The Gift of Not Giving:

The Gift of Not Giving 1

Have you noticed that Christmas aisles seem to be stocked earlier and earlier these days? Commercials for Black Friday โ€œdoorbustersโ€ are rampant, and there is even controversy about some stores beginning their sales on Thanksgiving Day.

The holiday materialism debate is not new: on one side, many families have incorporated Black Friday into their family gatherings. On the other side, many families join with Charlie Brown, who in 1965 first groaned about โ€œChristmas going commercialโ€.

Donโ€™t get us wrong — Christmas gifts can be a fun way to show love and appreciation for family and friends; in fact, one of the five โ€œlove languagesโ€ is gift-giving! But we need to be careful: if we feed into the messages of the marketers and give our kids everything they want for Christmas, gifts can become a detriment.

โ€œThe Price of Privilegeโ€

โ€œ[Parents] tend to shower their children with material goods, hoping to buy compliance with parentsโ€™ goals as well as divert attention away from their childrenโ€™s unhappiness.โ€

However ,โ€œ…past age eleven or twelve, increases in material wealth do not translate into advantages in emotional health; on the contrary, they can translate into significant disadvantagesโ€, such as a rate of depression three times the national average.

โ€œThe kids I see,โ€ writes Levine, โ€œhave been given all kinds of material advantages, yet feel that they have nothing genuine to anchor their lives to. They lack spontaneity, creativity, enthusiasm, and, most disturbingly, the capacity for pleasure.โ€

In other words, these children face a dearth of meaningful connection and values, which makes them feel empty inside. Parents try to fill their childrenโ€™s lives by giving them everything they want, but this just breeds more emptiness because fulfillment doesnโ€™t come from things.

What Kids REALLY Want for Christmas

So what do kids really want?

โ€œStudy after study shows that teens want more, not less, time with their parents, yet parents regularly overestimate the amount of time they spend with their teenagers,” writes Levine.

Another study showed that over half of teens wish they could honestly discuss โ€œReligious mattersโ€ with their parents.

Your kids donโ€™t want more flashy stuff for Christmas — they want YOU! They need YOU!

Dr. Bill Doherty, Director of the Marriage and Family Therapy program at the University of Minnesota, has identified family time as a key factor for kidsโ€™ well being: โ€œResearch shows that the most important thing a child can do to assure long-term well being is eat meals with his or her family. The more meals together, the better!โ€

This holiday season, think about what values your family traditions and gift-giving practices communicate to your child. Is the focus on the gifts and on getting fulfillment from the next, best, and shiniest new toy? Or is the focus on using this time to connect more deeply as a family, deepening relationships to each other and to Christ?

Having a vision that fits our values when we celebrate Christmas could be the most valuable gift of all.

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Jim and Lynne Jackson
Jim and Lynne Jackson
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