Thought I'd let knowledgeable people weigh in here on a problem of mine.
I'm 40 with two sons (four years old and a newborn). Five years ago I bought my first house, and my mom took the opportunity to go into her garage, get out all of my boxes of baseball cards, and mail them to me. It was a ton of boxes. When I got them, I was like a kid again: Sorting, putting the stars in sheets, etc. That process took a few months, but everything is now organized as I want it in new boxes and the original boxes that were mailed to me were all thrown away.
Meanwhile, months down the road, it was determined (not by me) that the cards of my younger brother, who also has two kids (six-year-old daughter, four- year-old son) were mixed in with the ones my mom sent. I have no way of knowing which cards were mine, and which were his, and now they're all mixed together.
He's been unhappy about it ever since it was discovered, and yesterday he mentioned how his son really wants some cards. It was a sweet story, and I owed him big for a favor he recently did for me, so we both agreed that I should give him a boatload of cards. I'm ok with this, he's ok with this. Whatever animosity we had toward each other over the situation is now water under the bridge. Now we're just mad at Mom.
So the question is: how do we split up the cards? It can't be 50-50 (I had a much bigger collection when we started). I can't just give him a box, because it would just be a bunch of common players, rather than the stars (who are all under plastic). Just weeding out all of the duplicates to give to him seems cheap. We don't live in the same city, so having some kind of "draft" probably wouldn't work. I honestly don't know.
At this point, the cards are not around to help pay for college or me to gaze at longingly. They're basically just there to give to my sons someday. My brother feels the same way.
Anyone have any opinions here?
Thanks.
I'm 40 with two sons (four years old and a newborn). Five years ago I bought my first house, and my mom took the opportunity to go into her garage, get out all of my boxes of baseball cards, and mail them to me. It was a ton of boxes. When I got them, I was like a kid again: Sorting, putting the stars in sheets, etc. That process took a few months, but everything is now organized as I want it in new boxes and the original boxes that were mailed to me were all thrown away.
Meanwhile, months down the road, it was determined (not by me) that the cards of my younger brother, who also has two kids (six-year-old daughter, four- year-old son) were mixed in with the ones my mom sent. I have no way of knowing which cards were mine, and which were his, and now they're all mixed together.
He's been unhappy about it ever since it was discovered, and yesterday he mentioned how his son really wants some cards. It was a sweet story, and I owed him big for a favor he recently did for me, so we both agreed that I should give him a boatload of cards. I'm ok with this, he's ok with this. Whatever animosity we had toward each other over the situation is now water under the bridge. Now we're just mad at Mom.
So the question is: how do we split up the cards? It can't be 50-50 (I had a much bigger collection when we started). I can't just give him a box, because it would just be a bunch of common players, rather than the stars (who are all under plastic). Just weeding out all of the duplicates to give to him seems cheap. We don't live in the same city, so having some kind of "draft" probably wouldn't work. I honestly don't know.
At this point, the cards are not around to help pay for college or me to gaze at longingly. They're basically just there to give to my sons someday. My brother feels the same way.
Anyone have any opinions here?
Thanks.
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