When I read the lists of loot people scored for Christmas, I'm astonished at the sheer quantity and price of items received. People are getting expensive computers, games, books, clothing, and jewellery. I can't imagine ever receiving half that much stuff. And when I spend time with my in-laws, I'm equally astonished at how much shopping they do. Their home is filled with Martha Stewart magazines and Martha Stewart-style décor, expensive toys for the granddaughters, brochures for the new car they're planning on buying, and box upon box of candy. f00's mother took me to a gift boutique she habituates. She saw some pretty cardboard gift boxes and was going to buy some, but I told her that dollar stores sell boxes just as nice for much less. Any time I'd pick something up to admire, she'd say, "I'll buy it for you!" I wouldn't let her do it, though. Although I thought the hot chocolate-scented candles were neat, I have no need of them. But she bought a bunch of snowman-motif bibelots and then we left.
My sister is the same way, except that she makes less money. But she's always buying stuff: DVDs, video tapes, computer games, romance books, remote controlled cars, etc.
When I was a little girl, one of my absolute favourite things to do was go shopping with my mother and grandmother. We'd go to the K-Mart and look for sales. A direct quotation from my early years is this: "Mommy! Mommy! I don't know what it is, but it's on sale! Let's get one!"
Now I hate the mall. But while I can look with distaste at the extreme importance placed upon consumerism by friends and family, there's also an undeniable kernel of envy. Why didn't I get a new computer for Christmas? How come I didn't get any of the books on my wish list?
I may never rise above my gimme-gimme roots. Being too poor to buy stuff for myself can make me pretend to be saintlike, though. Heh....
My sister is the same way, except that she makes less money. But she's always buying stuff: DVDs, video tapes, computer games, romance books, remote controlled cars, etc.
When I was a little girl, one of my absolute favourite things to do was go shopping with my mother and grandmother. We'd go to the K-Mart and look for sales. A direct quotation from my early years is this: "Mommy! Mommy! I don't know what it is, but it's on sale! Let's get one!"
Now I hate the mall. But while I can look with distaste at the extreme importance placed upon consumerism by friends and family, there's also an undeniable kernel of envy. Why didn't I get a new computer for Christmas? How come I didn't get any of the books on my wish list?
I may never rise above my gimme-gimme roots. Being too poor to buy stuff for myself can make me pretend to be saintlike, though. Heh....
no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 09:18 am (UTC)From:Now that I could, theoretically, afford some Christmas extravagance, I still avoid it. Decorating was my largest expense this year (mostly owing to the fact that my ex had all the ornaments and most of the lights!) and I actually felt guilty cashing the $100 check my mother sent me. The only other gift I received was a pair of ornaments for next year's tree, which in my opinion is a fine gift.
I can relate to the touch of envy, though. I'd feel terribly guilty receiving the kind and amount of gifts some of my friends rake in...but I probably wouldn't refuse them! :)
no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 12:35 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 12:51 pm (UTC)From:Plus I see us running about house to house on Christmas day. (Our various parents/siblings don't live sufficiently far enough to *require* spearate days, but are not sufficiently friendly or close to plop them all in one house, nor are they sufficiently mellow yet to be good about taking time between visits, but I'm working on it). There's barely time to open things and share meals, then off to the next place, no time to browse each others' books or try the other's art or play in the snow (and this year, we got some five feet falling in the 10 days before Christmas, yargh, doesn't my back know it...). Fewer presents would help (and be healthy for us! *@@#&^&S() storage unit industry...).
Plot: Be even better about a skinny budget next year. (Involves taking more time off work in advance and making odds'n'happy ends.) Utterly refuse to go to multiple relatives on Christmas Day. Celebrate the people, dammit, not the stuff.
no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 01:48 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 01:52 pm (UTC)From:Is Veterans' Day a big consumer holiday in the States? The only thing people buy here are poppies from veterans and maybe a poppy cross to place on a cenotaph.
no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 01:56 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 01:58 pm (UTC)From:Veterans' Day is a big consumer holiday in the sense that there are countless sales, which mostly serve to jump-start the Christmas season shopping, really.
Columbus Day and Presidents' Day are similar in that regard. Memorial Day and Labor Day serve to get people buying summer and fall wardrobes and outdoorsy stuff.
Basically any day that people aren't working, and where there's no traditional gift-giving, has been turned into an excuse to shop the sales.
It's all a huge scam, I say. But it does keep the economy humming along (usually).
no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 02:00 pm (UTC)From:Next year, it should be a bit better. We're planning on having a variety show for everyone's enjoyment. I'll dance, one of the cousins will do acrobatics, another will juggle, another will tapdance, and another shall play guitar/accordian. It could be quite fun!
no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 02:06 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 02:07 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 02:08 pm (UTC)From:*Most JWs do celebrate wedding anniversaries, although it's officially looked down upon, somewhat. Celebrating birthdays are considered an act that will make God hate you and the higher-up JWs kick you out of the religion, though.
no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 02:12 pm (UTC)From:Pursuant to my other, equally uninformed comments below, then, I presume you left the JW's in 1991? And yet, I still fail to see the connection to giving up TV...
no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 02:12 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 02:14 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 02:22 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2003-12-29 07:45 pm (UTC)From:My mother recently admitted she just learned how much more than most she did for Christmas, referring to a survey showing that Atlantic Canadians (us welfare types) spend more on the holiday than anywhere else in Canada. She read the number they quoted as average and realised she was well over that.
It's something that, once you start, you can't really stop. I mean, you could...but what parent is going to want to go "Sorry, this year Santa's gonna bring less."
I'm kinda surprised I'm still getting PS2s actually. It might be because they're not paying for my groceries anymore.
no subject
Date: 2003-12-30 04:44 am (UTC)From:I think it happens more often than you suspect, and not just with the newly-baptized JW families.
no subject
Date: 2003-12-30 08:06 am (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2003-12-30 08:38 am (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2003-12-30 10:05 am (UTC)From:And you've got to admit that the AdBusters crowd are in the distinct minority.
no subject
Date: 2003-12-30 10:17 am (UTC)From: