Christmas
shopping on Thanksgiving weekend usually goes its merry way without me.
What I do on the day after Thanksgiving is go back to work. Many
businesses have six holidays, and the Friday following Thanksgiving isn't
one of them. Christmas and New Year's Day come soon, so I don't mind. One
advantage is that right after Thanksgiving most offices are less crowded
and more relaxed than stores.
This year,
however, I did join the Christmas shoppers briefly on the big weekend. It
was an afterthought, and I waited until Saturday night. It wasn't that I
made a special trip to a special shopping place. It's just that I had a
list of Christmas suggestions along on my usual weekend stops.
That was
thanks to my mom, but the gift suggestions weren’t for her. She'd given
me a few ideas for herself earlier. She likes to get things done ahead of
time. After Thanksgiving dinner, for example, she showed me boxes of
Christmas cookies stacked up in the freezer and her draft of a Christmas
letter waiting in the computer.
Besides
being early, she's good at asking questions, so she'd been working on that
before I arrived for Thanksgiving. She had notes on my brother's gift
suggestions and specifications all lined up for the next step, which is my
part. I act as a purchasing agent for some items. Then she writes me a
check for the things I buy for her to give to someone else.
In this
case, most of the Christmas suggestions led to the men's clothing
department. I seldom set foot on the male side of the aisle and felt
distinctly out of place looking around in that area. I didn't know exactly
where to find even such standard items such as pajamas, gloves and socks.
Last year,
gift ideas for the same person included gender-neutral merchandise such as
towels. That department felt more like home to me.
Undoubtedly
many Christmas shoppers, as well as people just shopping for their own
needs, are looking for gloves, warm pajamas and flannel shirts at this
time of year. Those items were close to the main aisle. The socks were
nearby. The long underwear was there, too, but it was heavy on polyester
— 40 percent, in fact — and cotton was a fundamental requirement for
all the clothing on the list. Conveniently, the suggested price total was
about right without the long underwear.
Black was
specified for the gloves and socks, so the only big decisions I had to
make were color choices for pajamas and shirts. I chose pajamas similar to
the person's car color. Since they're worn primarily with eyes closed, I
figured it wouldn't matter too much anyway. For shirts, the notes provided
guidance by mentioning that the person usually wears black or navy slacks.
Keeping that in mind, I picked what I liked, since the prospective wearer
wasn't there to indicate a preference.
Pleased to
have the shopping list taken care of so quickly, I remembered that there
had been a separate request earlier. "The one store that had had the
humidifier filter the last few years didn't have it this year," the
letter said.
With the
part number and size written down, I tried one store the next afternoon
and left with a successful purchase within minutes. What was hard for
someone in the Chicago area to find was no problem in Lincoln.
Christmas
shopping should always go so well.
If
prearranged gift suggestions like that appear to eliminate the element of
surprise, creative packaging can help, and with lists handled early
enough, there's time for people to forget what they suggested. I think the
chances of gift satisfaction are higher and the need for returning
purchases is lower when desires are spelled out at the beginning. Also, no
rule says the givers can't select other presents.
If it sounds
as though it would be just as well to skip family exchanges of practical
gifts and let everyone buy for their own needs, I don't agree. Trading
shopping lists with someone else is an interesting challenge. More than
that, it’s a worthwhile process. I come to that conclusion again
whenever I make an unaccustomed, atypical purchase because of a gift
suggestion. Gift shopping won’t change the world into an unselfish
place, but it’s one way to make us think of what other people like and
want, to widen our interests, even to find out what's on the other side of
the aisle.
And if humidifier filters don't
bring a sparkle to your eyes, it could be that the air in your home is too
dry.