Everything2
Near Matches
Ignore Exact
Full Text
Everything2

Ho ho ho, hee hee hee, we gave your present to a refugee

created by dutchess

(idea) by dutchess (5.5 d) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 2 C!s Mon Dec 30 2002 at 20:19:08

Christmas: an embarrassment of riches

The youngest member of my family of origin is 30 years old. Our youngest first cousin is 29. None of us are buying for children, at this point. The piles of presents under the Christmas tree, however, would make you think Santa had confused my family for a mid-sized elementary school. When it comes to giving gifts, my family goes way, way, way over the top.

I don't want to sound like I'm complaining, or that I'm too much of a Grinch. We exchange gifts as tokens of affection. We are fortunate that we can afford to give as much as we do. I like Christmas shopping, and have made peace with the fact that I'm going to spend a lot on presents for others, and that each year, I'm going to receive a fair number of gifts that I just don't need. In self-defense, I have become queen of the recycled gift; if I don't want or can't use present X, I find it a good home. Gifts from work go to neighbors; presents from one side of the family go to the in-laws, and vice versa. Re-gifting works, as long as I remember where the present came from in the first place.

Of course, there are gifts that I keep. Some that I had asked for; some that I didn't even know I wanted, and was surprised and delighted to receive. But in general, I am given far more that I can use, or that I deserve, judging by Santa's naughty-or-nice scale. So I try to redistribute when I can.

Ho ho ho, hee hee hee, we gave your present to a refugee

When I was in college, I had a friend who found a note that said just that under the Christmas tree one year; sure enough, his parents had given the money they would have spent on his Christmas presents to someone who needed it a great deal more than he did. As a not-terribly-enlightened 20 year old, I was a bit shocked--and glad my parents hadn't done likewise. Over the years, however, that option---giving to charity in someone's name--has become more and more appealing to me. It costs more than re-gifting, but the total amount of good that comes out of it is greater.

So here's what I've started to do: I give relatives who are older than I am a token gift, and a letter telling them which charities I have given money to in the past year, in their name. Younger siblings and cousins still get material presents, but Nana gets donations to the Ronald McDonald House1, where she used to volunteer, and Guiding Eyes for the Blind2, an organization that raises guide dogs. My architect uncle gets donations to Habitat for Humanity 3 ; donations to the Smithsonian 4 are in the name of an aunt who loves cultural stuff; my fisherman father gets the newsletter (and a letter thanking him for the donation) from Save the Bay 5, the organization whose efforts go to restoring the Chesapeake Bay. Et cetera.

So far, no one has followed suit, but they don't seem to mind that I'm spending their present money elsewhere; they always thank me and tell me it's a nice idea. On the other hand, none of my younger siblings or cousins are begging me to extend this new tradition to them. Oh, well, I've struck a balance that works for me.

(Contributions to non profit organizations are tax deductible, so I'm really getting three benefits out of each donation: knowing the organization has been helped, coming up with a creative gift for a family member, and having a write-off on my taxes. Ho ho ho, indeed.)

________________________

The friend who gave me this idea in the first place died before his 33rd birthday ; in his honor I give each year to his non-profit of choice, Planned Parenthood. 6

Just in case you're interested in any of the charities mentioned above, here are some web addresses:
1 http://www.rmhc.com/donate/donate/index.html
2 http://www.guiding-eyes.org/
3http://www.habitat.org/
4 http://www.si.edu/giving/
5 http://www.savethebay.org/
6 http://loper.org/~george/trends/2002/Oct/50.html


printable version
chaos

Christmas is a solvable Engineering problem Gifts we already have The Most Embarrassing Christmas Present Planned Parenthood
Selling your Christmas presents on eBay Ho Ho Fucking Ho The thing your aunt gave you which you don't know what it is 36C mind in a 32A body
Some gifts are so fleeting Don't force your Christmas philosophy on me Twisted Christmas Award A great present idea
So they caught Santa Claus When your presents give me hives What to do with those annoying random instant messages Ronald McDonald House
Christmas present opening ceremony On a Leander Which Miss Reynolds, My Kind Friend, Gave Me How to wrap presents The day I gave to charity
Why it's fun to dose your relatives Chia Pet newbie flag How to know your Christmas presents before Christmas
Y'know, if you log in, you can write something here, or contact authors directly on the site. Create a New User if you don't already have an account.
  Epicenter
Login
Password

password reminder
register

Everything2 Help

Cool Staff Picks
What you are reading:
R.E.M. ordering breakfast at Denny's at 3 AM
The lightning men
anime
House of Flying Daggers
Multimedia software essentials 2D IMAGE EDITING
Henry V
Are you in the light or in the dark?
Impact of the Marshall Court
Tell me about your secret places
Faheem Williams
viral marketing
Gay Niggers from Outer Space
Invisible Man
New Writeups
Pavlovna
My Better Half(fiction)
kanoodle
Molson muscle(essay)
aneurin
You pays your money and you takes your choice(idea)
shaogo
July 20, 2008(log)
Glowing Fish
Tualatin River(place)
The Jacket
Words of Advice(idea)
John_Fox
Good Intentions Gone Wrong(person)
Heitah
Posthumous Oscar(thing)
ignis_glaciesque
University of South Florida(place)
ignis_glaciesque
Flogstaskriket(idea)
liveforever
Caesar's last breath(idea)
dagnyswaggart
she wants to believe(personal)
antigravpussy
he doesn't know, but her eyes widen too far(thing)
dagnyswaggart
Wild tides guard her secrets(poetry)
Lord Brawl
Caesar's last breath(poetry)
Everything 2 is brought to you by the letter C and The Everything Development Company