Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

No thank-you notes? Fine, no more gifts then

- 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 tellme@washpost.com

DEAR CAROLYN: I went to your column specifical­ly to see if I am the only one hurt by not receiving thank yous for gifts sent. I see I am not.

I thought maybe it’s just an “older generation” expectatio­n. I don’t even mind a text or email … just something.

We give just a little card and present to young relatives to let them know we love them and are not going to forget they are part of the family.

I am so close to not sending those gifts anymore.

— C.

DEAR READER: I think that might be the best response.

But not for the reason you imply, the, “Okay, if you won’t thank me, then I won’t keep sending you gifts.”

After watching the collapse in gift- and- gratitude manners, and after reading years of distress mail from gift senders and recipients both, I’m thinking the larger issue is the diminishin­g relevance of gifts for the emotional purpose we generally intend.

You say you want these kids to know you love and include them. Wonderful intentions. They sent me back into memories of prehistori­c times when I was the child receiving gifts from relatives. Gifts from this and that relative were often equivalent, but I never took them as such. If I felt close to the giver otherwise, then I felt the same love and inclusion. If I felt like a to-do list item for the giver otherwise, then I still did after the gift. (Won’t lie, still loved the cash and wrote thank-you notes for it.) So the love and inclusion were cultivated through year-round effort, not annual gifts. I felt close to the ones who talked to me, listened to me, prepared favorite foods for me, made time for me.

Meanwhile, this was all proving true before the great cheap stuff revolution — when a decent sweater cost a bit and wasn’t $9.99 at TJMaxx.

Disclaimer: Anyone meeting a legitimate need is an angel, and where there is need, it is often acute. Please let nothing I say here affect the giving to people who struggle to meet their own needs.

But anyone buying gifts as emotional outreach is using steeply devalued currency. Another sweater/toy/ tchotchke! Thanks?

Which doesn’t excuse the death of polite thank-yous — I will defend and urge and send them to my last breath — but may help explain it.

This is clear from the anguish I hear from the recipients’ side. Anything but the most useful, imaginativ­e, sustainabl­e or apt gift, small or large, risks incurring an obligation on the recipient. To find a use or place for it, to regift or dispose of it responsibl­y, to show somewhat unfelt gratitude for it, to tamp down the guilt of both costing someone money and being a helpless party to natural resource depletion. Call these recipients killjoys or ingrates or both, but you can’t say they’re wrong.

Thus my advice: Think carefully about what you want these gifts to say to the children in your family; try to think of a different, more personal, non-holiday-stuffpegge­d way of saying whatever it is; adopt that way.

This is more work. I know. (I’ll leave it to the commentari­at to explore the endless possibilit­ies.) It’s work I don’t always rally to do myself — which, to help prove my point, is a failing I can’t just paper over with gifts.

So sustained effort is the only substitute that makes sense to me for a dated gift ritual that leaves you and others feeling emptier and less connected than you did before you shopped. Why just stop the gifts when you can mindfully start something more?

 ?? (Washington Post Writers Group/Nick Galifianak­is) ??
(Washington Post Writers Group/Nick Galifianak­is)
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