I'm in a long distance relationship. Overall, it's pretty affordable. Flights can be expensive, but thanks to some very generous sign-up bonuses for southwest credit cards, and occasional sales, our once a month travel is basically free, so that isn't an issue. Since we fly back and forth visiting each other, there's no incurred hotel or rental car costs. So that's not a problem.
I took Monday off and flew out to spend a lovely long weekend with the boy. I knew he had some surprise planned, and upon arrival learned that involved getting whisked off on a two hour drive to Orlando, for a three night night stay at a hotel, and a showing of cirque du soleil. Only he read the website wrong (he came up with this whole idea a week before my trip), and bought tickets for June 1st, as there's currently no shows going on. The two things we ended up doing (seeing the new Star Trek and indoor putput golf) could have been done in his home city, and as for the hotel... well, they had pools and 24 hour jacuzzis and other assorted resorty things, but the only thing we did was spend our time there tangled in the sheets, which would have happened just fine at his house.
It's all so silly and unnecessary. He was saddened that his weekend plans didn't quite go the way he wanted, and so I just said I had a nice time, as I didn't want to further distress him by saying that the whole thing was silly. But the whole thing was silly. My educated estimate is that the whole production cost over $500, after you include food and gas and unusable show tickets. We could have put that money towards a real vacation (I have family in Orlando, so I've been to the area a million times; I've seen the Disney cirque du soleil show before, and the other things he had considered doing, Disney waterparks or Disney Quest, I've also done multiple times). Or he could have put that money towards paying off his credit card debt.
It's hard to fault him, because he just wanted to do something nice for me, since he feels it's been a while since he has done something to show how he cares. What he doesn't realize is that he does that all the time, just in smaller chunks, whether it's helping me through my occasional dark bouts of existential bleakness, or spending his Saturday mornings to tutor me over skype in programming concepts I'm having a hard time grasping at work. And I understand that it's hard enough to show appreciation to me in the traditional ways; I think flower delivery is over priced, and I've been pretty health conscious for a while with some good results, and so don't need an influx of expensive chocolates. But this is all so... not at all something I wanted.
I have shared MMM articles with him before, but it just hasn't stuck. Frugality is something I was raised with. I'm certainly not the most mustachian, and ERE people put me to shame, but compared to pretty much every "normal" person, I'm pretty badass. And he just... hemorrhages money in completely unoptimized ways. Heck, while dropping me off at the airport, he was like, "oooh, Quiznos. I think I'll get a sandwich to bring home." It's silly enough pay airport prices while starving at an airport. But to spend that money on something to then consume at home? And after a lavish weekend? I don't even understand.
I don't even know. I don't know how to approach this. Of the two of us, he is definitely the more emotional one; I'm practically vulvan, in regards to most things. And so I need some tips on how to sensitively approach the subject of, "it's nice that you wanted to do something nice for me, but your approach was idiotic."