While shoppers crowded the malls (and they always do, so why is it news?), Prairie Roots and I strolled about downtown Lincoln, Nebraska. We bought a couple burritos, sat at Starbucks knitting (Prairie Roots) and doing homework (me), and bought some scarves and necklaces for Madville Times Jr. to play with.
Then we went to a movie: What Would Jesus Buy? This documentary, produced by Morgan Spurlock of Super Size Me fame, follows the "Reverend" Billy Talen and his Church of Stop Shopping Choir around America during the 2006 Christmas shopping season. Their mission (an important word!): to save Christmas by exposing the mindless, destructive consumerism that corporations and the media foists upon us and our children for their own profit.
Reverend Billy's tactics are funny, if a bit hokey. His exorcisms of credit cards and lapses into speaking in tongues are as much a send-up of the excesses of fundagelical preachers as the excesses of our Christmas shopping mania. The Reverend Billy himself questions the value of his exploits after a protest outside Wal-Mart headquarters that garners little positive attention.
Yet as we gaze in puzzlement and disgust at the bags and boxes of cheap junk from China that we accumulated yesterday, as we get ready for a second day of turning 41st and Louise into the tenth circle of Dante's Inferno, we can perhaps see that the Church of Stop Shopping's performance art has a point. Think about how much time and effort you put into shopping yesterday. Compare that with the time and effort you spent actually playing with your kids, chatting with your spouse, and helping your neighbors. As you searched for the perfect gift, how often did you look on your fellow citizen and think happy Christmas thoughts, and how often did you think, "Don't you take my parking spot!"
As each of us prepares to spend an average of $859 on Christmas gifts, imagine what would happen if we acted on Reverend Billy' message to "buy less and give more." It wouldn't be easy, as shown more than metaphorically by Reverend Billy's own adventures. Throughout the film, whenever the Church of Stop Shopping shows up in public places, malls, and even Disneyland to sing, and whenever the Reverend Billy raises his megaphone to shout "Stop Shopping!" cops and "corporate police" (a most ominous euphemism for private thugs) all too often show up to protect their employers from Constitutionally protected free speech. Our society sends a message that if you're not shopping, you're doing something wrong.
But don't let that stop you from changing your shopping habits. $859 is a lot of money, especially if we multiply that by a few hundred thousand South Dakota shoppers. Suppose we buy only half that much this year. Spend $400 on presents. Save the other $400. Pay down your credit card debt. Put it toward college. Give some to the Banquet, the women's shelter, your local school. $400 from every person in Madison this season would pay for more than half of the new pool.
You decide how to spend your money. But if you think more spending will make Christmas special, think about what one woman in What Would Jesus Buy? says about what her father did for Christmas during the Depression. Fighting back tears, this gentle old lady recalls how her father always made Christmas special by making sure there were apples and oranges, and maybe a pair of boots.
Apples, oranges, maybe a pair of boots. Christmas doesn't have to be any more complicated than that.
You're anti-American, arn't you? ;)
ReplyDeleteConsume Citizen!
More to the point, though. How do we buy less without treatening jobs? Granted A LOT of the stuff we buy is made in not-America, but someone still trucked it to SD, right?
Bah, I dislike the consumer driven culture/government we have created. Is there anyway out? Do we revert to our hunter/gatherer ways? At what point do we draw the line between supporting unnessacary consumerism (such as ads in blogs)to full out membersips to CostCo and Sam's Club, etcetera?
I want to go live with those people in te Village...but still have te internet.
joe nelson
The real meaning of Christmas and this holiday season is giving a wonderful gift. The gift doesn't have to be material, it can be emotional too. The risk of our society cutting back on spending is absolutely no risk, but a few people, taking the challenge, can mushroom over time and that would be a wonderful gift to all of us.
ReplyDeleteWe refused to give in to the latest toy fad or clothing fad when our kids were growing up. They got a used Atari when that was no longer in vogue, enjoyed it, but I didn't buy many games and didn't upgrade when I saw how much time they would spend glued to the computer screen of that Atari. They did guard it like gold and promised me the moon on the way home from the rummage sale we bought it at! They had a few brand name clothes but not much. And they didn't suffer one bit. In fact, my daughter plans to raise her kids the same way.
ReplyDeleteAnd our Christmas family get togethers with relatives have long since given up gift-giving to each other in lieu of white elephants which are much more fun to do anyway.
I love to go out for the Black Friday sales and get caught up in the excitement, but I don't have to spend a lot to enjoy it.
I guess what I'm saying is that Christmas should be more about immaterial gift-giving than material, which is more rewarding anyway.
Here's a method we used after hearing our kids whine about what they didn't get for Christmas and after making several returns. Each year, we gave the kids an amount they could spend buying their own gifts. We told them in August, so they could watch for sale ads and learn how to budget or get more for less. Then we wrapped up the gifts and they opened them on Christmas Day. Even though they already knew most of what they were getting, there were no complaints and no returns and we were able to focus more attention on the real meaning of Christmas. Less stress and some budget sense were hidden benefits.
ReplyDeleteThis is a great post.
ReplyDeleteWe went strictly cash budget this year, and spent way less on gifts that were probably more heartfelt, personal and appreciated.