|
Tuscarawas MHA Resources:
Tuscarawas MHA Home
FSS Newsletter Home
Table of Contents
November 2005
Issue Home
To Have More You Must Become More
Mastering Inevitable Rejection
Tips to Help When You’re Feeling Overwhelmed
Share-A-Christmas “A Ray of Hope”
What Can I Do to Reduce My Expenses For
Christmas?
FSS Spotlight:
FSS Trivia
|
|
What Can I Do to Reduce My Expenses For
Christmas?
Whether you are frugal by choice or from necessity, Christmas
presents a financial challenge. All over North America, there
is a growing trend toward creating a less expensive holiday.
Incorporating simple traditions and showing our appreciation
in simple, yet thoughtful, ways are a meaningful alternative
to the traditional Christmas shopping frenzy. By planning
ahead, budgeting carefully and resisting the temptation to
overspend, you can create a terrific holiday that doesn't
wreck your budget. Envision Christmas as an opportunity to be
a creative and thoughtful gift-giver-you will enjoy the
holidays more!
It's easy to make a few changes that can really make a
difference to your budget. Here are sixteen suggestions that
will help you stay within your budget.
- Plan your shopping so that you make as few trips as
possible. Use the bus if you have good urban transit. Take a
friend shopping so only one car is used; you'll enjoy
spending time together while you shop. Phone ahead to see
which stores have the item you are looking for.
- Think carefully about the gift you are giving. Is it
truly something the recipient needs or wants? My grandmother
used to say, "Don't give old people something they have to
dust. Food or a plant is better." You can't go wrong with a
cheery poinsettia or a basket of warm muffins.
- Consider pooling your resources with other family
members in order to give one really special gift. Most
people have too much stuff and would be thrilled to get one
item they really want.
- Give gifts that will last. Visit local craft fairs;
you'll find lots of high quality items made from wood,
stained glass, or hand-woven materials. Often the prices are
very reasonable.
- Shop at antique shops, thrift stores and second-hand
bookstores. You'll find wonderful treasures to delight even
the most difficult to buy for person.
- Make a couple of denim shopping bags for an
environmentally conscious friend for Christmas.
- Use wrapping materials you already have in the house.
Scraps of material can be sewn into re-usable bags. Brown
paper bags can be cut apart, turned inside out and stamped
with gold paint. Add some raffia and a piece of cedar or fir
bough for an elegant package.
- Use your extra photos as gift tags-the recipients will
love them!
- Make your own wreath from natural items rather than
purchasing a plastic one. Buy or make a loosely woven
grapevine wreath and tuck lots of cedar or fir boughs
between the twigs. Wire on some pinecones and a big bow.
Wreaths make wonderful, inexpensive, environmentally sound
gifts. (Ask recipients to save the grapevine base to reuse
next year.)
- Use natural materials like cedar boughs and pinecones to
decorate with. They can be used for mulch or compost after
the holidays are over.
- Give a savings bond. There's no wrapping and no waste.
- Recycle last year's cookie tins and baskets by filling
them with newly baked or purchased cookies, bars, or
muffins. If you don't have time to bake, fill mason jars
from your local thrift store or recycling depot with a
cookie mix-in-a-jar or brownie mix-in-a-jar recipe.
- Real gingerbread cookies make lovely, edible
decorations. Before baking, insert a small tube cut from a
paper straw through the top of each cookie so you'll have a
hole to thread a ribbon through.
- Give gifts to children that DON'T require batteries but
DO require imagination.
- Popped popcorn makes a great packing product to protect
breakables when shipped. Put a note in asking the recipient
to feed it to the birds after opening your gift.
- Make a coupon that entitles the bearer to homemade
baking once a month for an entire year. This is a gift that
is especially appreciated by seniors, who will look forward
to your visit as much as your baking. That sounds like a
lot, but it's easy to make a few extra muffins or cookies
when you are baking some for your own family. Arrange the
treats attractively on a plate and add a seasonal decoration
such as a paper heart for Valentine's Day. Pumpkin muffins
would be terrific for October. Irish soda bread is simple to
make in March.
|
|