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Tuesday, 13 December 2011

Giving The Gift Of Life.

Welcome to the December Mindful Mama Carnival: Staying Mindful During the Holiday Season
This post was written for inclusion in the Mindful Mama Carnival hosted by Becoming Crunchy and TouchstoneZ. This month our participants
have shared how they stay mindful during the holiday season. Please read to
the end to find a list of links to the other carnival
participants.

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Give the gift of life this Christmas.
I grew up in a small town where Christmas shopping was limited and since my mom didn't drive and my dad worked at camp all week, visits to the nearest city 45 minutes away were few and far between.  We shopped from a Sears catalogue regularly and my three sisters and I all fought over the lastest edition of the Christmas Wishbook.  We would spend hours pouring over the pictures of toys, clothes, sleds, skates and more.  Everything looked so wonderful and exciting.  We would pick out, with stars in our eyes, a new toy or clothing item for Christmas.  I still remember the surreal feeling of opening a new toy, and even the smell of the new packaging.  I am sure my mom loved these catalogues because they guaranteed her hours of uninterrupted quiet time while we lost ourselves in the dreamworld of Christmas.

My children also love toy catalogues.  We get a few in the mail and the children love to look at the wonderful toys and images of children playing with new and exciting things.  One catalogue we get, though, is different.  Instead of advertising toys to buy, it advertises gifts we could give to children or families less fortunate than ours. World Vision offers gifts of life. A well for an African community.  Four chickens to keep a family with food.  An alpaca for an Andean family to make clothing and blankets.  Fruit trees to help a family start an orchard.  A bee hive to start a family business.  A wood-conserving stove to protect children from the dangers of open fire cooking.  You can even help impoverished families in your own country through World Vision.


Let's teach our children to help others and think outside the (well-wrapped) box.

This catalogue not only inspires the gift of giving in us, but it provides a unique opportunity to teach our children about helping others and thinking outside the (well-wrapped) box.  We can create happiness within ourselves by helping create happiness in others.   Watching my children pouring over this catalogue is a beautiful sight.  Together, we can choose a gift that will change a family's life.  We can set aside our own wants for a while and focus on the needs of others. 

This Christmas, take a moment to think of things we can do for others less fortunate than ourselves.  From the local food bank or animal shelter to the wide arms of charities like World Vision or World Wildlife Fund, there are many charities needing help right now.  Our children already know how to receive.  Let's teach them how to give.  Follow us on Facebook to receive regular charity suggestions during the days before Christmas this year. 



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9 comments:

  1. I absolutely love your post. It reminded me that as a teen and young adult, living in Africa, I used to sponsor children in orphanages in Europe with my measly Rands. We did a lot of church related community work around South Africa, yet I now live in England where my pounds are still measly, but they convert to a lot in Africa, and yet I only sponsor charities in the UK. How odd. I used to sponsor African families, when I first moved here, and maybe it's time to do that again. Thanks so much for the prompt.

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  2. I did the same thing with those Sears catalogs! Funny how my perception of materialism and desires has changed since I was a kid. Giving your children the opportunity to give life in this way is a way better gift than anything in those catalogs...for the recipients as well as your kids. Happy Holidays, indeed!

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  3. I love these ideas. An idea that I want to implement when my son is older is volunteering - I want him to find something he believes in and volunteer to help out. I learned a lot from my years of volunteer work and my only regret is that I didn't start it sooner. While that plan for my son will have to wait until he's a little older, something like this can certainly be implemented now while he's just a toddler. I love the idea of a tradition that he can grow with.

    Lovely post.

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  4. I have been thinking about ways to get my kids focused on charity and helping others-- especially during the holidays-- and this post was a good and very timely reminder...

    -Kerry @ City Kids Homeschooling

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  5. What a wonderful message! I made toys for a charity project earlier this year and I was explaining to my kids that the toys were not for them and they would go to kids who had lost all their toys to the floods. My children were shocked: 'These kids don't have any toys? Someone took them all away?' Kids have a lot of compassion and love to help given the opportunity.

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  6. I love the World Vision gift catalog! Just for myself, it makes it so much more "real" to get a sense of where the money is going. I love the idea of letting my kids help me pick things out. This year we bought presents for some low-income kids locally — at first, Mikko flipped out that he didn't get to keep them, but he came around. I wonder if he'd think he got to keep the cow or sheep? ;)

    Also, I remember the Sears Wishbook! I used to earmark nearly every page. My parents just nodded and then bought me whatever they felt like. Heh.

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  7. Thank you for participating in the Mindful Mama Carnival!

    I think this is a wonderful reminder of the central message of giving during the holidays, My children and I often discuss the differences between families as they try to understand value, money, and not being able to purchase everything they want. They are beginning to empathize with what it must be like to do without.

    Yes, I don't depress them, but I feel it is important my kids understand that it is important to help everyone.

    Like Lauren mentioned, my kids don't understand why we won't get to keep the goats we purchased this year or why the kids who are getting the goats won't be coming by to share them. We're working on the geography part, too.

    And, my kids asked Santa to bring them each a goat this year.

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  8. Thanks for your support everyone! Merry Christmas!

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  9. What a fantastic idea to have children look at a World Vision catalog! Awesome post! I also looked through the Sears Wishbook every year growing up, and it is definitely a fond memory. My husband and I were just talking about Kiva earlier today and about starting a tradition to have Baby (and future baby) pick someone to help.

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