Midwinter, season of over-commercialisation looms. Here are some tips for making your gifts more sustainable.
- Ask people what they want. Surprises may seem attractive, but unwanted gifts can end up in landfill.
- Listen to what people tell you they want, especially if you think it’s boring. For the person who can’t afford new socks, new socks are brilliant.
- Start conversations about budgets. Don’t risk anyone feeling pressured to spend on gifts when they can’t afford to.
- For the person who has everything – give them gifts that will make their gardens more wildlife friendly. Plant a tree in their name. Donate to a charity on their behalf.
- Ask people not to use wrapping paper. Tell people that more than anything else, you’d like a waste-free Christmas. Start early on this.
- Give re-usable things. This is especially powerful for people who have no choice normally but to by the cheaper, throwaway options. You’ll save them money and help the planet.
- Give less. A few really well chosen gifts that will be loved and valued are far better than a sack full of plastic tat.
- If there are children in your life, talk to them about consumption and waste ahead of Christmas. Many of them are very aware of the climate crisis and may feel happier doing the festive season in a more sustainable way.
- Consider debunking Santa. The story of the big sack of toys is part of the commercialmass agenda. It’s not ‘the magic of Christmas’ it’s a tool to emotionally blackmail parents into buying excessive gifts. Consider talking about this with your family if that’s relevant to you.
November 21st, 2019 at 4:08 pm
Yes to all of these, especially the last one! I grew up poor but went to a school in a rich area, and never could understand why Santa gave the rich kids much bigger and shiner toys than I got – the message that he rewards you for being good implies that rich kids are more “good” than poor kids, which is an awful capitalist lie.
November 22nd, 2019 at 9:17 am
James and i went round similar things – I think I’ll come back to this next week.
November 21st, 2019 at 10:33 pm
Great post as usual 🙂 selfishly, could I ask that you contact me? I tried to find your ‘contact’ page and couldn’t find it. I’m trying to set up a blog tour for my up and coming children’s book and would love to work with you on it. Thanks so much, Michael
November 22nd, 2019 at 9:17 am
emailed!
November 22nd, 2019 at 10:45 pm
I didn’t receive anything? Could you resend it to this email? mdaoust245@gmail.com
November 25th, 2019 at 9:02 am
trying again 🙂 fingers crossed…
November 25th, 2019 at 7:30 pm
I got it!
November 25th, 2019 at 7:31 pm
Got it!
November 21st, 2019 at 11:41 pm
Good ideas. Getting us all talking about this kind of thing helps us to connect again and get back in touch with the earth.