Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Holidays not merry for all

- tellme@washpost.com CAROLYN HAX Chat online with Carolyn at 11 a.m. each Friday at washington­post.com. Write to Tell Me About It in care of The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071; or email

While I’m away, readers give the advice.

On people who seem to shut down around holidays:

Many people have holiday depression. My husband had early memories of his parents screaming at each other. Until we talked this out, he had difficulty celebratin­g.

— Been There One December when I was in high school, our house burned down, my mother was already hospitaliz­ed, my father worked in a different city, and my grandmothe­r, who was burned in the fire, died a few days later.

As an adult I would become very depressed around Thanksgivi­ng and not know why until I talked it over with some friends. I realized I’d internaliz­ed all that pain and my body/mind recalled it like clockwork every year. Now I write myself a note in my new annual datebook to make preparatio­ns, as I know it’s coming, and I no longer endure the gray holidays as I used to.

— K. In the house I grew up in, holidays meant parents who would overindulg­e in alcohol and get very nasty in front of five children. Thanksgivi­ng was hardest for me as a young adult because those memories didn’t involve trees, music or gifts — just drunken parents going at it.

My first joyful Thanksgivi­ng was at age 27 when I was stationed in Europe with the Air Force and spent the holiday skiing in Switzerlan­d. I learned holidays can be fun without turkey and stuffing (or drunken parents).

— C. On taking the gaaaahhhh out of gift-giving:

It’s a gift. If you give someone something and expect something in return, then it isn’t giving — it’s a swap or trade. People give gifts because they want to make the other person happy. Expecting reciprocit­y is petty and dilutes the generosity of the giver.

In addition, the recipients are within their rights to do (practicall­y) anything with gifts they receive. If I gave someone an expensive, hand-carved teak diorama and they said, “Thanks, this will make great kindling for my next weenie roast!” I now know that: (1) They like hot dogs; (2) They have a barbecue or firepit; and (3) A good future gift might be some wax-dipped pinecones or a bundle of fatwood with a nice bow.

If people want to make a business transactio­n out of this, they should give gifts and consider the smile on the recipient’s face to be payment in full.

— De-commercial­ized On loved ones who deluge your kids with stuff on holidays, whether you want them to or not not not:

I would discuss with the kids the idea of moving the immediate family’s gift-giving to a time you all choose together. They might like having a different day with presents and it would be a way to step away [from the excess]. June 25 could work. In fact, a general discussion with kids about the problem and ways to deal with it could help.

— C. Ask for the gift of memories for your children. Have the relative pay for tickets for the whole family to do wonderful things like The Nutcracker at Christmas or a day at the zoo in the summer. A movie on a rainy Saturday or a visit to the Arboretum on a pretty day. These are all pricey, which helps the givers’ need to prove their love by spending, and the parents should have a lot fewer things to donate.

— K. A lot of you suggested going the experience-gift route. Some other useful examples: lessons (swimming, tennis, music, etc., all typically expensive); membership­s to museums; bookstore gift cards; family trips. And, charity: “Suggest [they] use the money to help an animal shelter or homeless shelter, with the kids accompanyi­ng to ‘jointly’ make the donations.”

— Carolyn Maybe the materially minded could deposit the money in college savings accounts? It would be a way for relatives to channel their love and financial means into the future. I’m 25, using money my grandmothe­r set aside for me at childhood holidays to pay for graduate school now; meanwhile, sadly, I’ve forgotten a lot of the toys & gifts she gave to me years ago. — H.

In my experience, shoppers gonna shop, but if your letter converts even one stuff-buyer into a 529-stuffer, you’re my hero. Maybe this is the trick:

My husband and I discussed the issue with my generously over-giving parents, and we came up with a wonderful solution. My parents would give the kids a small toy along with a check toward future education. As the kids got older the toy changed into a book or another age-appropriat­e item. The kids never missed the hordes of presents, and were most grateful when those college years began. — C.A.

 ?? Washington Post Writers Group/NICK GALIFIANAK­IS ??
Washington Post Writers Group/NICK GALIFIANAK­IS
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