Christmas can be a tough holiday to navigate: we have expectations of ourselves, others and how the holiday should go.
One part of the equation is gift giving. While I love giving people things, I hate having to figure out how much and what to give people. It seems like every year, I'm caught off guard by some acquaintance buying me a token gift. I certainly appreciate the gesture and the time and effort put into buying me something. But, I also find that I am then rushing around to reciprocate or feeling crummy for not having a gift for them with me.
These gift giving dilemmas hit a new level this year with the pre-teen daughter. She announced that she needed to buy gifts for 6 girls, then 10, then maybe 12. And she had no idea how much to pay for each gift. She wanted to buy each a candy bar, but wasn't sure what they were buying her.
After several discussions about how I wasn't financing gifts for a dozen pre-teens (none of whom have an income), I informed her that if she thought that having a cost limit discussion was too embarrassing, she should wait until I forced her to return any gift she received that was more valuable than a candy bar. She can't give a cheap gift and keep an expensive one. This pushed her to discuss the matter with her friends, and then they all decided to draw names and set a monetary limit. Crisis averted.
But that still leaves me with the surprise friend's gifts. To solve this problem, I now buy small trinket gifts (decorative glassware items on deep discount) to give as gifts. Some are even pre-wrapped with blank tags so I can give them on a moment's notice.
Guess I need to follow my own advice and have these gift discussions before the holiday season.
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1 year ago
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