How a jaded family got into the holiday spirit.
This
article originally appeared in Supply House Times in December of 2003. It is no
less relevant today.
The holiday season is a joyous time of year,
or so we’re incessantly told. Yet, it’s well documented that suicides reach a
peak during the month of December, as do bouts of depression. Emotions get a
vigorous workout amid so much contrived conviviality.
Wild things happen when scientists violently
crash subatomic particles into one another. So it is when the elementary forces
of God and commerce collide. December’s holiday season pivots around a
celebration of Christianity, and lately our society has come to recognize the
concurrent Jewish Hanukkah tradition as well. But religion long ago got
hijacked by Santa Claus. A good part of our nation’s economic health now is
determined by how well retailers do in what has become a festival of
consumerism stretching from Halloween through New Year’s Day. The hectic pace
of shopping, partying and holiday hullabaloo turns an enjoyable time of year
into one that puts many folks on the verge of flipping out. This is a story of
one such family.
Buying Binge
During the hardy economic times of the
1990s, this family - let’s call them the O’s - got sucked into the season’s
commercialism like never before. It was no longer enough to buy “a” present for
family members and close friends. Cherished ones started to get two, three,
four presents. Meantime, the gift list had expanded beyond friends and
relatives to include casual acquaintances. They in turn felt obligated to buy
gifts for the O family, although as time passed nobody could remember who
started the cycle.
It got to the point where the O family was
devoting almost every free hour between Thanksgiving and Christmas to gift
shopping, gift wrapping, or giving themselves headaches trying to figure out
what to buy for people who were on the gift list only because they were likely
to buy stuff for the O’s. The holiday spirit of peace and goodwill had evolved
into a canon of proportional reciprocity. How unfair it seemed that they had to
buy gifts for six members of the fertile W clan when the O’s numbered only
four. On the other hand, the O’s gift list included some singles and twosomes
who customarily bought gifts for all four O’s. So things seemed to even out in
that regard. Nonetheless, the holiday season became increasingly less cheerful
for the O family. It turned into a month-long ordeal culminating in the torment
of January credit card statements.
A few years ago, the O family patriarch took
inventory of the dozens of Christmas gifts he had received. He found exactly
two things worth keeping, both coming from his wife and daughters, who knew
exactly what Papa O needed. The rest consisted of books he had already read or
had not the slightest interest in reading; music CDs he already owned or whose
content he regarded as noise; and items of clothing he didn’t like or which
didn’t fit. Of course, he could spend precious time returning these items for
better things, but something Mr. O hates even worse than shopping is
exchanging, which takes longer and is filled with paperwork. Mr. O also
received lots of cute stuff that inspired a chuckle for a few seconds after
opening, then disappeared into a junk pile. Mrs. O’s experience was similar.
And if this was how they felt about the gifts of well-meaning friends and
acquaintances, why would it be any different for the recipients of their
largesse?
A Cure For Insanity
“This is insane!” declared Mr. O as he
packed trash bag after bag with Christmas wrappings. Mrs. O agreed and took the
lead investigating a course of treatment that might lead to sound mental
health.
Which ended thusly: In subsequent years, the
O family contacted everyone on its gift list and made a pact. Absolutely no
presents exchanged among them. Instead, working through a church and social
service agency, the O’s identified some have-not families that needed
sponsoring. All seasonal gift shopping would go toward buying grocery baskets,
clothing, children’s toys and other items sorely needed by the designated
families, with the social service folks guiding the way.
Everyone in the gifting circle was thrilled
to get out from under the self-imposed seasonal pressure to “perform” for one
another with gifts that more often than not proved underwhelming. They spent
about as much as before, and therefore did not do much damage to our economy.
It’s just that their gifts went to people who genuinely needed the stuff, and
what they received was immeasurably more valuable. They felt better about
themselves, and better about the world around them.
Programs like this exist in most
communities. If you’re feeling the holiday blues, it’s time to start
investigating them.
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