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How
to Entice Kids to Share During the Holidays
by Sherry Gordon
So
many people gripe about the commercialization of Christmas (or Hannukah,
or whatever one celebrates at the end of the year)... Why not just
let the public tinselandmuzak roll off your back? ...Right that's
not so easy to do with kids in the house! Nothing we do is going
to keep businesses from dangling
those carrots in front of prospective customers... And for most
people, presents are a big part of the holidays.
But
many of us seek more balance, especially when we notice that getting
is looked forward to much more than giving in our households.
What
if we make sharing part of the fun? It's a way for children to
learn that there is meaning beyond the getting part of gift exchanging.
That deeper togetherness engendered enjoyment, in fact, is bound
to stick in the mind long after the panoply of toys has faded in
memory.
There
are so many ways of putting "we" into endoftheyear
celebrations...
Putting
on a party at home
A
party is a fine way to share with others and kids, of course,
can help with planning it and making it go smoothly. Look for ways
of making the gathering truly cohesive... Have a singalong, go
caroling. Play a group game. Have a quilting party (kids can help
with that too). Invite each person to talk about his or her favorite
holiday memories while sitting around a bonfire at the beach or
in the snow?
Here's
an idea... Make a child a wallflower spotter! Kids usually like
to be used as "runners" and intelligence gatherers...
A parent could set things up so that even a shy child could be an
effective icebreaker just by passing an invitation from mom for
a guest to join her in the kitchen.
Helping
out at someone else's party
If
your family is invited to a big wingding, offer to arrive early
to set up or stay late to clean up. Yep, kids too! The Befores and
Afters can be billed as (and be) miniparties in themselves
where sharing in the work is great fun. (Put the toddlers to sleep
in a mini slumber party, if need be, while the dishes get done.)
Letting
other people help out at your party
How
is this sharing? ...There are all sorts of people who enjoy conviviality
but don't enjoy (maybe even absolutely dread) the responsibility
of putting a party on themselves. Maybe such a person rues that
fact that his apartment is too tiny or that her home is so messy
and there isn't time to deal with the
clutter. Or maybe they just feel inadequate to plan and manage things
in a gathering... but love to help
Giving
them a way to participate in the planning, and/or the setup, monitoring,
maybe gameleading, cleanup could be a huge blessing to these
folks. (Not to mention a help to you hey, you could actuallyenjoy
your party for a change!; and the companionship with the helper/s.)
If it were me being asked by a friend, I'd be delighted and would
certainly feel specially singled out rather than used. (Yep, I'm
one of those who's a naturalborn brainstormer and major domo
but who stresses out unpleasantly when the whole thing is up to
me.)
Giving
your kids insight into this and letting them in on the privilege
of sharing in the work is good exercise for their own planning
and interacting abilities.
Focus
your party on sharing with others
Some
for instances...
- Ask
your guests to bring food for the local food bank.
- If
you have a gift exchange, have everyone bring two gifts one
to go to Toys for Tots.
- If
you have a children's toy exchange, have each child bring two
ingoodshape toys of their own that they're tired of. They'll
take one "new" (used) toy home... the others will be
gifts for
less fortunate children of the community.
- Or
have your party's main activity be making gifts/food to donate
to those in need.
Taking a party with you somewhere else
Parties
can be portable and there are plenty of other places where we
can have fun... feting others in need of it too, and not as likely
to get much of it. Nursing homes, homeless shelters, the homes of
shutins. How about taking the makings of a party to the police
station, or to a children's hospital ward?
I recall
a very happy experience of this kind of pleasure as a young Girl
Scout... Our troop made decorations, baked cupcakes, and wrapped
little presents for the inhabitants of a rest home in our town
and took a Christmas party there. We sang carols, ate cupcakes and
drank punch, and got to open
surprise presents ourselves, as I recall... But we also got another
gift: the chance to make friends with "old people" who
were otherwise hidden away from our ken. And then, of course, there
was the gift of knowing we'd made a difference to them you could
see it in their eyes.
The
exchange of presents can be on many layers...
For
me, trying to formulate an especially meaningful gift greatly enhances
my pleasure in giving because I know it has more impact at the
receiving end. Older kids can understand this too and can be encouraged
to take layers of meaning into consideration when they choose gifts
for others. Putting more
thought into a gift is putting more of yourself into the giving
of it.
It's
a game! let's see, how to add another layer to Aunt Jan's present...
A real surprise? A family symbol? Humor? Something that will last
for years? There are many possibilities and even toddlers might
come up with great (if perhaps odd) ideas (and the charming oddity
would be one of the layers, of course!).
A
family gift exchange that includes the children as givers and
receivers
Family
gift exchanges that I hear about usually mean "the adults
draw names" and the kids get presents from everybody. I'm
sure that's fine with the kids! but I think the children should
draw names too. Letting them rake in gifts from all and sundry without
participating as givers takes something away from them... They don't
get to be a "special buddy" to their allotted loved one
that's the fun part of this
giving arrangement, that this one gift can really be given some
attention.
And
it's a great way for a child to learn the nuances of gift giving
(i.e., sharing themselves with the recipients).
And
the gifts given to children might allow them to share with pleasure...
A
group game. A promise of a popcornandmovie slumber party. Chocolate
chips and walnuts to take to Granna's house for a cookiebaking session.
A pinata. Stationery. A kit for making crafts as gifts. Vegetable
seeds for a garden, the output of which is to be shared with a homeless
shelter. A prepaid calling card to be used for calls to Grandpa.
What
a nice tradition, if at least one of a child's presents is sure
to be a sharing gift.
Sharing
with the critters around us...
Whether
as the focal point of a party or just in a family setting, remembering
the wild things during the holidays can be a delight. I know, they
don't know it's Hannukah or Christmas... But isn't the point of
the holiday to focus on our blessings? Surely one of them is that
there are so many wonderful creatures
we share this world with.
Children
love to put out food and decorations for the birds, squirrels, etc.!
Have a blast making edible garlands and ornaments for an outdoor
tree (or apartment balcony). And perhaps you won't forget to fill
a stocking for the dog or cat?
Finally,
why do we decorate our homes and property with lights and other
gaiety?
It
gives us pleasure every time we come home, but it gives to the whole
neighborhood as well. (Surely you've made sure your kids don't think
that you put up all those house decorations in competition with
the neighbors.
One
of the most wonderful holiday treats of my past was the years I
lived on a country road where there were no lights... except during
the month leading up to New Year's. Then, a family with several
acres along the twisty road wound little white lights around trees
all along it driving past their house at night was like entering
fairyland! I never met these benefactors, but I blessed them each
time I went by, my spirits lifted.
Sharing
does give back to the giver... but sometimes kids (we all) need
nudging to see the opportunities for the sowing and reaping thereof.
Incorporating a few into the endoftheyear festivities is a great
way to make the holidays more meaningful for everyone.
Sherry
Gordon is the author of The Sharing Season: Ideas for a Frugal,
Meaningful Holiday http://www.thesharingseason.com.
(10% of the profits go to the American Red Cross.) She lives and
writes in the Idaho backcountry and is the developer of the websites
www.ThinkJointVenture.com,
www.AffiliatePrimer.com, and
www.AlternativePetHealth.com.
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