When
the peace, joy, and togetherness of the holidays are squelched by a rush
to "shop till you drop," something has gone wrong. For those in this
bind, I found some motivating statistics and valuable suggestions on the
internet, and added a couple ideas of my own. I hope this helps!
Credit
card debt piles up each December during our annual shopping spree, and
the proportion of Christmas spending that is paid with plastic has
steadily increased. Debt counselors are very busy in January and
February when the bills arrive. By 1996, the average American household
had credit card debt of $4800, more than twice the amount of 1991.
There were 376 million Visa and MasterCards floating around, up 80% from
'91. These figures are undoubtedly higher now.
Debt
can enslave us, limiting future options and our ability to give to others.
How can we participate in the spirit of giving now, without mortgaging
the future? I found some helpful ideas from members of the Consumer
Credit Counseling Service, an association of counselors who help people
organize their finances and escape from debt. They say we should
give ourselves a break if we've been straining to do everything "right"
for Christmas. Consider the aspects of Christmas that are truly important,
that bring peace and joy. Write them down, then review your holiday
plans and eliminate time consuming or expensive things that don't
express these central values. Make a list of people you plan to buy
for and consider who you can acknowledge or give to in other ways.
For each person on the list, set a limit on how much you'll spend.
Use cash--not credit cards--to buy holiday gifts. This makes
the cost much more real. If you must use plastic, use just
one card and plan to pay off all the holiday charges within three months.
It can take over 20 years to retire $1900 of credit card debt with
the minimum monthly payments.
Christmas
is a time for reaffirming and strengthening ties with family and loved
ones; for many it has deep spiritual significance. We may need to
dust off some old traditions, or create new traditions to replace
excessive gift-giving. Some might like dinner by candlelight during
the holidays. Others may enjoy reading out loud from spiritual or
inspirational works. We can listen to Christmas music and cook, bake,
or work together making original holiday cards and decorations. We
can develop and rehearse creative family plays or presentations, to be
"performed" for friends or relatives. We can bundle up for the cold
and take special walks in nature together. Almost anything we do,
especially if we do it together with loved ones, can become a deeply
meaningful tradition. Each year, my dad's three sisters sing a song
called "Bless This House" at our family gathering; it always sends shivers
up my spine. I remember this much more than the presents I may have
received over the years.
I grew
up absorbing television ads, and as a child I thought I wanted as much
"stuff" as possible, but I can barely remember now what
these things were. Besides receiving Dr. Seuss' The Sneetches
at the family gathering in 1966, only one set of Christmas presents really
stands out: in about 1970 (I was 13), there on Christmas morning
were 4 shiny new Schwinn Varsity 10-Speeds in the living room, all different
colors, one each for me, my brother, my mom, and my dad. I think
there were no other presents that year because this was a BIG DEAL.
I remember because it was so dramatic, and because in subsequent years
we all rode these bikes a lot, many times together, and it was a real bond
to start out with them as a family. I rode mine for thousands of
miles; it was my main transportation for years. The thing was utterly
indestructible. I was crushed when it was stolen in 1984.
So for
physical gifts, quality items of lasting value can indeed touch someone.
You can also touch someone with an offer to help them
cook or clean house. You can give a "voucher" for a week's worth
of dishwashing, a wax job on the car, an evening of babysitting, breakfast
in bed, an hour's massage, help with preparing tax returns, or any other
unique service you can provide. You can give an evening out to experience
some of our fantastic local live music or theater. You can give someone
a gift membership in an organization they like. Instead of buying
anything, you can write a letter to a person listing 10 things you love,
admire, appreciate, or respect about them. Your gift of time and
thoughtfulness may be remembered long beyond a hundred knick-knacks collecting
dust in their closet.
Some
of these gifts may take time, but time can be freed from cancelled shopping
chores and from the extra hours we'd have to work to pay for the shopping.
We can remind ourselves that often what people most need is not more "stuff,"
but rather more forgiveness, love, communication, and fun.
These
are just a few ideas; many more could be added. The important thing
is to clarify for ourselves what are the most important parts of Christmas,
and to spend our time and energy in harmony with those values. Talking
with our friends and loved ones and developing creative solutions together
is the best way to find the peace and joy we seek and deserve.
The
Simple Living Network has a lot of great material, including information
on simplifying the holidays. I think the site is set-up in a cumbersome,
hard-to-navigate way, but it's worth looking around. They have extensive
material on the holidays: click community services>links>miscellaneous>A
Simple Holiday For You.
Here is A
Simple Christmas Message, a short article with themes similar to the
above.
Here's an
Australian group focusing on Christmas debt in their country. They
have an article called "From
Jingle Bells to Juggling Bills."
Saving
Yourself from Christmas Debt is another good short article.
Credit
Card Customers Crunched: yet another article on this topic.
Credit
Card Math is free software, downloadable here. The author says:
"it goes behind the scenes and reveals the true hidden costs associated
with credit card debt. It will give you the knowledge you need to get yourself
out of debt fast, save money and beat credit card issuers at their own
game." I haven't used this software and can't vouch for it, but it
sounds interesting.
Here's something
on the Consumer Credit
Counseling Service. When I did a search for this, I came up with
many listings; things like CCCS of greater Atlanta, CCCS of the Seattle
area, CCCS of Lubbock, Texas, etc. It looked like many of these sites
had lots of great information. I did not find a large national overarching
site for this organization, though one may exist.