Try
these last minute tips for increasing your enjoyment and
decreasing your stress at Christmas.
1. Try opening the gifts a new way.
Open the gifts one by one as everyone watches and enjoys. This
gives you a chance to slow it down, appreciate it more, and teach
about giving and receiving. You can talk about the gift-giver and
memories.
2. Have a special time for you and your spouse/partner to exchange
gifts.
Amidst all the rush, take time to bond with your spouse or
partner. You're a couple and this is an important part of your
life. This is important for now, and important for later. When the
kids have left home, you’ll have a lasting tradition to enjoy
together. Have your special celebration and gift-exchanging
Christmas Eve after the children are in bed, or save them for late
Christmas Day when the kids are out playing, off with friends, or
in bed for a nap. Or get a sitter and go out for dinner Christmas
night and exchange your gifts then.
3. Can't get the kids to bed Christmas Eve? Try this.
Bundle them up and go out for a walk to enjoy the neighborhood
Christmas lights. Enjoyable, peaceful and good for winding down.
Also a chance to talk. And take the dog along!
4. Try something different, easier and more fun for the holiday
meal.
A buffet is a great idea. Gives everyone a chance to visit, get up
and move around. Little kids -- and some adults -- get tired of
all that sitting. You may find you eat less, as well.
5. Have a Treasure Hunt!
This works especially well for teenagers who often want money for
gifts, but just as well for smaller children. Make one special
gift the object of a treasure hunt. Make short rhyming clues going
from place to place in your home. Have the final gift somewhere
safe and hidden, like in the microwave or bottom oven. SAMPLE
CLUE: For this clue, look high and low. It's nestled beside the
shoveler of snow. (Beside the snow shovel.) Yes, they're corny,
but that's 90% of the fun!
6. How to present money as a gift?
Lots of people ask for, and give, money for presents. How can you
present it? (1) Put it in a festive or colored envelope and
clothespin it to the Christmas tree. (2) Gift wrap a series of
boxes going from small to large - ending with as big a box as you
can -- available at moving companies, storage places, or parcel
post stores. (3) Make it the final gift of a treasure hunt (4)
Stick it in the pocket of an item of clothing you give them (5)
Make a collage of things they'll likely use the money for. (6)
Lead them astray by wrapping it in a box from a toy, watch,
microwave, computer, etc. (7) Stuff it inside a Santa or snowman
piñata and let them take a whack at it.
7. Make your Christmas Eve dinner manageable and different.
(1) Bake pizza from scratch together as a family - grate the
cheese, cut up the tomatoes and onions, knead the dough, etc. (2)
Eat at card tables in front of the fireplace. Wrap sandwiches and
deviled eggs in foil with ribbon and place inside special
inexpensive Christmas stockings. Serve a light soup in Santa mugs.
(3) Order in Chinese - most Chinese restaurants are open Christmas
Eve. Have some festive paper goods to eat it on. (4) Have a
make-your-own pancake supper. Set out special ingredients for the
kids to add to their pancakes - Christmas colored sprinkles,
cranberries, chocolate chips, nuts. Serve with cranberry syrup!
8. Make gratitude a part of the ceremony.
Give each child old enough to write, a pad and pencil and make
sure after they open each gift, they write down what it was and
whom it was from. They can use this the next day to write their
thank you notes.
9. What to do about the after-Christmas letdown?
Most people experience a let-down after Christmas. Try one of
these pick-ups: (1) Have a "Look What I Got for Christmas" Party
for friends and neighbors; kids too. They can wear that new
sweater or watch! (2) Have a scrapbook evening where you assemble
the photos from the big day. (3) Have a New Year's Resolution
party. Lay out supplies for everyone to make a poster of their New
Year's Resolutions. Provide markers, glitter, glue, yarn,
magazines, computer printout graphics and such for pictures.
10. Going over the river and through the woods to Grandmother's
house?
Surveys say kids tire after 30 minutes in the car (train, plane or
boat!) Bring along some gifts they can open in the car and use --
books, tapes, headset, new tape or DC, a new toy. They also never
seem to tire of the “I see an A in Alamo” game. If you’re in town
or on the highway, use the words on billboards and store signs;
out in the country, real objects such as M is for Mailbox or T is
for Tree.

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