Must Haves

Day 241

I like giving gifts, particularly when the offering is more “organic in nature.”  What I mean by that is, to me, there is nothing more satisfying than stumbling across something that would be perfect, useful and loved by the recipient, particularly when they are hard to buy for.  In the last couple of years, I found a series of audio books that my father actually likes. (Throne of Kings, Martin).   In the 40 plus years I have known him, this is the first gift I believe he enjoys and I am not just buying him something—ANYTHING, to check that gift giving box.

I don’t think I am the only one that feels a duty to buy gifts on major holidays and birthdays and as a result has spent money on ridiculous items in an obligatory frenzy.  I know I am not alone because every thrift store in America (probably the world really) is full of cast off items like these:

  • Billy Big Mouth Bass Singing Fish Plaque – if somehow you haven’t seen one of these, count yourself lucky.
  • Millions of holiday themed, socks sweaters and ties- seriously people, stop buying these as gifts.
  • Individual mugs- I once went to a retiring teacher’s garage sale and she had over 400 holiday and teacher themed mugs for sale and that is the truth.
  • Various absurd small appliances of the year- included in this group are The George Foreman Grill,  Home Facial Sauna, and hot dog maker.
  • Electric wine bottle opener- Really how lazy do you have to be?  Although, after giving it a bit more thought, I will admit to sometimes choosing a bottle of wine out of our wine rack because it has a screw off top rather than have to take a cork out…
  • Golf or fishing themed stuff- particularly if it serves no useful function other than to sit on a desk with the very clever phrase “A bad day fishing is better than a good day at work.”  I know, brilliant, right?
  • Cheap multi-purpose tools prepackaged and sold in the aisles of department stores everywhere-items like a flashlight, lint shaver, nose hair clipper combo, useful to almost no one.

So, I have taken a different  angle during our Simple Year.  I’ve been collecting “nearly new” items for the kids all year.  I had to round it out with a couple of eBay purchases, but I still tried to keep it minimal. This year if I stumbled across a perfect previously owned item for someone, I got it for them.  If not, I didn’t buy them anything.  Instead, We just sent charitable donations on their behalf.  We tried to pick charities that were meaningful to the recipient.  I actually was able to complete all of my “holiday shopping” this way in less than an hour. Based on that time saving alone, I would recommend it.

I am going to close this post with a link to a product that showed up as a sponsored post on my friends Facebook feed, the Hutzler 571 Bannana Slicer. So while I sincerely hope that they don’t actually sell many of these items, I was amused while reading some of the nearly 700 comments on the bottom of the page.  Just when I think the world has gone completely bananas in its desire for useless items, my faith in the human race is renewed by mankind’s collective sense of humor.

Maybe by sponsoring links the company is hoping to corner the market on gag gifts this year?


9 Responses to Must Haves

  1. I’d love to hear what you (or others) suggest doing in the following situation: my spouse’s family has a ton of stuff, virtually no hobbies (golf if you’re male, shopping if you’re female), don’t appreciate donations in their name, and generally say they can’t think of anything if you ask for gift ideas but get offended by the idea of not exchanging gifts. We have stopped buying them anything for birthdays & holidays like Mother’s Day but Xmas is harder to avoid because it’s obvious we’re exchanging gifts with others (like my family, who are less consumptive and will always have ideas for things they’d enjoy or could really use because they haven’t bought everything the minute they saw it). Any ideas?

    • Honestly at that point I would just get them a gift card or cash and let them buy what they please. Or cook or bake them something and give them a consumable item!

    • That is a tough one. Maybe the gift of time? Like wrapping up a sleeve of golf balls with a note that you would like to spend an hour or two hitting a bucket of balls with them? Or some nail polish and a note for a lunch and manicure date? Or you could frame a photo of yourselves…how can they not like that? -Kerry

    • We buy scratch off lottery tickets and wrap each one individually in a different sized package. They have fun seeing if they won anything, and we, in a round-about way, check the box while donating to the open space fund. We’ve had family and friends win up to $100, and some win nothing, but they still have fun.

  2. That’s a great idea on donating, I may do the same for some relatives (but not the kids, somehow I don’t think they would appreciate the gesture).

    • Lisa- Have you ever heard of kiva.org ? It is a micro-lending site. They will send you a gift card and your kids can then chose who they would like to loan money to and watch it come back in over the next few months. Among other things, I think it is a good lesson in economics 🙂

  3. I own a banana slicer! Bought it when my son was a toddler and my daughter a newborn. He always wanted bananas in his cereal, and I didn’t always have time to slice in the morning. So I got him one of these – showed him how to put the peeled banana on the cutting board and slice his own banana. He loved it, and I loved not having to do it 🙂

  4. You should read some of the reviews for this on amazon. I always wondered what you did if your banana didn’t curve right

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