The Christmas List Parents Dread

October 5, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Christmas Tips, Featured

During November, children from every country sit down and thoughtfully write their letter to Santa hoping for cool Christmas gifts. For a significant amount of parents, this is a moment of sheer horror, when the desires of our children are laid out. Especially in tough economic times, a dollar-demanding list can be a cause of very high anxiety. Given that we naturally want our children to have what they want, many parents will overspend and get into debt this Christmas trying to meet their children’s wants.

To try and prevent such a dilemma, there needs to be some ground rules to follow. Naturally, your children are not to know these are ground rules as such – after all, Santa is making the toys, you’re not buying them – but the spirit is the same. Before they make their list, tell your children that Santa is very busy this year and only has time to make a set number of presents. Allocate each child the same number, and tell them they have to stick to it, with one alternate.

Some children may not like this, but it’s necessary if you want to avoid debt following the Christmas holiday. It also teaches children a good lesson in channeling their desires to get what they really want; something which will come in useful in later life. Certainly, if you find you have a little more cash than you’d expected, you can always add cool Christmas gifts. By asking them to prioritize, you can be sure that more effort and thought will go into the list than if they had just written down everything they could think of.

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Only One Christmas Tradition is Essential- Care to Guess ?

October 5, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Christmas Time Information, Featured

As you may be aware, There is no right and no wrong way to celebrate Christmas. At least, where Christmas is concerned you do not have to stay with the traditional ways at all. After all, one of the major messages of Christmas is peace and goodwill to all mankind. It would b very wrong to start introducing rules as to what makes up an acceptable form of revelry, above and beyond those already laid down by the law of the land. As long as you stick to the laws which already exist, your Christmas can take any form you deem acceptable.

That said, there is a reason that the traditions have become traditional. When the first Christmas mince pies were produced, it is likely that the baker who cooked them had no idea just how much a part of Christmas they would become in many countries. People eat them, however, because they are tasty and part of tradition. Equally, it is not really compulsory to have a tree in your house for the Christmas period – but many people do, and have done for many years it does give a certain festive cachet to the whole occasion.

The main thing that you must keep in mind about the festive period is that people are supposed to enjoy themselves, and this should not be controlled by an insistence on maintaining traditions. The major tradition that should always be upheld at Christmas is that people are kind to one another and find a way to get along, even with those people they would ordinarily not speak to. As for the rest of it, people will find their own way.


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Are You Dreaming Of A White Christmas ?

October 5, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Featured, Get Ready For Christmas

Whenever you receive a Christmas card, or watch  TV Christmas special, there is one thing which seems to unite them all and that is  presence of snow. This is something that has become as much a part of the Christmas message as anything.

Perhaps it is because it looks so welcoming and bright and pure. Perhaps it is because it makes the scene immediately identifiable as a winter one, and therefore links it to Christmas. But there are many people in the English-speaking world who have never seen a White Christmas especially in third word countries, and wonder when they will.

It depends, of course, where you live. Because it is in the Southern Hemisphere, Australia has Christmas in the middle of its climatic summer. As well as this, Australia is a temperate country anyway, so the chances of snow at Christmas are roughly equivalent to those of a 100-degree heatwave in New York in January, virtually impossible. Even in the United Kingdom, which is known for its cold winters, snow tends to hold off until January for whatever reason. Though cold enough, the snow just doesn’t seem to have that sense of timing.

Nonetheless, whether you live somewhere that gets snow reliably just in the run-up to Christmas and then all the way through, or somewhere where it is unlikely to ever happen, the fact remains that, as a symbol of the day and the period, snow is something that is inextricably linked with Christmas. This holds true wherever you live, and is why we all know what the great Bing Crosby was singing about. I’m dreaming of a white christmas .

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