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12th Street Jam
In my experience,
shopping and gift giving
ruin Christmas.
Not only do they cause incredible stress,
the nicely wrapped present is often given to make up for not using
The Principles during the rest of the year.
If I have treated people with compassion, been honest,
and taken responsibility for my own actions,
I feel little need to cap-off the year with some shiny bauble.
My actions should be evidence enough of my regard for you.
This also works the other way.
Many of the people who love me are generous to a fault. While I am grateful for their gifts, I don't need a single one of them.
In so many ways throughout the year, these people have supported, encouraged, and accepted me.
Do I really need a watch or a sweater
as further evidence of their love?
Perhaps some of you remember the O.
Henry Christmas story, "The Gift of the Magi." In it, a poor husband and wife desperately want to give one another gifts at Christmas to demonstrate their love.
The wife wants to give her husband an expensive fob chain to accessorize his prize possession - a gold watch that had belonged to his father and grandfather.
To buy the chain, she cuts off and sells her beautiful long hair.
On Christmas Eve, when she presents her husband with the gift, he reveals that he has sold the watch to buy her a set of jeweled, tortoise shell combs for her spectacular hair.
Both hair and watch are gone, making the gifts all the more poignant.
The supposed lesson of the story is that the true gift that the couple gave one another was love.
But the story always seemed deeply sad to me because it supposes that two people who adore one another are so insecure in their love that they have to prove it in the form of material objects.
I wonder how many poor but good people believe themselves to be failures during Christmas because they cannot afford extravagant gifts.
On the other hand, I suspect many people who receive spectacular presents don't really enjoy them as much as they would like.
The material world crumbles into ruin. Objects - large and small, treasured and insignificant - break and are lost. Anything that can be held disappears.
This, I think, is the sadness that I feel about gifts.
No matter how thoughtful or precious
those gifts are they can never
compare to the love I give and receive.
Tweaked
by Patrick Moore
Available now
on Yahoo! Shopping.
shopping and gift giving
ruin Christmas.
Not only do they cause incredible stress,
the nicely wrapped present is often given to make up for not using
The Principles during the rest of the year.
If I have treated people with compassion, been honest,
and taken responsibility for my own actions,
I feel little need to cap-off the year with some shiny bauble.
My actions should be evidence enough of my regard for you.
This also works the other way.
Many of the people who love me are generous to a fault. While I am grateful for their gifts, I don't need a single one of them.
In so many ways throughout the year, these people have supported, encouraged, and accepted me.
Do I really need a watch or a sweater
as further evidence of their love?
Perhaps some of you remember the O.
Henry Christmas story, "The Gift of the Magi." In it, a poor husband and wife desperately want to give one another gifts at Christmas to demonstrate their love.
The wife wants to give her husband an expensive fob chain to accessorize his prize possession - a gold watch that had belonged to his father and grandfather.
To buy the chain, she cuts off and sells her beautiful long hair.
On Christmas Eve, when she presents her husband with the gift, he reveals that he has sold the watch to buy her a set of jeweled, tortoise shell combs for her spectacular hair.
Both hair and watch are gone, making the gifts all the more poignant.
The supposed lesson of the story is that the true gift that the couple gave one another was love.
But the story always seemed deeply sad to me because it supposes that two people who adore one another are so insecure in their love that they have to prove it in the form of material objects.
I wonder how many poor but good people believe themselves to be failures during Christmas because they cannot afford extravagant gifts.
On the other hand, I suspect many people who receive spectacular presents don't really enjoy them as much as they would like.
The material world crumbles into ruin. Objects - large and small, treasured and insignificant - break and are lost. Anything that can be held disappears.
This, I think, is the sadness that I feel about gifts.
No matter how thoughtful or precious
those gifts are they can never
compare to the love I give and receive.
Tweaked
by Patrick Moore
Available now
on Yahoo! Shopping.
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