91热爆 > Opinion > Clicking down to Christmas
Laurence Clark
Laurence juggles stand-up comedy with family life. He聮s previously toured an anti-Jim Davidson show and been called a 聭sit-down comic聮 by Cherie Blair - which was nothing compared to what he calls her! You can catch up with all Laurence's activities on his .
Clicking down to Christmas
7th December 2008
Having been through that stereotypical phase of being disparaging towards anything festive in my teens and twenties, these days I鈥檝e come back round to enjoying this time of year again. Thankfully, gone are the days of me braving the cold to plough through crowds of desperate shoppers with a cartload of shopping bags suspended from each handle of my electric wheelchair, using my footplates to clip the heels of anyone who dared linger in my path too long.
Today, Christmas shopping is an altogether more relaxed experience thanks to the internet. Instead of all those fraught weekends of aimlessly wandering up and down the aisles desperately searching for inspiration, nowadays I only need to spend a few hours surfing the web with my credit card to hand to get the perfect gifts for everyone.
When I was a little boy I鈥檇 write a letter to Father Christmas with a list of all the presents I wanted. I'm all grown up nowadays, but I still maintain a similar tradition around this time of year by emailing my wife with a set of web links to the various CDs and DVDs I want her to buy for me, just to make sure I get the right ones. Being the sort of considerate husband that I am, however, I do run them all through a price comparison website beforehand, to make sure that I鈥檓 pointing her towards the cheapest possible online deals.
The only accessory that we don鈥檛 currently order online or have delivered is our Christmas tree. The first Christmas after we got married we had absolutely the tackiest fibre optic tree I have ever seen, donated by my new mother-in-law, which we had to have positioned in our front window for the whole world to see.
Anyway, I鈥檓 sorry if this column has proved an unwelcome early reminder that Christmas is just around the corner and it鈥檚 time to start frantically buying everything in sight. But let鈥檚 face it - you had it coming sooner or later, so may I be the first to wish you a Merry Christmas!
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Comments
Keeping your child's presents in your own house is asking for trouble. Find a neighbour or friend without small children who is prepared to stash stuff at their place. I used to do this for a friend of mine in my pre-dis days - on Christmas Eve, about an hour after the kid's normal bedtime, I'd head round with the pressies, and help with the wrapping marathon.
My grandparents went a step further when we stayed with them for Christmas. Their flat was small and we'd have found presents in minutes - so they were stashed at my great-grandmother's house. On Christmas Eve (this was in Germany where you get presents that evening) we would spend the day helping decorate the tree and then go, with my parents, to "collect" my great-grandmother and bring her to my grandparents' place. My parents would take the long way around, giving my uncle a ten-minute window to take the quick route to her house and grab the presents before we arrived. Then she would stall us at her place for about half an hour - oh, you must have a drink, oh, I can't find my hat - to give the rest of the family a chance to set up a Perfect Christmas Scene complete with more presents than could *possibly* have been concealed at my grandparents' flat. It was magic :)
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Back in the days when we had 3 small people, we made it clear that Santa delviered the stocking presents and everything else came from relatives/friends. That way it didn't matter so much if they saw the big parcels (although we did manage to keep bikes hidden in our neighbours garage one year). Downside - helping them write/draw lots of thankyou letters to everyone they'd had presents from!
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