Are Large Presents Better
Kirkland McCauley bought his wife an elephant as a birthday gift. It was not a present she liked or understood, and it made a mess on her carpets. In fact it remained the elephant in the room, the unspoken horror that separated them for the last few days of their marriage.
Kirkland bought his present on the Internet. These days it’s easy to be imaginative. Simply scroll through ebay or amazon for ‘presents’ and the choice is at least very, very wide. It ranges from ‘adopt a monkey’ to track days, having a star named after somebody to buying a glass cased piece of Highbury turf.
But being imaginative is not enough, as Mrs McCauley was quick to tell her husband of the moment. The miracle of having a mobile phone that meant he could access the Internet, and thereby arrange such transactions as buying an elephant while down the pub with his friends, did not compensate for the inconvenience. And anyway he always knew she never liked grey.
So choosing suitable christmas or birthday presents is an art form requiring a mixture of diplomacy, creativity, sensitivity, and inspiration.
Certainly the web can be a good help by opening up all sorts of possibilities. But this is not the complete answer.
‘Unusual’ is never enough. Being impractical is not enough, although it can help. After all, who likes a practical present - a new lawnmower, new knifes and forks on or iron?
‘Frivolous’ often helps, as does ‘extravagance’ - or at least the appearance of either or both.
{Buying something because you have always wanted one yourself is certainly not the way to go}. What wife wants the almost complete set of Charlton Athletic football programmes, 1967 to 1983 - missing only the April 1971 Accrington Stanley game?
Selecting something ‘meaningful’ or that send a message is worse. A month in rehab seldom does the trick.
‘So ‘appropriate’, possibly in a witty way, is the most important gift adjective - but appropriate to the receiver not the giver. The worst that can happen is that the present ’says more’ about the giver’s interests and prejudices than those of the receiver. The best that can happen is that the giver receives in return more appreciation of their thoughtfulness and sensitivity.
Meanwhile Kirkland went back to his job at the zoo a wiser man, and Mrs McCauley was remarried to a big game hunter who always brought her gift sets - and jewellery, and chocolates and only the occasional subscription to Rifles and Telescopic Sights magazine.
Mail this post
Leave a Reply