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Not bad for going to buy anything |
Thanksgiving has come and gone and this morning, as we have
for many years, we rose while roosters slept and headed out to face the crowds
at the stores for special deals on those Christmas goodies. Most of the time, we aren’t really looking
for Christmas gifts. We’re just browsing
to see what catches our eye or to pick out something for the house. It’s been a tradition for about twelve years
now, only it’s changed some over the past two years.
Last year, Black Friday began to put the squeeze on
Thanksgiving. If you’ve been around,
then you remember my rant about it back then with Blacker Thursday. Some
stores opened at 8 p.m. last year in order to get the drop on the
competition. We refused to play along
and for the first time in twelve years skipped the whole Black Friday
experience. To be honest, the whole
reason we started it was to get those small Mickey Mouse snow globes that J.C. Penny’s
passes out to the first few customers and they didn’t do it last year, so we
slept in. This year, however, it was
worse. Not only did more and more stores
jump on the Thanksgiving-Is-A-Shopping-Day bandwagon, some even opened as early
as 6 a.m. and stayed open all day. The
pressure was on and now employees as well as parents with long gift lists were
skipping part of the day with their family to wait in long lines and deal with
angry consumers fighting over some overly priced gadget that now could be
slashed down in price. We refused again
this year.
Thursday night, Thanksgiving night, I had a gathering of our
kids around a fire pit in the backyard.
A couple of hours later, they were huddled around the kitchen table
playing a card game. Music played, pies
were devoured and my Jameson was quickly disappearing. Laughter mixed with holiday music and the 9
year-old made sure she didn’t get left out of the games. The house was open and the college kids kept
coming. It was this gathering of family
and friends that Thanksgiving was about, being surrounded by the people for
whom I am thankful. Being away from them
on this day, losing this time, was not worth any discount on material
possessions. I would rather spend the
extra cash and have the extra time with my family.
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Tuckered out after shopping |
Now, that doesn’t mean we did not go out Friday
morning. We did. At 3:30.
J.C. Penny’s was once again passing out those small globes and we were
back in line for ours. However, the
streets were quiet and so were the stores.
Everyone else had gone out the night before leaving Black Friday, the
real Black Friday, for us. We enjoyed it
and it didn’t even matter that most of the big ticket items were gone. We weren’t out looking for anything in
particular. We were just out.
We browsed, we bought, we ate breakfast, and we did get a head
start on Christmas. Yet, we did it
without sacrificing time with our family, and that to me is more important than
savings. I think to walk away from the Thanksgiving
Day gathering to wait in a retail line sends the wrong message to our children. It doesn’t say, “Hey, I’m sacrificing to be
able to get you something.” Rather, it
says, “Possessions are more important than being home with you on Thanksgiving.” It’s not the message I want to send my
family.
I know this trend won’t go away. It’s started and once retail begins
something, it never goes back to the way it was. It’s a sad reality. I can’t change the world, but I can change my
little portion of it. Or rather, not
change it. Thanksgiving will always be a
day for family and not a day for shopping.
I hope you would put time with yours above helping the corporate world. It is the memories that will carry us into
retirement, not the gifts. To be honest,
your time is the best gift you could ever give and you don’t even need wrapping
paper or a card.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
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Other posts you might enjoy ~ Blacker Thursday
Thanks for visiting The Mess! Keep chasing your dreams!
Great post, Robbie. We don't do the Black Friday thing. I do Cyber Monday instead. But, as you said, Black Friday is now Black Thursday, and Cyber Monday is quickly becoming Cyber Sunday. Soon all the holiday sales will be on the 4th of July. This holiday race is ridiculous. People fighting in Walmart over a Christmas gift does not put me in the holiday spirit.
ReplyDeleteI agree. It's bad enough the decorations are in stores before the school year even starts, but taking away a holiday for the greed of the CEOs is sad.
DeleteThanks for visiting :)