I let out a horrible groan when local radio stations started playing Christmas music starting in mid-November.
The frost wasn’t thawed from my jack-o’-lantern when the Christmas decorations went up in downtown Newton.
Stores already were stocking decorations and Christmas cards when I still was buying treats for Halloween.
I hate to be the one to bemoan it again this year, but the commercialization of Christmas has gotten way out of control.
Year after year, I have been discouraged by our elevation of retail profits over Christmas charity, but when I read a man was trampled to death by a Black Friday mob at a Wal-Mart, I was aghast.
Our obsession over stuff in America, especially at a time noted for love and charity, has sickened me.
I, like many Americans, am on a pretty tight budget for Christmas this year.
I don’t want to be cheap, but I still want to show those around me I appreciate all they have done for me during the last year.
I started by making a budget for what I thought I could spend on Christmas and adding notations of what I was going to buy or make each person on my list.
Lt. Gov. Mark Parkinson has a new Web site (www.governor.ks.gov/LtGov/pennypinch.htm) that offers money-saving tips, some that especially can be used during the holidays.
One of the links has a holiday budget calculator, which contains line items for food, gifts, entertainment and Christmas decorations. You can find this Web site at www.bankrate.com/dls/news/pf/holidaySpending.asp.
I am pretty crafty, so a number of people on my list are getting homemade gifts.
Homemade doesn’t have to mean cheap, but it does take some time and preplanning. Homemade gifts also can be something in which the whole family can be involved.
Last year, my sister, nephew and I made strawberry bread for my co-workers. My nephew, Philip, helped make Christmas ornaments, and we have been working on homemade wrapping paper using blank newsprint.
End rolls of blank newsprint an be purchased at the Kansan for 40 cents per pound.
Don’t forget to recycle when you’re done.
Homemade cards made using stamps, stickers, or paper or foam cutouts also can be a fun project for kids.
Presents that involve pictures can be inexpensive and add a personal touch to your gift giving.