The gift that keeps on giving…

giftWith Father’s Day coming up, the kids and I have been running secretive errands to find the perfect gift.

I pitched it to the kids as a reconnaissance mission, rather than a “I need to go to the mall to find something for Daddy and I’m dragging you with me.”

Rest assured, we have also secured the standard home-made, heart-tugging, sentimental gifts to present as well.  But sometimes you just need a little Wow Factor to hand to the paternal figure in the house.

However, I’m not that great of a gift finder.

You probably have one of those people in your life, right?  That one person who always procures the perfect gift that strikes the right balance of uniqueness and suitability to your personality.  They manage to hunt down items you didn’t even know existed but now can’t live without.  And they get all their Christmas shopping done in October.

I am not one of these people.

I’ve had brief moments of brilliance, but they’ve been few and far between.  For my first anniversary to my husband, I culled all of our emails during our long-distance relationship, relegated a specific font and color to each sender, printed that sucker off and bound it in to a book.  You know, with paper being the Hallmark-required first anniversary gift. I felt like Martha Stewart reincarnate.

And I haven’t done a thing like that since.

We’ve instead resorted to some standard gifts that we come to rely on year after year.  Jon knows that he will probably receive new running shoes for either his birthday or Christmas, so I don’t even bother to hide the fact that I’m looking for his shoe size. And I know that my perfume will be replenished on my birthday each fall.

For his sister and brother-in-law, we’ve established a tradition of finding the most tacky and gaudy bottle opener we can find (preferably with a magnet to be displayed for all to see on their fridge).  There is a Cat Fancy magazine that circulates amongst the Christmas stockings, and it’s a roulette wheel of luck each year as to who gets stuck with it.

But nothing tops The Obscenity Shirt.

One year, while we were living in New York City, Jon had a friend come in to town.  While this friend was out and about seeing the sights, he came upon a t-shirt that he thought would be a perfect gift for Jon, and presented it to him during dinner at a very fancy schmancy restaurant.

At first glance, it was just a solid black shirt, daring in its simplicity.  But as Jon unfurled the garment, his face squished in laughter as he turned it around to reveal these words in bold white print:

FU

Too good not to share, we wrapped that brilliance up in a bow and gave it to Jon’s brother-in-law that Christmas. The next year, the brother-in-law gave it to Jon’s mom.  The next, it was gifted to a great-aunt with an impressive sense of humor for someone over 80.  It went to Jon’s youngest sister the year after that.

And then, it abruptly stopped.

Because our kids were finally able to read.

It’s a shame, really.  I loved that tradition.  I loved the surprise of forgetting the shirt even existed, and then seeing someone open it up on Christmas Day.  The resignation that you were the target of that shirt that year.  That this shirt, in all it’s vulgarity, had become a standard holiday custom.

Perhaps, as the kids get older, much, much, much older, we can resume this inheritance.  Maybe even bringing them in to the fold.  And relishing in the delight of seeing them receive this time-honored bestowal.

Because this will make a fantastic Father’s Day present one year.

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The gift that keeps on giving…

Birthday Party Season is upon us.  Between now and the end of the month, we have something like 7-8 parties to go to, including but not limited to my own son’s.  And with each one comes the need to bring a gift.  Crikey.

Before Mr. B hit preschool, I used to include the “Please No Gifts” tag in his invitations.  Really, he doesn’t need more crap.  But then we started getting the invitations for school friends parties when they all started turning four.  We made the ignorant mistake of showing up to the first party empty handed, and that’s when I realized that not every kid has those kinds of gift-free parties.  The worst types of parties are the ones where the birthday kid sits there and opens all of their shiny presents in front of a bunch of drooly and nap-deprived toy coveters.  That one always ends badly.  Mr. B’s birthday is at the end of the school year, so when we finally had his party, I said “Screw it!” to the no gift policy and let the boy have his way.  Damn it, we’d spent hundreds of dollars on little gifts for the 20 or so parties we’d attended throughout the year, each one meaning a stressful trip to a toy store in which I had to explain to Mr. B that we were not there to buy something for him (I quickly learned my lesson and did most of the rest of the shopping on my own).  So, Mr. B could certainly have his day.  I really applaud the parents who stick to their guns and hold firm on this gift thing.  Out of the 15-20 invitations we’ve received to little kid parties this year, only three parents requested donations to charities in lieu of gifts.  To them, I stand and give an O Captain My Captain applause.  My kid?  He scowled and threw a fit when I suggested this.  Not in to giving, I guess, and I’m too much of a pushover to stand my ground.

With that in mind, I’ve run out of ideas.  What kind of toys do you enjoy giving to five year olds?  What’s the new IT toy?  That runs approximately $10-$15-$20?