Saturday, November 27, 2010

Deck the Halls With....Lots of Savings!

For many of us, Christmas can be a very stressful time of year.  For some it's family stress, for others it's financial stress, and for the unluckiest of us, it's both. 

Christmas as a kid was always great - presents abound, lots of food, and a chance to see grandmas, grandpas, cousins, etc.  Boy how that changes when you're an adult, especially if you have kids of your own.  It took Jill and I several years before our attitude and philosophy about Christmas began to change.  First and foremost for us, we needed to refocus Christmas as the time to celebrate and acknowledge the birth of Christ and away from gifts, reindeer, and elves.  When we were intentional with our children about why we celebrate Christmas, it made our experience much more enjoyable.

Second, we didn't want money to be a reason to add stress to this season.  We decided to get creative.  I'll state upfront that, while we've implemented all of these ideas at some point, we don't necessarily do them all at once.  With that said, here are my top 3 best ideas to help make the holiday season less stressful and less expensive.

1) Re-think those Christmas cards.  This will be a highly controversial idea, I know, but worthy of serious consideration.  While spending evening after evening tediously addressing and licking envelopes is as much a tradition as pumpkin pie at Thanksgiving, it's a tradition that you can do without.  We certainly don't mind receiving cards and notes, but if you quizzed me on who sent us a card last year, I would have no idea.  If you quizzed me on who didn't send us a card, I also would have no idea.  Would you?  There are enough stressful things going on this time of year.  Not sending our cards can not only save you $100 or more, but also free up a lot of extra time during this busy season.

2) Pay for all your gifts - without spending a dime.  For the second straight year, we are not spending a dime of our income on gifts.  We have raised more than enough money by selling things on Craigslist to cover all of our gift purchases.  This idea could have a whole post dedicated to itself, but for now, I'll just say that it's a great opportunity to clean out your storage room from things you don't need or will never use, and NEVER forget that people will buy anything, and I mean anything.  While we've been successful selling enough to cover our expenses the last two years, I'm not sure the idea would work every year.  However, once every two or three years would be well worth it.

3) One gift at a time.  One of the ways we've tried to simplify Christmas is by taking focus away from the quantity of gifts and put more focus on the quality of thoughtfulness of them.  We have a "one gift" policy that extends to not just us as parents, but also to grandparents, aunts/uncles, etc.  We've found that this eliminates what we call "The Gift Contest" - he who gives the most gifts wins type of mentality.  Buy less, stress less!

There are other smaller ideas as well, such as making your own wrapping paper instead of buying it.  Buy brown packaging paper and either decorate yourself with stamps, etc., or have your kids decorate however they choose.  Also little known is for $5 you can cut down your own Christmas tree anywhere in a National Forest.  Much cheaper that a tree lot, plus the adventure of hiking through the woods to find the perfect tree (Clark Griswold anyone?). 

Perhaps most importantly, what do you do to make Christmas less stressful or less costly?  I'd love to hear your ideas as well.  Please leave your comments for my benefit and the benefit of others.  


I'm completely new to blogs, but someone mentioned you can "follow" a blog.  If that's true, I encourage you to follow mine!  The next post I'm working on will likely be focused on setting realistic financial goals for next year, and reviewing some things that you may still want to consider before this year is out.  Here's to a great Christmas season!!

Until we meet again...

5 comments:

  1. Andy - all ideas are good of course, but I really liked the last one. In the past our kids have received far more gifts than they could realistically appreciate. I think it's overwhelming for them!

    And yes, RSS feeds make it easy to follow a blog, and many bloggers also add a Facebook link as you're probably aware. For using a reader, check out iGoogle as one option.

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  2. great ideas!
    If we had enough space to store extra stuff, I'd definitely sell things on craigslist. love that.

    when low on dough, i've gone to the $1 store for gifts. or to Michael's to make gifts for others. it's fun & gives the opp to be creative.

    great blog andy! keep it up! :)

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  3. I found last year that shopping online was far less stressful and less expensive than fighting the crowds.

    We are hoping to do something to reach out to a family in need this year. Hopefully so our kids can see how richly blessed we are. And also to give them a focus other than themselves.

    PS. Can I put in my resquest for a post on the college savings fund dilema?

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  4. Andy, you are a man after my own heart! Being good stewards of financial resources is paramount to a peaceful and fulfilling life, both at Christmas and throughout the year. I look forward to reading more of your gems!

    One thing I've done is create little traditions to keep me on track with gifting each year, like I send my godson an ornament each year rather than another toy or gadget. It doesn't add to HIS family's clutter, and each year he has little reminders of my love.

    And I also make almost all the gifts I give to the women in my life: mom, aunts, cousins, boyfriend's mom, etc. They love the funky scarves and handknit dish clothes I come up with, and again, they aren't just clutter.

    And good luck with this blogging thing, it can be a blessing and a curse.

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  5. Before kids, one of Bryan's seminary professors shared how her family had a rule of 3 gifts per child - to go along with the 3 gifts that Jesus received - gold, frankincense and myrrh. That family had those 3 broken down into something for fun, something to read and something to wear. We've had that tradition with our kids. Last night our church had a women's christmas dessert with a speaker who spoke on having a stress-free Christmas. She, too, shared the idea of 3 gifts but had them correspond like this (from the historic uses of these 3 things):

    gold gift - something precious = that ONE thing they really want
    frankincense - was burned when praying, etc = a gift that brings them closer to the Lord
    myrrh - was something they sprinkled on their bodies from head to toe = gift would be something they can put on their body

    Great ideas!

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