OzIdeas Alternativs
Alternativ
Christmas
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Ideas
for My
dream Yuletide
Now is the time when we can design our Dream
Christmas, our Dream Elections, our Dream Holiday, in
time for our
Next Chance
Think Early for
Christmas!
Less than 365 Dreaming
Days to go
IDEA
FILLERS
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ALTERNATIV IDEAS to make
Christmas real for you.
Giving.
For all you spend to
give good things to your family and friends,
give an equal amount to help the rest of the world.
For example: A $199 video-game for
your kid = giving also $199 to a charity, a cause, to give a better Christmas to poor people you know, or do not
know,
towards giving the chance of better 1999 to those who need a start.
For some people, this may mean less money to give gifts you buy
for family and friends.
But some rich people might not even feel the extra giving,
and what they gave to others to match what they gave to their own
kin
would be a significant drop in the almost empty bucket of the world's
needs.
These 'quids for quos' could
be made into a ritual.
Charities and causes can provide gift cards that could be given with
the gift to friend or rellie.
"This gift to you has been doubled by an
equal gift in your name to . . . . ."
(If the receipt is in your giftee's name, they can get any
tax-deduction.)
Some people have so much or need so little that they prefer all
the gifts given to them to be a gift to the world, and it is already
common for worthy causes to supply gift cards showing that
"A gift has been made in your name towards
. . " maintaining a school/providing medicine/building a/
training a/purifying water at . . ." etc. These cards could be made
very attractive.
Buying
Many retailers rely on Christmas for survival.
But it is an horrendous thought, though,
to look at a shopping centre with all its goods to sell,
and reflect that in three months time,
50% of the goods on display may be landfill or other waste-disposal
problems.
How then, can there be jobs and businesses
if people do not buy products that are single-use, obsolescing,
undurable?
(See 'Alternative Jobs' for some recommendations. Our society need
not be built on absurdities.)
SOLUTIONS.
EXPERIMENT!
with family pre-Christmas 'Santa
Claus' listings for adults as well as children,
with multiple-choices which include 'Surprise'.
'Santa Claus' listings can be part of the
whole Christmas ritual,
Santa Claus listing be included as a page in diaries, together with
Christmas-card lists.
Some people like surprises for Christmas
presents -
Others sigh because they are
given things they do not want,
and don't receive things they would like or need but can't/don't buy
for themselves.
Experiment - to please everybody, and make life
easier for Present-Givers too.
Waste -
The Waste at Christmas
is in presents that people do not want or have no room
for,
and in the Decorations that get thrown out,
and the Cards that get thrown out.
Some Ideas to prevent this
"Christmas = Waste"
-
'Family heirloom Christmas
Decorations
that are kept in a (non-flammable) container from year to
year,
up in the roof if nowhere else.
When a household moves and cannot take their Family Heirloom
Christmas decorations with them,
they can leave the box in the roof marked as 'Household Heirloom
Christmas Decorations'
for the incomers, or donate to an opshop.
Then only the tatty pieces need get thrown out each year.
- Christmas Cards are a big source of income for charities.
But there is Waste in throwing them out at the end of each Christmas
time.
There are many alternatives -
- Save your favorite cards each year, and put them up again next year.
I save mine in plastic envelopes (saved from incoming postal
articles) according to topic
- Australian/ decorations/ art
reproduction /funny/ birds etc.
and often find they come in useful during the year.
Some cards are saved to make next year's gift tags.
Each pre-Christmas time is also a time to remember old friends
as their cards are taken out again,
many now making a series received over the years.
- 'This is a recyclable card' - Send out your really good new Christmas cards unmarked,
with a filler note of greetings and a message
'This is a recyclable card'
so that recipients can send on its loveliness to others.
- Child's play - Cut off the names page and find preschools or other
places
where children can play with them, and cut up and use in many
ways.
- Wrapping
paper - It is possible to steam-iron and re-use much gift-wrap,
but the whole practice of wrapping paper at present
is wasteful of trees, money and products.
You could spend more on the gift itself
without spending on the wrapping.
Many people hate the chore of wrapping presents.
Yet it is exciting and great
fun
to receive a gift all wrapped up -
it seems more of a present than something handed to you penny
plain.
Some suggestions: -
- The Japanese give gifts wrapped in pretty scarfs, which can be used as scarfs or kept to wrap up more
presents.
- The Japanese also make gift boxes and wraps
out of many materials that would otherwise be wasted
- such as papier-mache or weaving them out of rushes.
- Little baskets and wicker plates can also be re-used, but it can be a problem storing them to the next gift-time, even for
op-shops.
- Easier to store in a flat box or drawer are the little decorated
plastic bags that many small items are now put into when bought. These can be decorated, and tied with ribbon - and re-used again.
Some make funny-bags when matched with the presents
inside.
- OPEN WITH CARE! Make it part of the household ritual of gift-giving and
receiving
to open each present with care and slow-mounting excitement,
instead of just ripping off the paper without even noticing it
and scattering it and then on to wanting the next present.
Children can learn how to look at the gift-wrap, as part of the
present,
and then open it with care - and put the wrapping aside gently,
so that it can be
RE-USED AGAIN FOR MORE PRESENTS NEXT TIME!
Fun
Everything about Christmas should be happy and fun,
from the preparation (not left to one sole woman but the household
joining in)
to the clearing up.
It is partly the spirit that ensures this - but there is some 'fun'
that spoils fun.
You can have a Christmas party with all your senses intact,
dropping the stupid inhibitions, while keeping the sane ones.
People who have other sources of fun than alcohol or drugs
can have more hilarious times than people who binge on destructive
oral intakes.
It would be good to revive informal singing by everyone.
And boo to the Scrooges who say it would be awful.
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Religion
The spirit of great religions and non-religions is humane
and people-loving,
with enjoyment of all creation
rather than its destruction.
Christmas is a time to revive this spirit
and to revive your own spirit,
renewing your
own religion and non-religion.
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But what about the
supernatural?
It is amazing that every year people debate about whether to
tell their children lies.
Surely they should always tell them the truth,
at the level their children can understand.
(There are things that children should not be exposed to all, but
this is not the case about Christmas.)
What do you say to children when they ask
you about Father Christmas?
You neither lie, nor spoil their happy innocence.
You tell them that Father Christmas is a Beaut Pretend,
for them to join in.
If they dont want the pretend they neednt.
But they will all say, "Yes, we want the
Pretend" and join in,
because children love Pretends,
and play many of them themselves -
and they like getting presents too.
Does Father Christmas come to take the little gift left for him?
"We pretend he does."
How does he come down the chimney - when there probably isnt one
anyway?
We pretend he does
and we make up stories about the reindeer and all that."
"Who is Father Christmas?"
You can tell them the first story about St Nicholas and go on from
there.
Father Christmas is the spirit of giving.
When you tell children the truth about Santa Claus,
that means they can trust you when you tell them the truth about
other things.
And when it comes to the Christmas story itself, you can tell them
truly what you think, a
nd what you think it means,
and what you believe and what you do not know
and what you hope,
and they will not be muddled up.
Christmas
all the year
Our family are Yules, so we have Christmas all the year.
Even if your name is not Yule,
we hope you have Christmas in your hearts all the year -
an evergreen that will flower again next Christmas.
The first Web-Page for
OzIdeas is at
http://www.avoca.vicnet.net.au/~ozideas
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