These Americans won’t give any gifts over the holidays — and they love it

Via Marketwatch

Image result for no gift christmas

More than 1 in 10 gift givers say they’d like to boycott gift giving altogether

Forty-eight-year old Michelle Morton’s Christmas celebration probably doesn’t look like yours — but you might wish it did.

That’s because, for the past few years, the Raleigh, N.C., resident and her sisters and husband have instituted a no-gift policy for the holidays. “It was stressful and expensive getting all those gifts, when none of us really needed any of it,” she explains. “In order to stop the madness, our Christmas became about being able to spend time with family.”

Now, rather than trading gifts or gift cards (Morton says they tried the gift-card exchange one year and realized “all we were doing was exchanging money”), they all travel to Morton’s parents’ house in upstate New York to spend time together. “We will keep doing it this way,” she says. “Our Christmas has become more meaningful,” she says.

The no-gifts or very-limited-gifts holiday — while certainly not for everyone — is popular with a small group of Americans. Roughly two million households have dropped out of holiday gift spending altogether, the 2014 Survey of Affluence and Wealth from Time Inc. and YouGov revealed (this data was not measured this year). That means that nearly 9% of American families will not participate in holiday gift-giving.

What’s more, many more want to. Data released Monday from personal finance site Bankrate.com reveals that an estimated 31 million Americans (13% of gift-givers) are willing to boycott gift giving altogether.

There are many reasons Americans just say no to holiday gifting, including that they don’t celebrate the holidays or have no one to give to. But for many, the holiday tab — the average American will spend $637.67 on gifts this holiday season, according to the National Retail Federation — has gotten to be too much (nearly one in four Americans say that the holidays are too expensive, according to a Pew Research Center poll).

That was the case for 42-year-old Cherie Lowe of Greenwood, Ind. In 2008, Lowe and her husband “were a wreck of debt,” she told MarketWatch. They owed $127,000 that had accumulated from student loans, credit cards and other factors, she says. So to cut back, for four years they did not give gifts to one another or friends and limited the kids’ gifts to a few items and some stocking stuffers (in addition to other cost-cutting measures). Lowe admits it was very hard to do the no-gift thing — “I love to both give and receive gifts so it was truly a sacrifice that I felt deeply,” she says — but she is glad they did it: “I learned that I could give and receive love without giving and receiving things.” And now, the family is debt free.

Others take a stand against consumerism and buying for the sake of buying (one in three Americans say they dislike the commercialism and materialism of the holidays, the Pew survey found). Kellie Pelletier Macdonald, 42, of Roswell, Ga. says she and her husband and their brothers, sisters-in-law, and one set of parents/grandparents have stopped gifting one another altogether (though they still give presents to the kids). She convinced the other set of grandparents to give an experiential gift rather than a material one. “The holidays are not about material things,” she says. “I so prefer watching ‘Sound of Music’ with my mom after the kids go to bed on Christmas — just the two of us — or playing flag football with three generations of family members.”

Whatever their reasons, many people who stopped or curtailed gifting said doing it was a challenge. Lowe notes that doing so was a big sacrifice, and Morton says she had a hard time convincing some of her family to get onboard. Still, they felt it was worth it.

So, if you’re thinking of doing something similar this year or next, the first thing to do is to make a to-gift list — and cut it. First, look to cut people whom you don’t see that much anymore. “If you rarely see or interact with certain people, consider sending a card instead of a gift,” says etiquette expert Diane Gottsman, owner of The Protocol School of Texas.

But don’t stop there. “Don’t be afraid to communicate with family and friends about cutting down on the gift list,” says Gottsman. “Most extended family and friends will appreciate a financial reprieve, or an alternate form of gifting.”

Macdonald notes that you can bring up the no-gift idea in a number of ways to get others to buy in: “The key is pitching the angle that will appeal most to the recipient,” she says. “For the frugal sibling, you emphasize the money you’ll save; for the environmentalist, you promote the trees you’ll save by wrapping fewer presents; for the time poor, you talk about the hours you’ll save at the busiest time of year (and it’s hours) by dropping a few people from your list.”

Of course, this no-gift policy is easier said than done, and the people we talked to, though they had stopped gifting adults, still gave to children. Furthermore, if you have the money, time and motivation — and love gift-giving — by all means, keep the economy humming and your family happy with a home filled with thoughtful gifts.

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12 Comments
Mary Christine
Mary Christine
November 19, 2018 2:16 pm

Oh I would love to stop buying presents. Christmas stresses me out. It would be so much more fun and I might stop dreading it. But I have grandkids, who fortunately are getting old enough to want some money but aren’t quite willing to give up the wrapped presents completely. We did decide not to buy anything for the in-laws this year.

EL Coyote (EC)
EL Coyote (EC)
  Mary Christine
November 19, 2018 3:20 pm

While exchanging names to limit the number of gifts one person has to buy, gift exchanges complicate shit when people are not happy with what they got. One year, we decided to limit gift-giving to kids under 18. Then we simply stopped giving to the family at large and confined it to the very immediate family.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
November 19, 2018 2:25 pm

Everybody gets the same present.comment image

EL Coyote (EC)
EL Coyote (EC)
  Iska Waran
November 19, 2018 3:13 pm

Iska, the radio personality known as El Doggy said that women expect lavish gifts on every damn holiday but when it’s Father’s Day or your birthday, they try to get away with giving you the same old worn out ‘gift’ you’ve been getting for the last 30+ years.

Like a bunch of stood up lezzies in waiting, the feminists quickly attack him for disrespecting women, they demand to know if he is a woman hater, a queer or what? They never consider he might be right.

One anonymous writer (not TBP’s mouse) wrote on the bathroom wall, ‘Now I will go back to my home, when (hubs) gets home, he will find me laying naked on the bed. Surre…

If you get on that bed, you are going to be working – Old Pangloss to big assed chick

EL Coyote (EC)
EL Coyote (EC)
  EL Coyote (EC)
November 19, 2018 6:38 pm

One thumbs up for a sly reference to ‘worn out gift’. I guess the joke was lost on the palm riders. Hey, doofi, women have pussies, ask for some, stop settling for cuddling.

Dutchman
Dutchman
November 19, 2018 2:31 pm

The software business has been very good to me – for many, many years. We buy ‘stuff’ when we need it. Don’t exchange gifts, but have nice dinners, shows, etc.

Bob P
Bob P
November 19, 2018 4:07 pm

I’d support halting gift giving, as long as I still get gifts.

Last year our (extended) family jettisoned the practice of getting gifts for everyone in favour another scheme. It works as follows. Each person buys one gift ($30-$40). All gifts are placed under the Christmas tree. Each person draws a card from a full deck of cards. The lowest numbers pick a gift first and suits are also ordered (spades draw first, then clubs, diamonds, hearts). So, for example, a three of clubs would choose a gift before a three of hearts. The group watches each person unwrap the gift and either laughs if the gift sucks–people can buy joke gifts–or covets the gift. The key is people with higher cards can substitute whatever they got for a gift that has already been selected, leaving the victim with a lesser gift. That causes a lot of laughter as people get crappy gifts or lose their coveted gift. I especially liked when someone foolishly made it evident how much he/she liked what they got, only to have it taken. It was great, inexpensive fun.

EL Coyote (EC)
EL Coyote (EC)
  Bob P
November 19, 2018 4:23 pm

Sounds like the old Mexican game called naughty Santa.

James
James
  EL Coyote (EC)
November 19, 2018 5:01 pm

I am out of the gift/holiday thing due to PC!

I would love to celebrate the diversity/holidays but then would be accused of “cultural appropriation”!

Hmmmm….,does this mean I know owe the sjw’s a gift for freeing me from holiday?

EL Coyote (EC)
EL Coyote (EC)
  James
November 19, 2018 6:39 pm

If you eat pussy, you might be culturally divesting the lezzies.

KaD
KaD
November 19, 2018 6:23 pm

Most of these people are overspending by leaps and bounds anyways. I don’t do that much gift giving. My Mom will get a nice Seabear gift tower of heart-healthy salmon based items and the SO is getting a cashmere sweater because he’s been cold a lot since the chemotherapy. That’s about it.

EL Coyote (EC)
EL Coyote (EC)
November 20, 2018 12:40 am