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Christmas gifts to "helpers" - not just the paper girl/boy

Last post 12-21-2008 6:42 PM by haverwench. 11 replies.
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  • 12-09-2008 5:18 PM

    Christmas gifts to "helpers" - not just the paper girl/boy

    Dear All, As you know, I have 3 home health-care aides, & I live in an apt building with a manager with whom I am also friends.  Year-round, in thrift stores, I look for suitable gifts.  I give the aides 2 gifts a year, once for thier birthdays, & once for Christmas.  The manager's Christmas gift I gave to her early -- I had no more room in the kitchen when I added in teh half-gallon jars for my Indian foods -- for a decorative huge pasta bowl (which I had never used).  It was wwhite with raised eggplants, celery, tomatoes, & several other veggies in true colors.  I will give her a book to put under her tree, though.  As I write, my aide is working on teh Murphy bed, which is right next to the cabinet where I keep those intended gifts, so I can't describe them. 

    Anyhow, to what "helpers" -- not just the paper girl/boy -- do you give gifts @ Christmas?  What do you give to them?

    Yours in Him, Deb

    Proud trainer of Heart, a black female Miniature Poodle, as a Psychiatric Service Dog

    Enter His gates with thanksgiving, His courts with praise; give thanks to Him, bless His Name. (Psalm 100)

    Yours in thrift, Deb


    Officially Recognized Stretchpert in Government & Charity Assistance, Kosher Living and Prayer Circle

  • 12-09-2008 5:30 PM In reply to

    • Pat
    • Top 10 Contributor
    • Joined on 03-06-2007
    • Colorado
    • Posts 11,090

    Re: Christmas gifts to "helpers" - not just the paper girl/boy

    I gave a package of homemade goodies when I had service people to gift. Everyone seemed to enjoy them. Since I don't take the newspaper, the postman is about 9 individuals, I haven't had my hair cut in over a year, etc., I don't worry about it any more. 

    Community Facilitator
  • 12-09-2008 7:15 PM In reply to

    • gayla50
    • Top 10 Contributor
      Female
    • Joined on 09-24-2007
    • Western North Carolina
    • Posts 3,213

    Re: Christmas gifts to "helpers" - not just the paper girl/boy

    we have a couple of people who work for us we always give them cash and a small gift

    The lady who does my hair I give cash and at a gift of some kind

    Gayla

    Officially Recognized Stretchpert in Frugal Food and Cooking



    Purpose is what gives life a meaning
  • 12-09-2008 11:04 PM In reply to

    Re: Christmas gifts to "helpers" - not just the paper girl/boy

     Hi ... This year, all our 'helpers' received homemade chocolates and cookies.

  • 12-12-2008 8:07 AM In reply to

    • mrs_q
    • Top 500 Contributor
    • Joined on 09-23-2008
    • Posts 51

    Re: Christmas gifts to "helpers" - not just the paper girl/boy

    My mother in law is a personal care home which is a major financial stress to say the least. Last year I made little gift bags for the staff of 12. When we had a lady coming in to help me with my mother in law we exchanged gifts with her just like family. This year my husband has been on home healthcare and I figure I will make his wound nurse that comes once a week a cake. He is very nice man with a busy family & he would never take a gift cash.

    This year when my husband was talking to one of the workers about the Christmas party at the personal care home she said the staff would like cash this year! Ok,,I am sorry I know some of the families there have a ton of money but we are not one of them.  If it was a staff of five or six ok but 12!!!

  • 12-12-2008 9:31 AM In reply to

    Re: Christmas gifts to "helpers" - not just the paper girl/boy

    Dear Mrs Q, If you just gave something yuo baked to the staff members, wouldn't it cost almost $5 between the food & the thrift store basket or other wrapping?  Why not make a wallet greeting card that's handsome, & then just insert a $5 bill.  Yes, that's $60 for the whole staff, so maybe if you go to the bank & ask for a nickel roll for each of them ($2).  You could then get a streamers roll in red or green, & wrap & wrap the roll.  What do you think?  Yours in Him, Deb

    Proud trainer of Heart, a black female Miniature Poodle, as a Psychiatric Service Dog

    Enter His gates with thanksgiving, His courts with praise; give thanks to Him, bless His Name. (Psalm 100)

    Yours in thrift, Deb


    Officially Recognized Stretchpert in Government & Charity Assistance, Kosher Living and Prayer Circle

  • 12-13-2008 12:53 PM In reply to

    Re: Christmas gifts to "helpers" - not just the paper girl/boy

    As a teacher, I work with a lot of people - and I give homemade gifts all the time - usually food I've made and put on paper plates wrapped in colored plastic wrap; being Jewish, I tend to go out of my way to avoid anything that looks Christmas-y - but lots of people give me gifts too, and I like to reciprocate.  Last year found ceramic mini-loaf pans for $0.50 each and used those instead - but that's rare.

    <rant>

    It's all well and good to say that people prefer cash - of course most people prefer cash - but I can make food and other gifts (one year I made candles) for a lot less than giving an amount of cash I'd feel comfortable giving.  It's one thing to give a gift that I spent little money and a reasonable amount of time on, but if I give cash (or a gift card) it's obvious what I spent, and I tend to feel that I have to give a larger amount that I might have to spend.  If I take the time to make a gift by hand - whether it's food, a craft item, etc. - and someone doesn't appreciate it because they wanted cash... well, sorry, but I can't afford to give cash, and if they don't appreciate what they're given, they're welcome to not get a gift at all.

    There are quite a few discussions on this board right now about who to tip, and how much to tip them, and who to give gifts to and how much the gifts should be worth - and whether or not the gift is what the person wants (cash, or something expensive) compared to what the giver can afford.  The commercialization of the holiday season is absurd and excessive, and it has long since taken over the American culture (and a few others), and totally forgotten the actual reason for the holiday.  This commercialization is why many Jews give major gifts at this season - Chanukah is a fairly minor festival, involving small gifts of food and change (that's where gelt - chocolate coins - came from) that just happens to fall near Christmas - but try explaining that to a 5 year-old who wants to know why Johnny up the street got presents and he didn't.

     The rampant greed that occurs at this time of year - and especially the self-righteous begging for gifts and tips - never ceases to amaze and disgust me.

     <rant over>

    Give whatever gifts or tips you can afford and enjoy giving - and if other people don't appreciate it, that's their loss, and speaks more to their values and personalities than to your own.

  • 12-13-2008 1:27 PM In reply to

    • Pat
    • Top 10 Contributor
    • Joined on 03-06-2007
    • Colorado
    • Posts 11,090

    Re: Christmas gifts to "helpers" - not just the paper girl/boy

    karenteacher:
    Give whatever gifts or tips you can afford and enjoy giving - and if other people don't appreciate it, that's their loss, and speaks more to their values and personalities than to your own.
     

    Very well said. I agree with the rest of your post, too. Although I love giving gifts, if it was a chore or if I felt it took money away from more important things, I wouldn't do as much. Giving is an act of caring to me.  

    Community Facilitator
  • 12-13-2008 2:26 PM In reply to

    Re: Christmas gifts to "helpers" - not just the paper girl/boy

    The nursing home sent out a letter last year and this year. They want money for the employees. There is not a separate fund for this and each employee would have to pay tax on the extra money that would be included in their paycheck.

    I feel very strongly about this. The nursing home is owned by a major health service in my area.

    I am not going to contribute to this fund. Sorry, but it is against the way I believe plus in one of her extremely lucid moments Mom told me not to do it.

    The nursing home administration does not want homemade gifts of food.

    I will most likely do something like bake brownies in a disposable pan and put the Andes baking chips on top to frost them.

    Sorry if I sound cynical, but my time involved in baking something and the money involved for the ingredients plus the electricity are worth way too much to not be appreciated.

    I will knock myself out baking for the beauty shop bunch as they truly appreciate homemade gifts.

    I will buy large things of hand cream for Mom to have in her room for the aides and nurses to use. The nursing home has a lot of rules and regulations and I'm not permitted to give individual gifts. That's right.....I couldn't even give those sample sizes of hand cream to each nursing staff member.

  • 12-13-2008 3:18 PM In reply to

    • dlw
    • Top 75 Contributor
    • Joined on 10-22-2007
    • Posts 439

    Re: Christmas gifts to "helpers" - not just the paper girl/boy

    Ds has a teacher, five aides, a gym teacher, 2 speech therapists, behavior therapist curriculm specialist and an OT. He also has three aides at home that rotate. A case manager, a team leader and an advocate. AN A PARTRIDGE IN A PEAR TREE...No just kidding.

    The Class room teacher and the aides get gift cards. The rest get a small gift this year I got some cute mugs and hot chocolate, ornaments and chocolates.

     DL

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