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What Should We Do When We Receive Bad Christmas Gifts?
Townhall.com ^ | December 25, 2007 | Andrew Tallman

Posted on 12/25/2007 6:27:43 AM PST by Kaslin

In my previous column on bad Christmas gifts, I explained why we give bad gifts and how to avoid doing so. The main point of that column was that bad gifts are a burden because they fail to show real love. But what should we do when someone loves us this badly? The most habitual response is to say that we should be polite, smile, and say, “Thank you.” The most habitual response is wrong. Why? Because lying is a sin.

“But being polite is not a sin.” That’s a discussion worthy of it’s own attention. Fortunately for this column, acting pleased in the reception of a bad Christmas gift is not a form of politeness. Being polite is what we are supposed to do to strangers and people we don’t know well enough to be fully honest with. Such people are not usually giving us Christmas gifts, and, if they do, that’s a different case. I am talking about bad gifts from friends and family, people with whom we have a relationship, or are supposed to.

“Still, why is lying and acting grateful not acceptable? Isn’t it the thought that counts?” As I explained in the previous column, no. But the danger of lying is already well-known to anyone who’s tried this approach: it only makes things worse. I once had a good friend give me a book as a gift. I added it to the 3,000+ other books I own and forgot all about it … until he asked me a few months later if I had enjoyed it. I told him I hadn’t read it yet, and I distorted reality slightly by saying I intended to do so. Another few months passed, and he inquired again. Now I had to make a choice, either continue to lie and act as if I intended to read this book as soon as I could make the time or else tell him the truth.

And that’s the point, bad gifts accepted gratefully only cause further problems. Your friends visit and inquire if something went wrong with the lava lamp you’ve been storing in the garage sale pile. You get asked why you never wear that hand knit green and orange sweater you acted so glad to get from your grandmother. Or perhaps your realtor notices that your skin tone doesn’t seem to be responding to the Siberian anchovy cleansing cream he sent you.

Maybe you lie. Maybe you have to invent subsequent outrageous lies to cover over the first. But the worst part of lying is the awful thing that happens when you do it well: you receive another bad gift next year from the person who thinks he’s doing you a blessing. Alternately, at some point the deception becomes so fraudulent that you rightly recognize it as being incompatible with the honesty that’s supposed to be the cornerstone of any non-pathological relationship. So you tell the truth later, which turns out to be messier than if you’d done it earlier, before the scope of the fraud was so extensive.

Let me come at this a different way. When you give a gift, do you want it to be a blessing to the other person? Of course you do. If it isn’t one, do you want to continue falsely thinking you’ve succeeded while the person secretly deceives you and harbors resentment over having to do so because of your bad gift? Surely not. Unless you’re so selfish as a “giver” that you’re really doing it only to please yourself and you don’t really care about whether they are pleased.

When I give someone a gift, I make sure it’s going to be something the recipient wants. But even so, I will make it as easy for him to tell me it isn’t as I possibly can. “Here’s the receipt. If you want to exchange it. I won’t be offended at all. Please, if it isn’t what you really want, get something you’ll enjoy. I want to bless you, not be a problem, and I’d be truly upset if you didn’t exchange it.” Precisely because I know that bad gifts are an awful moral burden, I want to eliminate that possibility in giving something. But, of course, we all know the paradox. People who give gifts so selflessly are also the same people who give good gifts. It’s the bad gift-giver who makes honesty so challenging.

But honesty is your only viable option. Bad gifts are immoral, and just as a child needs guidance when he does something foolish, bad gift-givers need honest feedback if they are ever going to learn to do better. Not because it’s a way of punishing them, but because we care about them and about our relationship to them. But I get ahead of myself. You’re probably still balking on the idea of objecting to a gift in the first place. Allow me to persuade you with some examples.

I’m a Christian man. Imagine someone were to buy me a subscription to Hustler and a VIP pass to a local strip club. Should I smile and say, “Thank you?” What if he gave me a couple of ounces of cocaine? Perhaps a copy of the Devil’s Dictionary by Ambrose Bierce? What if someone bought my 3½ year-old son a hunting knife? What if someone gave my Muslim friend a one-year subscription to the pork-of-the-month club or my Mormon friend a copy of “Polygamy for Beginners?” Now, obviously, these are ridiculous and even sometimes evil gifts. But that’s the point. Some gifts are so inappropriate that being polite is clearly wrong.

If my son comes to me one morning with a dripping paintbrush in his hand and says he decided to give me the gift of painting my car for me, he would be in deep trouble, not in deep affection. If someone decided to “clean up” my desk and papers “as a favor,” this act would be such an affront that to act grateful would be nearly as inappropriate as the act itself. And that’s the point. When a gift is really bad, it demands an honest response. So why don’t we react honestly when it’s only moderately bad? The real answer here is painful to admit.

It’s because we’re selfish.

Bad gift-givers are selfish (see my other article), and polite bad-gift receivers are also selfish. It’s simply easier to avoid the conflict honesty would cause. It’s easier to make jokes about the person to a sympathetic spouse than to tell him the truth to his face. So we take the easy way out and deceive ourselves into thinking that we’ve done something loving. It’s almost perfectly symmetrical with the immorality done by the person who gave the bad gift. Both parties are selfish, and both parties think they are behaving lovingly. Now isn’t that ironic?

But there’s more wrong here than first meets the eye. We lie to them with our gratitude, but we lie to ourselves about our motives. We say that being polite is the loving thing to do for the other person, but we are equally motivated by the desire to protect our own reputation. See, you worry people will think less of you if you complain about a gift, so you do whatever is necessary to keep this fear from happening. Instead of voicing your ingratitude, which you fear will make you look mean, you lie and seem like a perfectly decent person. Thus, what seems like selfless etiquette actually turns out to be a very deceptive maneuver to prevent yourself from being judged for who you really are. What did the Bard say about webs and deceptions?

Here’s further irony. We would never feel such a burden in dealing with our enemies. Although I admit it’s a bit weird to imagine, consider how you would respond if someone you despised gave you a bad gift. Likely you would feel no compunction about telling this person the truth, and rudely. Why? Because you care neither about this person’s feelings nor about his image of you. But isn’t there something askew in a moral system where we only feel at liberty to be honest with those we do not love? I suspect our notions of love and truth need revising.

There is an explanation: we’re bad at telling the truth effectively. The reason for rules of politeness (though I repeat this isn’t about being polite) is because it’s easier to not mess them up. Honesty is really difficult. Nonetheless, there’s enough light at the end of the tunnel to make it worth trying. A bad gift is a kind of rupture in a relationship. It shows lack of knowledge and, therefore, lack of love. But any rupture is also an opportunity.

Bad gifts create a sort of crisis, and the relationship can’t stay where it is. It must either become stronger or weaker, and ignoring the breach can only make it weaker. Confronting it runs the risk of total ruination, but it also runs the risk of deeper intimacy. So you have to ask yourself a very simple question: Would you rather keep such relationships forever trivial by protecting them from the stress that might break them, or would you rather risk losing them in the hope that you might gain real ones in exchange? Every meaningful relationship I have is so because it survived one or more crises of honesty. The only way to get respect and real love is to tell people the truth. So here’s how to do so successfully.

The three keys to effective confrontation:

1. Apologize in advance. “I’m sorry, John.”

2. Admit the obvious. “I have something really awful to say to you, and I’m genuinely afraid that it’s going to hurt your feelings or make you mad and ruin our friendship. I’m really scared right now because you mean a lot to me and I don’t want to lose that. ”

3. Get permission. “So would you rather have me tell you the truth or keep it hidden from you?”

Certainly, the frenzy of Christmas morning may not be the correct time for such a confrontation. This you must decide for yourself. The Bible wisely teaches that we should confront people and resolve our issues with them privately, in part because defensive anger is a more likely result in public encounters. But some form of honest confrontation is the only loving way to proceed, and the benefits should by now be clear.

You’ve taken a breached relationship and tried to heal it. You’ve dealt with the giver honorably, as a loved one who deserves your honesty. You are likely helping that person to become a better gift-giver to you and others in the future, which should make everyone a lot happier. And you’ve cleared your conscience against the need to indulge in subsequent deceptions. But there’s one more benefit to this approach. When people know you react honestly, they know your expressed joy at a gift is real. Precisely because my friends know I’m honest, they also need never second-guess my reactions. I yield no false positives. And as a symbolic reinforcement of this very concept, my honesty about the need to be honest is my possibly unwelcome Christmas gift to you. I sincerely hope you enjoy it.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: regiftem
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1 posted on 12/25/2007 6:27:44 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: pnh102; Fresh Wind; kitkat; Girlene; wolfcreek; ContraryMary; Maigrey; NittanyLion; Malsua; ...

Ping


2 posted on 12/25/2007 6:29:42 AM PST by Kaslin (Peace is the aftermath of victory)
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To: Kaslin

Making a mountain out of a molehill.


3 posted on 12/25/2007 6:29:47 AM PST by peyton randolph (tag line taking a siesta)
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To: Kaslin

Oh for crying out loud!

Thanks the giver and be happy that they love you!


4 posted on 12/25/2007 6:36:19 AM PST by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: Kaslin

I hope this guy’s wife never asks him if she looks fat.


5 posted on 12/25/2007 6:36:32 AM PST by Huck (Soylent Green is People.)
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To: Kaslin; MotleyGirl70; Cagey; Mr. Brightside

Shut up and “re-gift.”


6 posted on 12/25/2007 6:37:58 AM PST by Larry Lucido (Hunter 2008)
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To: peyton randolph
Making a mountain out of a molehill.

I suppose it would have made a good Seinfeld episode.

7 posted on 12/25/2007 6:38:05 AM PST by Always Right
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To: Kaslin
Jeez, talk about writer's block and needing to put some hunk of guano out before deadline.

I swear there's a fruitcake that's been passed around my family for so long it's an unwritten rule that if anyone dies in posession of it they have to use it for their headstone.
8 posted on 12/25/2007 6:40:11 AM PST by OCCASparky (Steely-Eyed Killer of the Deep)
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To: Kaslin
It's a "gift." Not something you earned. You have no right to have expectations or requirements for a gift. Any gift you receive is, by definition, something given to you for nothing. Be thankful for whatever is given you.
9 posted on 12/25/2007 6:40:54 AM PST by Timmy
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To: Kaslin

10 posted on 12/25/2007 6:42:38 AM PST by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: Huck
I hope this guy’s wife never asks him if she looks fat.

I hope she does, it would serve him right.

11 posted on 12/25/2007 6:43:09 AM PST by Tijeras_Slim
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To: Kaslin

Gift giving in the extended family - I could write the book on this. Most recently, I wanted to give a homemade Christmas stocking to my niece as a baby shower gift. I have learned through the years to check with my sister in law before giving anyone in her family a gift. I can choose to be offended by that requirement or I can work with it. I asked her. She asked my niece. I called her a week later. She said yes. So I put the little soon to be born great niece’s name on it and gave it to my niece.

I remember the worst present ever as a child. I was in I think 7th grade. My father had been out of work for almost a year because of honorable reasons but that’s another story and I received a pair of red pants. That’s it. I never wore them. Another time my husband had just been laid off and I was pregnant with our second child. He took my present, some warm foot socks, and stuffed each one in a roll of toilet paper and wrapped them separately. He thought it would be funny. I cried.

I wasn’t very gracious either time. I know that each time the gift was given with love and the giver was hurt by my rejection. Little regrets.


12 posted on 12/25/2007 6:43:24 AM PST by Mercat (She's learned the dance moves and she's memorized the lyrics, but she can't hear the music)
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To: Kaslin

That may be what they do in the big city, but out here in the sticks we say “Thank You” to avoid any hurt feelings, then we go out on the porch and laugh our tushies off at the ridiculousness of the gift. And lemme tell ya, nothing warms up a 17 degree night like a good laugh on the porch!


13 posted on 12/25/2007 6:43:24 AM PST by blu
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To: OCCASparky

L0L!


14 posted on 12/25/2007 6:43:40 AM PST by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: Kaslin
And that’s the point, bad gifts accepted gratefully only cause further problems

Oh' Horse manure.

Within my family my mother is famous for sending the absolute worst gifts.

She a great mom, but just can't seem to figure out I no longer wear the same size shirt when I was 14 years old when I am now 48.

I'm suppose to confront her because I tell her a white lie when I call and thank you for the shirt?

15 posted on 12/25/2007 6:44:24 AM PST by Popman
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To: Kaslin

See if you can return them or exchange them for something you really want.


16 posted on 12/25/2007 6:44:51 AM PST by mainerforglobalwarming
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To: Kaslin

Yes, Mr. Tallman, it is the thought that counts. A gift-giver is never under any obligation to give something that the receiver wants. Your examples of bad gifts merely illustrate the absurdity of your arguments.

Remind me to never give you a gift. I’d rather sell you something, with a “no returns or exchanges” sign prominently posted.


17 posted on 12/25/2007 6:50:22 AM PST by jimtorr
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To: Kaslin

What a bunch of nonsense.

Intentionally hurting the feelings of people who have given you gifts because of some kind of stupid self-imposed restriction on making white lies is not a moral thing to do, IMHO.

If, down the line, someone keeps asking about a gift and doesn’t get the hint the first couple of times you (truthfully) say: “I haven’t used it yet”, then, perhaps, they deserve to have it explained that the gift isn’t really right... but, at the time of gift giving, being gracious and saying “thank you” IS the right thing to do.


18 posted on 12/25/2007 6:50:37 AM PST by Pravious
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To: Kaslin
"What Should We Do When We Receive Bad Christmas Gifts?"

Smile... say thank you... pitch on the next trash day.

19 posted on 12/25/2007 6:51:10 AM PST by xtinct (I was the next door neighbor kid's imaginary friend.)
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To: Kaslin
This is what I got for Christmas L0L! The thing is the size of a brick!(but wider) L0L!

I love it ;0)

20 posted on 12/25/2007 6:58:41 AM PST by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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