Can less really be more during the holidays?

“If you can live with less of what you have. You can be more of who you are.”
– Celso Cukierkorn

As many of you know, this year I’m running an Adopt A Family program – sponsored through my side business – and dedicated to my Kind Year journey. So far so good – we got people excited, raised the $200 goal – and I got to go out and shop! I am bound and determined to stretch this budget to it’s limit – I REALLY want to do a lot with the money. I started shopping – ticking items off the kids wish list (a little boy and girl) – and watching the stash grow.

Then I hit a wall.

I know these kids don’t have a lot – but do they really NEED a bunch of “stuff” to make it Christmas?  I spent roughly $80 of our goal money and received some very kind donations – and the kiddos gift pile was growing quite large.

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Lots of love and caring went into the collection of these gifts! Very proud of my peeps and all their generous donations!

I’m taking a step back.

Yes – I want these kiddos to be excited and have an awesomely amazing Christmas morning – but when is enough enough?  After reviewing all the items I’d already bought, I’ve  decided to finish up a few small thing (mostly clothes as I want both kids to have a new outfit and new jammies) but take the remaining $100 and give the family a Visa gift card.

I know it’s slightly unorthodox to give “cash” gifts in situations like this – but I believe it’s the right thing to do.  While I cannot control how the they spend this gift – I’m going to add a note, explain about the Kind Year journey and ask that they use it as a family.  I’d love it if this money would give them a shared experience – something they can really remember and treasure.   Maybe it’s a huge family dinner complete with all the fixings on Christmas day – or a trip to the movies and ice cream as a special treat over the holiday school break.  I’m not intimately involved in their situation and I don’t know what $100 will mean to them.  Maybe it’s enough to take some pressure off an already over taxed budget and allow for a few treats over the holiday.  Maybe it will be the difference between lights and no lights.  Maybe it means Dad can take a day off of work and spend it with the family.

I don’t know.

I just know that I cannot in good conscience continue to spend just to spend.  $100 is a lot of money and the goal is to help this family.  And that help – if possible – should extend past just wrapping paper and ribbons.

I hope with all my heart that this money will ease a burden for this family.

That would truly be a gift.