When I was young, Christmas at Grandpa Earl’s house meant each grandchild would be receiving the same gift. I remember precisely when this started – it was the Christmas after I turned 10. There was a big fight the year before between my uncle and his wife because she thought grandma and grandpa had spent more on the holiday gifts they gave my family than on the gifts they gave her family. Grandpa was very upset by this so he vowed that from then on, each grandchild (there were 14 of us) would received the exact same gift! With kids ranging in age from one to fourteen, this wasn’t going to be an easy task. But grandpa was pretty creative, and some of the gifts we received were the most memorable of all!
The first year this “equal gifts for everyone” thing started, we each received a Christmas Bear. I liked mine, but my brother and boy cousins were not as happy. Another year we all received a Battleship game – this time the boys were pretty pleased but the girls weren’t. I think all the grandkids would agree that the best gift we received was the year we each got a giant Hershey’s chocolate bar with a $20 bill wrapped around the foil. It was sweet – in more ways than one! Although some of us wouldn’t have minded the same gift (especially if it was the cash kind), Grandpa never repeated his gift from one year to the next.
As time went on, Grandma passed away and the grandchildren got older, it became harder for Grandpa to come up with “equal” holiday gifts that would be a good fit for everyone. He still stuck to his tradition every year, and as we got older we received fruit baskets, gift cards and snow shovels. When Grandpa passed away three years ago, I vowed to continue his tradition and have had some fun coming up with unique ideas each year. Since all of his grandchildren are now grown with children of their own, somehow the $20 around the Hershey bar just doesn’t work as well. My cousins and I are now scattered across the country, with jobs ranging from a pharmacist to a tree-trimmer and kids ranging in age from 8 months to 12 years old. The best luck I’ve had, especially since 6 of the gifts must be shipped, is searching online for “unique holiday gift ideas”. In the past three years I’ve sent out personalized photo frames, ornaments for the Christmas tree, and a plaque with a commemorative poem and a photo of our grandparents. This year I’ve decided on a holiday gift basket filled with gourmet snack items. It’s my own little way of paying tribute to a man who is greatly missed by all of his grandchildren!
That was a really sweet story. Gift baskets sure are a great idea to ensure everyone recieves the same thing.
Comment by Kris — November 27, 2009 @ 12:35 pm
Thank you for sharing this, I wonder what will be a perfect gift idea for my grandmother. I’m a little bit bothered by it due to that, my grandfather passed away two weeks ago and of course this will be the first Christmas that our family is incomplete. I still want to see her happy this Christmas. About your idea of Gift Baskets, that would be great and lovely. Keep it up! And for other members of the family, just go for a simple and inexpensive gift idea. Another idea is an earth-friendly stuffs that they will surely love like lunch box tins. It will show how important they are. Besides, Christmas day is not only about exchanging gifts but it is about celebrating together with your love-ones.
Comment by Ara — November 28, 2009 @ 1:48 am
I have always done this “same gift” with my grandkids. I just do the same gifts each year.
Pajamas, books and a filled stocking. I have fun chosing the pjs for each child and a special book (when we have traveled I try to get books writen by local talent) I also try to find puppets for each of the kids for the stockings … even the older ones have fun with these at our family party. When the kids get older (usually 12 or so) I get gift cards to the vintage book store for them to chose a book of their own.
This year and a few years ago I got a bug and knit slippers for each of them also. That has been a challenge but fun. We have 18 grandchildren from 4 yrs to 15 yrs
Comment by Terase — November 28, 2009 @ 8:34 pm