STEVE SMITH -- Family Time
One of the sales and marketing principles you learn early on is that
it is important to give people permission to buy your product or service.
That permission may take the form of the right price, a limited time in
which to conduct the transaction, a limited supply and so on.
Once you hit the right permission button, the sale is yours.
This year, Americans have been given even more permission to splurge.
This year, we are being told over and over again that if we are real
Americans, if we are true patriots who want to show terrorists what we’re
really made of, we’ll go out and shop ourselves silly.
Of course, that takes money and although that has never seemed to
bother Americans, already notorious for living off of money we have not
yet made and for shopping more than we save, this year the buying frenzy
seems to have a dark cloud overhead.
Shopping for kids is always fun. One night during the weeks before
Christmas, Cay and I will enlist the services of a baby-sitter and go out
to shop for our two children, now 9 and 11. That evening includes dinner,
and we always look forward to it, in part because although we do so much
together, it doesn’t often include any sort of shopping, save for monthly
trips to Costco.
Kids usually make it easy for their parents and give them permission
to buy for them because they’re beginning to realize just how much
difference a little cooperation and volunteerism can make before Dec. 25.
Those children who believe in Santa want to stay on his “nice” list and
don’t argue when asked to do something. Older kids suddenly volunteer for
things, having discovered years earlier the reason why they are forbidden
from entering the garage or going into mom’s or dad’s closets during
December.
Parents know it’s the Christmas shopping season when the conversation
goes something like this:
“Hi, Dad! Gee, you’re looking great today. Say, have you been working
out? Dad, I was wondering about something.”
Dad peers over the top of the newspaper and offers his best bewildered
look. “Yes, son, what is it?”
“Well, dad, I was just wondering if I could paint the house today.”
“Uh, no, son, that won’t be necessary. We just had it painted a month
ago, remember?”
“Oh, yeah, that’s right. Well, how about if I refinish the kitchen
cabinets?’
“Last summer.”
“Oh, yeah, I forgot. Hey, Dad, you should see the new bike that my
friend Scott got. It’s called a Tomahawk GT, and it’s really cool. Well,
Dad, I’m going out to play. Bye.”
“Bye, son.”
Some kids are stuck with birthdays too close to Christmas. They get
shafted because they wind up with the “combination” gift assortment. It’s
not a bad collection of gifts, it’s just not enough for two holidays.
Some kids just miss the combination cutoff date. Born in late November
or very early in December, they sneak under the wire and gets gifts for
both holidays. These kids have work to do, however, because they can
never be sure that one year won’t become a combination year.
So almost every morning for the week leading up to their birthdays,
they can be heard commenting about how wonderful either or both of their
grandmothers are and placing phone calls to them “just to say ‘hello.”’
And at restaurants on the nights shortly before the birthday, they’ll
make sure that the server fully understands that their birthday is just
around the corner. Usually, the tactic is good for a chocolate sundae,
three cookies with whipped cream on top or some sort of frozen waffle
filled with ice cream and topped with chocolate syrup and nuts.
But the gift-giving works both ways. Each year, our kids are given a
large cardboard box into which they are supposed to put all of their
unwanted toys and books for donation to a local charity.
As I write this, they’ve had all morning to work on filling up their
boxes, a tradition we’ve had for a few years. One of the boxes is half
full, the other has just enough toys to cover the bottom.
But I know that by tonight both the boxes will be full, not because
the kids want to stay on the “nice” list or on our good side, but because
they know that they have so much and other kids -- kids who belong on the
nice list too -- do not. Filling up the boxes isn’t the equivalent of
painting the house or refinishing the cabinets, it’s just the right thing
to do.
But I must admit that it gives us permission to be particularly
generous this time of year.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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