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Christmas With No Presents
One family’s daring experiment: Christmas without all the stuff.
We had, in other words, an amazingly good time.
What we didn’t have, though, was the average American’s $800 hole in our bank accounts, gouged out by Christmas-present spending. Nor did we have the credit card debt still unpaid by June. Nor the forcing of smiles for gifts we didn’t really want. Nor the buying of extra luggage to bring home those unwanted gifts. Nor the stressful rush of last-minute crowds at the mall.
Without presents, you see, we didn’t have the sensation that I, at least, normally associated with Christmas—the stress. And without stress or presents, it’s not Christmas, right? But of course it was. It was the best of Christmas, the part that, research shows, makes people happiest. It was all the upside without the downside.
Let me back up.
From November 2006 to November 2007, I and my little family—one wife, one toddler, one dog—embarked on a lifestyle experiment in which we tried to live with the lowest possible environmental impact (you can read about it on my blog NoImpactMan.com). Among other measures, the experiment included not making trash, not using any form of carbon-producing transportation, and not buying anything new.
This may sound like a lot of meaningless self-deprivation, but the question we wanted to answer was this: Does consuming fewer resources actually feel like deprivation, or is it possible that consuming less opens up another way of life that provides more enduring satisfaction? Or put another way, could we find a win-win way of life that might be happier both for us and for the planet?
Sometimes the answer was no. It may be better for the planet if we all decided not to buy big hunks of metal otherwise known as washing machines, but—believe me—washing my family’s clothes by hand did not make me happier.
On the other hand, eating local and riding bikes instead of driving cars allowed us to lose the spare tires around our guts, cure ourselves of longstanding skin problems and insomnia and become generally healthier. And not using electricity to power entertainment devices drew us closer together as a family and made us spend more time with friends.Our experiences illustrated that some uses of planetary resources improve quality of life and some may not. Indeed, we could go a long way toward dealing with the crisis in our planetary habitat if we found a way to avoid those uses that don’t improve our lives—like the packaging that comprises 40 percent of trash in landfills, for example.
But as Christmas 2007 approached, the more pressing question for us was, did the season’s huge consumption of resources add to the Christmas experience or detract from it? Since one-sixth of all American retail sales (and as a consequence, a hefty proportion of our national planetary resource use) occurs during the holiday season, it’s a question worth asking.
Despite the fact that people spend relatively large portions of their income on gifts, as well as time shopping for and wrapping them, such behavior apparently contributes little to holiday joy.
I’ve already told you enough to let you guess how my little family’s experience played out, but you may be surprised to learn that our findings are backed up by bona fide psychological research: Even though oodles of presents at Christmas is the dominant American paradigm, it turns out that people who spend less and have less spent on them at Christmas actually enjoy the season more.
This, anyway, is the conclusion of a paper published in the Journal of Happiness Studies by researchers Tim Kasser of Knox College and Kennon M. Sheldon of the University of Missouri-Columbia. After studying the Christmas experiences of 117 individuals, they found that people who emphasized time spent with families and meaningful religious or spiritual activities had merrier Christmases.
“Despite the fact that people spend relatively large portions of their income on gifts, as well as time shopping for and wrapping them,” the researchers said, “such behavior apparently contributes little to holiday joy.” In fact, subjects who gave or received presents that represented a substantial percentage of their income, Kasser and Sheldon found, actually experienced less Christmas joy.
Of course, this makes perfect sense. We all know in our hearts that treasuring meaningful experiences and spending time in valued relationships—at Christmas or any other part of the year—make us happier than getting more stuff.
But try telling that to the grandparents at Christmas time!
Try living out these lofty principles when the rest of your family and friends are swapping presents at the same rate as ever. You may find “bah humbugs” shouted in your direction more than once. That’s problematic, particularly if you’re hoping to inspire more sustainable lifestyle choices in other people. Nobody will be convinced by dogmatism or Grinch-like behavior.
The trick to a happy, sustainable, non-consumptive Christmas was not, we discovered, to ignore the expectations of the people we celebrated with. We didn’t want our loved ones to feel bad. Those who expected presents should get them, we decided. Gifts, after all, are associated with the exchange of love.
For us, the answer was to buy presents that did not require the exploitation of large amounts of planetary resources. My mother was very happy with the two massages she got. My father and his wife enjoyed the gift certificate to the fine dining, local-food restaurant in their neighborhood. Friends appreciated the theater tickets we bought them. And unlike those unwanted trinkets one sometimes buys for the “person who has everything,” our sustainable gifts, we felt, actually improved the recipients’ lives.
Still, my wife, Michelle, worried very much that it would be hard for Isabella if all the cousins had presents to open, but she didn’t. Try saying, “The research says you’ll be happier with less,” to a three-year-old. So Isabella’s Aunt Maureen contributed toys that her children had outgrown, and we wrapped them for Isabella.
When present-opening time came, Isabella didn’t care whether the present she was opening was for her or not. She didn’t even want the presents. She just wanted to open them. She didn’t want something to have later. She wanted to participate now. And when her Uncle Joe started playing the piano and singing, she got bored with the present opening anyway and went to sit with him on the piano bench.
Much to our surprise, she didn’t even want to take her cousins’ old toys home when the Christmas vacation was over. She’d already had her presents. What was important to her was what turned out to be important to us: the singing, the charades, the laughter, the time spent with family, and of course, the celebration.




49 Comments so far
Show AllThis article reminded me of New Years Eve in Times Square.
40 tons of trash created in what 3 hours? 3 tons of confetti in 2 minutes!
The "American Lifestyle" is far beyond absurd at this point.
Beautiful.
Christmas is nothing but an over-commercialized distraction designed to further seduce a sucker audience into drowning themselves into debt.
Xmas keeps our consumer culture alive.
Dysfunctional parents trying to buy their children's love, generation after generation., but the emptiness remains.
Yo got that right. You know what my family has decided to do for Xmas dinner this year. I get to cook my family famous lasagna. I'm looking forward to all the complements. A pat on the back, big hug and a thank you, what more than that can you ask for?
Rickster
My wife and I have been opting out of X-mas for years, and LOVE it! If we really need some commercial piece of crap we buy it ourselves.
And what is this "Black Friday" crap anyways?? Another lame attempt to get people shopping for shit they dont need.
"The only means of strengthening one's intellect is to make up one's mind about nothing, to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts." - John Keats
"And what is this "Black Friday" crap anyways?"
It's the day when retailers get out of debt (red) and enjoy profit (black) - accountants traditionally used red ink to represent loss, and black ink to represent gain. The Xmas season literally keeps our consumer culture alive, and Black Friday is no coincidence.
"It's the day when retailers get out of debt (red) and enjoy profit (black)"
You know if they can't get out of debt till the day after Thanksgiving they probably ought to get out of business. The reason they can't get out of debt is their paying the boss too much.
Rickster
"It's the day when retailers get out of debt (red) and enjoy profit (black) "
Not true. Profit is simply the difference between revenue and expences and is unrelated to debt, except to the extent that servicing debt, if it any exists, is an expence like any other. Operating at a loss may in fact have nothing to do with debt, and could be made possible by funds owned by the proprietor of the business free and clear.
Gifts? I just hope I can mail my Christmas cards before the Grinch raises the postage rates, again.
I'm just going to send e-cards. Much quicker and cheaper, plus less wasteful of paper.
Yeah, why blow postage and kill trees. I have been doing a mass email for the past 10 years. It's great, one letter, one 80 person email list, one mouse click and I am done!
The over-commercialization of Christmas is why I find Thanksgiving to be a much nicer holiday; a relaxing time spent with family and friends having a nice dinner and a bunch of us going to a good movie afterwards.
I tell my family and friends to please not buy Christmas presents for me. I put lights in the window to celebrate Winter Solstice and the New Year, and that's it. Once in awhile I put up an artificial Christmas tree just because I like cheerful, beautiful objects.
"I tell my family and friends to please not buy Christmas presents for me."
I do too, and my friends respect my wishes. They also understand that they will not be receiving store bought gifts from me (I did loose a "friend" some years back who did not appreciate my homemade card that I made out of dried flowers that I picked the previous summer - she had bought me a prepackaged gift basket from The Body Shop). My family on the other hand simply does not get it. Every year I tell them I do not want presents, and I will not be buying them presents. I even wait to come over until present unwrapping is finished. And every year, I show up with some homemade food dish, and I am given expensive gifts to unwrap (which is so awkward with everyone staring at me) and then everyone frowns when they don't get something from me to unwrap in return. I am meant to feel guilty, but I do not. Last year I got so fed up, I pulled my Dad aside and told him if this was going to continue I won't be coming to anymore Xmas celebrations. "But we just want you to feel included" he said. "Included into the notion that I have to buy people things or else I look like Uncle Scrooge?" I replied.
Ah! Someone else who has the same experience with their family! Mine just doesn't get it either. And you'd think i would have an easier time with this, since I am single and live in an entirely different state. Alas, they still insist.
I am convinced it is some sort of neurosis.
In what may be a portent of things to come, our new refrigerator caught fire the day before Thanksgiving while we were out of the house but fortunately didn't burn the place down and kill our two dogs. All the food was ruined and we had to cruise the area looking for a restaurant to have Thanksgiving dinner at. I believe this is the Curse of George Wanker Bush. Or maybe it's Obama.
Mordechai, wow.....sorry about the fire. I guess you could give thanks that it wasn't any worse. ;)
Three years ago my heating element went out in my oven while baking pies late in the day. All the appliance/supply stores were already closed for Thanksgiving the next day. The next morning I got a call from a man who owned a supply store, one of them run down looking ones that you would think nobody buys from. He had heard from a friend of a friend who was a friend of a friend of mine. I'm serious. Within an hour I had a new element and he refused to take money from me. Guess where I do my business at now?
Later when I finally saved enough money I bought a new cook stove from him. I found out he had the cheapest prices in town and handled the kind everybody needs to buy. It absolutely had no bells or whistles not even a timer and is the best cook stove I've ever bought.
Rickster
I don't like Thanksgiving much. I see it as a day of gluttony. We overeat and over drink and say it's all about family. Truth is, families should be spending quality time together throughout the year, if it means so much to them.
As a vegetarian and animal rights activist... Well, I'm sure you "get" why I find this day to be a sad one...
I hear ya.....I'm also a vegetarian and just skip the turkey. It does seem kind of selfish to have such a feast when there are hungry people in the world. I think it would be a nice gesture to send money to relief organizations or to a poverty-stricken Indian reservation in our own country in the same amount that is spent for our Thanksgiving dinner. With everyone so busy working our family doesn't have many get-togethers, so it's a nice day for us.
Sioux Rose
Greenis: Great suggestion!
"As a vegetarian and animal rights activist... Well, I'm sure you "get" why I find this day to be a sad one.."
No I don't. I admit I would rather have a free range baked chicken or grass fed beef over turkey though. I smoked a small brisket once for thanksgiving along with the turkey. Didn't have any brisket left over.
Rickster
"I admit I would rather have a free range baked chicken or grass fed beef over turkey though."
Thanks for understanding the difference between grass fed and typical corn-fed meat. I swear. Sometimes, vegetarians and vegans can sometimes go wacky when they complain about meat eaters contributing to global warming when in fact, most veggie burgers and peanut butter jelly sandwiches suck up more fossil fuels and contribute to more global warming.
P.S.: For the most part I am vegetarian but will eat meat occasionally.
Grass fed beef is catching on. So is getting locally grown and butchered livestock. Free range chickens is really coming on fast. If haven't ever eaten a free range egg you've haven't eaten a good egg. Brown eggs are better and healthier too.
Rickster
I need more info on the eggs part. I'm starting to come across eggs where the label says cage-free and Omega 3 but I don't know if that's what you are referring to.
You ever tried a home made peanut butter home canned jelly home baked bread sandwich before. No artificial coloring or flavoring at all.
Eat more brown sugar. ;>)
Rickster
Even better, stevia. If it weren't for big government, stevia wouldn't have been shackled to "dietary supplement". It was initially ban and them partially uplifted.
Some friends of mine who are in the green house business grow the plants for sell. We don't care much for the taste but we do generally sell all we grow. I work for them part time. Well we trade labor really.
Rickster
"We overeat and over drink and say it's all about family. Truth is, families should be spending quality time together throughout the year, if it means so much to them."
Correct.
"As a vegetarian and animal rights activist... Well, I'm sure you "get" why I find this day to be a sad one..."
Now that's pushing it too far.
I am a vegetarian also but still enjoy Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving does not have to mean turkey or gluttony. I ate tofu cutlets and lots of vegetables.
"a bunch of us going to a good movie afterwards."
Upu can afford to go to movies, lucky you.
Rickster
Sioux Rose
Well, I felt like a modern anthropologist today, venturing into a South Florida Mall. The last time I attempted entry was a black Friday 2 years ago, when there having been a shooting, the ONE store I wanted to buy on-sale sheets at, had police all over and the upstairs (where the sheets were) cordonned off! I entered today, (still for sheets!) and was very surprised how robust this mall was, filled with families of all racial hues. I noticed the redundancy, and by that I mean, how many different stores selling more or less similar clothing. If the NONSENSE about fashion was not ingrained, clothes would be very usable from year to year without any new feeding frenzy to satisfy the abstraction of what's
"in." And it's largely the same with electronics. As soon as you buy something (and Goddess knows I can barely operate most technology as it is) it's obsolete, forcing the next generation of purchases.
When I realize the extent of this bonfire of the fiscal vanities, it seems to me a recession is a good thing. It's time we enjoyed WHAT WE HAVE. I wore a dress to dinner last night that happened to have been a designer dress, fit me like a glove, and I spent a whopping $4 for it at a local consignment shop, even with shoes to match *(probably never worn) for $5. When we shop for recylced items at least nothing new is being added to production lines or land fills. This nation is literally grown fat on all it has, and still appreciates so little. I do NOT wish poverty or hunger on anyone, but a little reduction of calories in the form of consumer restraint is long past overdue, as our waistlines and credit card debt attests.
I have not given a Christmas present in ten years--nor received one except to avoid hurting a child's feelings.
Nietzsche, you are my hero. I have tried this with my family, and they don't like it one bit! And I must confess . . . I have given up the fight to bow to their wishes and participate in the whole thing. They were quite offended when I talked about this for my birthdays and Christmas and even suggested there was something psychologically wrong with me. Perhaps it is time I press the issue once again.
I don't think it has to be all or nothing. I generally buy about a hundred bucks worth of used books for friends and family and sometimes make a handmade card and they like that just fine. Nothing wrong with giving gifts IMO if that's your tradition, it's all the overindulgence in unsustainably produced Chinese crap from the mall that produces stress, ecological ruin, and the outsourcing of American jobs to boot IMO.
IMO it's all about re-localizing, being more sustainable, and caring for the earth and her people, there is no reason that has to be a hairshirt experience of no gift giving and making it a depravation means it's less likely we will adapt a more sustainable lifestyle as a society. Which are your relatives more likely to adapt NO Christmas gifts, or a joyous potluck with high quality used, gifts from your local co-op or craftsperson, and handmade gifts? Nothing wrong with a big joyous potluck even the most sustainable native cultures had those. And ironically for "conservatives" celebrating Christmas in this way is far more "traditional" than commercial Christmas.
I agree. I think it is somewhat sanctimonious to say to the relatives that you do not want presents or will not bring presents. The point is to scale down, buy consignment or second hand or buy only 1 gift vs. 5-10 or perhaps instead of a gift donate to the receiver's favorite charity. I get my daughter's presents from freecycle or second hand places and it works fine. I spent far less money and she gets mostly what she likes.
Like many parents, when my kids were little and spent more time playing with the boxes toys came in that with the toys, I told my three-year-old that "next Christmas, I'm just going to get you boxes." And I did. From big ones down to small ones that would all fit together, and be a good size for my son. Then I put a big green ribbon around one of the large ones, with a tag "To Johnny." I'd also gotten him a large box of crayons because he was showing an avid interest in my art supplies.
He loved those boxes and had them strung out from the living room down the hall, and with the crayons created a train filled with people. There was the the engineer waving out the window, windows filled with passengers, and finally the conductor, holding his lantern, standing on the platform of the caboose. He was very talented then, and still is.
For months he played with his box train until it was worn out and mostly flat, and he was devastated when they finally had to go. The few other present I'd bought for him were forgotten completely.
"I'm just going to get you boxes."
When I was a kid back in the sixties my dad would bring us refrigerators boxes home to play with. They would last a month or two outside and we had a blast with them.
Rickster
It's really too bad that "imagination" has been lost.
Sioux Rose
WILMOOR: When my grandson first learned to sit up at about 4-6 months old, I took an old (clean) box and sat him in it with this unusual toy my daughter found 2nd hand... it was an alien, and you squeezed it and it made this strange musical sound and other almost "hoots." I put the toy in the box with my grandson and pushed it every which way around the room and he adored that ride. My daughter just saw it as her kooky Mother at it again... but I wanted to keep the box and the alien. That was in San Juan; but when she moved to Florida 2 years ago, bye bye box AND alien! Dang! 'Cause he has a little sister now (8 months old) who'd probably love the ride, too.
I'm reminded of of an orange crate roped to sled that my father dragged skating us up and down the frozen lake - breathtakingly fast. A thread spool, rubberband and twig made a wind-up giggity gig that entertained. A washing machine carton left outside that a field mouse nested her newborns in under a mulberry tree. Cutting paths in the woods and tending the trails. Creativity!!!
My wife and I starting making presents last yr. She was out of work recovering from surgery and I was unemployed. With little or no income we set about hand making gifts for family and friends. We made among other things sea glass jewelry and hand knitted scarfs, hats and sweaters. Take it from one who knows people greatly appreciate hand crafted gifts, especially when they know the person giving the gift also made it. Back in the day before the Industrial age this was how X-mas was celebrated. Most people didn't have the $$ to buy presents then anyway. Of course if we all starting following this tradition it would probably destroy our economy and send China back into the dark ages. So keep buying folks, as they say, shop till u drop!!
Dave Korten "The Great Turning" - a brief article - old 2006 - but still a great read
http://www.yesmagazine.org/article.asp?ID=1463
My father despised Xmass- fathers day etc... One day a year???
We all wrote our names and threw them into his hat. Whoever's name was drawn - you could not spend more than $5 and had to write at least a 5 line poem. Chestnuts dessert etc. and and the 'draws' on xmass eve.
My partner and I are fortunate that we now live in southern Spain where there is a whole different set of values decidedly less materialistic than those we experienced in the US. Here the towns and cities put up amazing light displays with lots of Christmas flowers along the streets and plazas. The season is a time for family and friends to spend time together.
Christmas eve is a big time for gatherings and the big meal is not eaten until after midnight with the whole family/friends staying up all night socializing and eating.
January 6th is the day of the Three Kings' parade with the 3 Wise Men processing through the streets of every town and city throwing candy to all the children and that is the day that children awaken to see what gift the Wise Men have left for them overnight. Not Santa Claus, despite the multi-national chains efforts to make him the center of attention and the push to make people buy more (at least so far).
In the homes and in most stores the central decoration is the Nativity Scene and huge ones are on display in churches and city halls for all to visit and enjoy. It is a much more festive and spiritual time with little emphasis on gifts. We hope it can continue!
For ourselves, we do not give each other gifts but donate money to our favorite charities and find that more rewarding than getting gifts we do not need or want.
I had to chuckle when I read this piece - we've done the same thing in our families, no more mega shopping for massive amounts of presents anymore. The only people we buy gifts for are the children and the Moms and Dads - that is it. We have become the retailers nightmare. :). It is unbelievable how much more peaceful the Christmas season and the day itself have become for us. No fuss or muss, just downright pleasant! We should have done this decades ago....
Given the tragedy that happened at a WalMart store against an employee due to consumers stampeding to rush in, I don't expect the Christmas shopping mania to end. The only way we will have a Christmas without presents is if we are in a Great Depression like the 1930s when people actually united and buying dropped.
> She didn’t even want the presents. She just wanted to open them.
Are you familiar with Japanese gift-giving customs? The presents are often of little value - but the wrapping is exquisite: origami and suchlike.
http://www.users.bigpond.com/pmurray
http://www.paulmurray.id.au/ageofworms
With my foster sister over from Honolulu, I had to choose a restaurant, no easy task for a vegan. Luckily, one of Maui's best chefs, who knows how to serve fruit and vegetables, just opened a new one. All the way over, she was anticipating eating turkey, but the buffet(s) were so excellent that she didn't even go to the main one, which had the turkey as well as prime rib!
n.b. We bought nothing all weekend (except movie and concert tix)and mostly enjoyed each other's company.