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Save your shopping
to the last minute. The Jiffy Mart is usually open all night Christmas Eve
and you can always buy a Nascar cap or lighter for your wife.
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Plug all your
Christmas lights into one socket. The overload will create a great fireworks
display and give you a new festive holiday hairdo.
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Make sure you
give your children lots of holiday cookies and candy. They need extra sugar
to be this persistent and annoying about getting stuff and how Santa does
his job.
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Insist that
you attend every holiday party and event that is around. No matter how exhausted
you are or how much your feet hurt, go!
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Be sure that
you don't set limits on spending. Hey! You've got charge cards. You've
got checks left! Hey! There's an ATM! That must mean you can afford it.
Show your kids that its all about the stuff!
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If you've never
chopped down a christmas tree go to your neighborhood tree lot and tell
them you want to get the feel of cutting your own tree down. Carry your
own chain saw onto the lot and for safety be sure and wear an old hockey
goalie mask for safety. Watch the children run around and squeal in
unbridled joy.
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Use the fruitcake
your friend sent you as a doorstop. Invite your friend over and she will
be so impressed that you are using her gift so proudly.
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Invite all the
associates and relatives you do not like to one party. That way you can
get all the unpleasantries over in one evening. If you add alcohol you could
even get law officers to validate how hard these people are to get along
with.
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Send out one
of those yearly family update newsletters. Enclose your family pictures
(Everybody has blank space on their refrigerator they need to fill). Detail
every day of your kid's school life. You have so many to send just address
them to "Resident".
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Ask for receipts
with your presents. I mean, really we're all going to run into each
other at Wal-Mart the day after Christmas exchanging everything anyway.
So just ask for the receipts in advances and make things really easy for
us.
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Know what is
important to you. Write it down. What do you want? Lights? Music? Family?
Charity? Religion? There are so many choices and opportunities you need
to decide for yourself what you want.
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Schedule. Let
it be known what you want and when you want to do it. The time will get
away from you and you will be saying, "I wish I would have''
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Budget. Tell
your kids that Santa can only bring them one big toy to each kid.
Don't get into competitive spending with relatives or friends. Don't
equate your own self-esteem with the amount of money you spend on gifts.
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Slow down. Your
internal organs do not know they are supposed to exist on less sleep, more
sugar, and hours on your feet shopping.
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Write a personal
note or make a personal gift for someone who adds a lot to your life.
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Visit a nursing
home. Bring some holiday cheer to people who have really missed out. These
people may not have the opportunity to share in the hustle bustle, lights
and sounds of the holidays so take some of it to them.
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Take special
time with meaningful people. Have an annual holiday lunch with your
best Friend. Spend an evening by the tree with your spouse complete with
holiday music.
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Charity. Shop
for a needy child. Have your office adopt a needy family.
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Teach your children
charity. Let them pick out presents for children their age. Take them to
serve a meal at the homeless shelter.
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Sing. Sing loud.
Sing Jingle Bells. Make up verses. Make up new songs with your kids. Listen
with your kids to N'Sync's or Christina Aguilera's Christmas CD. Go to the
church Christmas musical.
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Bake, craft,
draw, create. Making things makes things personal for both the giver and
receiver. It allows you to put your own spin on what Christmas means to
you.