someone will tell him to stop. He starts with pebbles but after each toss and satisfying bloop, he feels a bit better and starts throwing larger and larger rocks.
As he picks up a large stone of 5lbs, he notices a family making their way to the beach. He drops the stone in a panic directly onto his foot and screeches in pain. The father of the family runs to the boys side. Without asking, he picks up the boy and carries him to a nearby boulder, sits him down and inspects the boys bleeding wound.
“What were you doing?” The father asked.
“I was seeing how far I could make it” replied the boy.
You’re not the evil you think you are. It’s late but I’ll get back to you in the morning. PM me in the mean time.
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- Trd ( @Trd@lemmy.wtf ) 4•10 months ago
Get her a book, maybe from the Diskworld series, its great for big and small.
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- Gamma ( @GammaGames@beehaw.org ) English1•10 months ago
Pet Semetary
/s obviously
Discworld is a solid suggestion, it’s very accessible!
- Thisfox ( @Thisfox@sopuli.xyz ) 4•10 months ago
Flowers. Or a little potted plant. But yeah cut flowers are the traditional gift.
A picture book for her kids, so she can read to them. Or a board game, to play with them.
Someone gave me a usb stick with a few kindle books on it one time, that was nice.
A flowery handkerchief or scarf is always a nice gift for a woman who has everything, I never dislike getting one. I have pretty handkerchiefs in my glasses case to clean them with. Better than scratching them with a tissue, and nice to look at too.
- Björn Tantau ( @bjoern_tantau@swg-empire.de ) 3•10 months ago
Someone gave me a usb stick with a few kindle books on it one time, that was nice.
A friend once made a “mixtape” on a USB stick. Instead of mixing music tracks it contained whole albums. The girl he gave it to exclaimed “A USB stick! How nice!”
So make sure to let them know that the contents are the gift.
- Thisfox ( @Thisfox@sopuli.xyz ) 1•10 months ago
It isn’t difficult to label usb sticks. They have little loops to thread the chord of the label through and everything.
- bloopernova ( @bloopernova@programming.dev ) English2•10 months ago
Seconding the Lego suggestion. There’s some really nice fairly cheap sets of flowers, succulents, and city postcards.
We buy people Lego flowers instead of real flowers these days. For something that dies super fast, flowers are too damned expensive.
- monkE ( @monkE@feddit.ch ) 1•10 months ago
Stuffed toys, books for the kids and also spend some time with them and reassure her. Give confidence and strength that they can figure it out.
- waitingtodie ( @waitingtodie@lemm.ee ) 1•10 months ago
An 8 ball is always appreciated.
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- oehm ( @oehm@midwest.social ) English1•10 months ago
A candle
- n0m4n ( @n0m4n@lemmy.ml ) 1•10 months ago
Write a note to let that person know how valuable and wonderful a person that they are. Using specific examples is good. This isn’t the time for vague platitudes. I would tie any gift in with how much they have done for others, and how deserving they are.
- Call me Lenny/Leni ( @shinigamiookamiryuu@lemm.ee ) English0•10 months ago
Does it have to be food-related?
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