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12/09/2008: Shoestring Santa.

The Advent Calendar is up to date. Well, I guess it won’t be up to date until I do today’s entry. I don’t know.

A Christmas Chia Tree update: The future centerpiece of Christmas dinner has begun sprouting its coat, but it’s definitely been a slow burn. I’ve made Chia Pets before and I know that they need time, but I still always hold to the unfounded expectation that they’ll go from Brazil to Europe in three days flat.

Chia Pets are championed for their “no muss, no fuss” process, but there’s a certain sense of Chia Anxiety™ that rears its ugly figurative head whenever I try to grow one. I always convince myself that I did something wrong. Maybe I didn’t soak the seeds long enough? Did I spread them evenly enough? Maybe my inclination to keeping our apartment at a constant temperature of 37 degrees is bad for Chia Pets? I’ll threaten suicide if a slow car makes me miss a green light; can you imagine the news report if I don’t have a picturesque Christmas Chia Tree by 12/25? Shit will be epic.

Upside: I took the above photo yesterday morning. Since then, I’d say that nearly twice as many sprouts have sprung. Oh yes, glory is coming. I’ll update you on my Christmas Chia Tree’s progress when it’s finally through with its boring pupal stage.

I have an incredible memory when it comes to Christmas presents. Wouldn’t claim that I remember everything I ever received, but I’m sure I could name more than 50% of the stuff. I bet plenty of you can, too. There’s just something about Christmas presents. Even bad ones.

But what about the stuff you gave out? Can you remember the first time you bought your family and/or friends gifts? For me, I’m pretty sure my first run at “giving” was during the fourth grade. I had around 50 bucks to spend, and six older brothers and sisters to buy presents for. Since most of them were already married or at least living on their own, I settled on giving everyone these horrible $5 glassware sets. You know the kind. A bunch of crude cups in Christmas red, in dented cardboard boxes with the “$5″ price tag visible not as a store-provided sticker, but as part of the actual product label.

I was so proud of those glasses, and the many other horrible Christmas gifts I gave out. Even if you didn’t believe in Santa, there was always a feeling that there’d be karmic retribution for spending money on someone other than yourself. The way I saw it, if I bought each of my sisters a $10 vanity mirror, I’d get a Nintendo back.

I found the two miracles shown above at Target the other night, and they really reminded me of all the many stupid gifts I bought for family members throughout my childhood. After all, who hasn’t gotten or given a weird “magnetic sculpture” or a silly “coin sorting bank” at least once in their life? They’ve been around forever, and no matter who sells them, they’re always the same.

As I’ve grown older, the stuff I give out for Christmas has upped in value. Once you hit a certain age, it’s virtually a social responsibility to spend “X” amount of dollars on Christmas presents. Sadly, magnetic sculptures and plastic coin banks do not make the grade. Even if they did, I’m not sure who I would give them to. It’s easy to plead ignorance when you’re in elementary school, but as an adult, there’s no way you can give someone a “coin sorting bank” and act like you thought it was kosher.

Whatever. I still love gifts like this. Just looking at them makes me remember what Bradlees smelled like. From Mancala games to red-boxed Old Spice sets, these budget-conscious “easy gifts” have quietly etched their spot in Christmasdom, somewhere between After Eight dinner mints and TBS’s Christmas Story marathon.

The “Magnetic Sculpture” includes a handful of magnetic bolts with a magnetic base, providing ample opportunities to use the word “magnetic” over and over again. You’ve seen it before. Maybe not in this exact shape and style, but everyone’s had something like this.

I guess they fall into the category of “desk toys.” As a kid, nobody gave you desk toys. You’d see them all the time, but you never had them yourself. You wanted to play with them, but they were on top of desks, where few kids were allowed to play without paying the price of a firm hand. Of course, this made them insanely appealing. Now that I have one myself, I see that it’s just a bunch of magnets on a podium. It’s just as awesome as I always thought it would be.

Even more incredible is the “Coin Sorting Bank.” I’ve had many like this, and I’ve given out a few of them, too. This one is extra skimpy, lacking the noisy, battery-operated pulleys and levers of the more expensive varieties.

It’s pretty simple — just a one-slot coin bank that separates pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters into piles. It doesn’t do this particularly well, though. While I was filling the bank up in preparation for the big “slice of life” photo shown above, at least a dozen coins got stuck in the upper compartment and wouldn’t come down until I shook the thing like the bad parent of a newborn baby. And even then, some of the dimes went into the penny chamber. I guess I shouldn’t expect that much quality control for ten bucks, but I hate it when dimes try to be pennies. Don’t they realize it’s a downgrade? Dumb dimes.

In any event, even a malfunctioning coin sorting bank is better than what we had been using to hold spare change…

A dusty mason jar. I don’t know how we ended up with so many mason jars. I swear, we’ve never made our own jelly or anything, not even once. Also: How did Squid Head’s head end up in there? Where is the rest of him? :(


Posted by Matt. E-mail me!

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Discussion Thread: 220 comments

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can i say first, yes i remember these gifts, gave and got em.

Ghosted by tigerfan @ 12/09/2008 12:14 PM EST


I remember what Bradlee’s smelled like too…ahhh, the memories.

Ghosted by borloff1313 @ 12/09/2008 12:27 PM EST


been a while since I’ve been so close to the top…I’ve never received or given either of these gifts…I’m still jealous…and I still try to spend less than $25 on any family members, even with a small family

Ghosted by random bob @ 12/09/2008 12:31 PM EST


Second!

I’ve never tried to grow a chia Tree, or a chia anything. Don’t have space to decorate, but I always thought one might be cute.

Remember when people used to give out those magnetic sculpture things as party favors for big parties during the early teenage years.

Ah, yes a coin sorter, actually pretty convenient, better than the snapple bottles I use!

Ghosted by Tresjolie9 @ 12/09/2008 12:31 PM EST


ok, last one, I promise….

I’ve always wanted a chia pet, even more than a desk toy.

Ghosted by random bob @ 12/09/2008 12:32 PM EST


I had a coin sorting bank like that. I think it was a Christmas Present, too. Never had a magnetic base, though. To scared of Magnets messing up computer stuff…

Ghosted by Cameron T. @ 12/09/2008 12:37 PM EST


I’d actually be really excited to get mancala for Christmas! That game was the shit in middle school, because I hung out with nerds. We used to play it every day in the library before class. I remember the sound the stones make when you drop them being really satisfying.

Ghosted by jazzy @ 12/09/2008 12:42 PM EST


I remember in elementary school they’d have a Christmas craft thing they sent us to for Christmas shopping and tried to understand who could possibly want any of the crap they were peddling. I know most kids’ budget is rather low, but I’d rather buy something small that someone would like….like a new wallet or a fancy pen or something.

Ghosted by Jeff Mack @ 12/09/2008 12:46 PM EST


Ok, I’ll be the dink that points out that those aren’t magnetic bolts, but magnetic nuts.

As for remembering Christmas presents, hell I don’t even remember what I got for my last birthday let alone last Christmas. Seriously looking forward to how the Chi center piece come out though.

Ghosted by Wenthral @ 12/09/2008 12:50 PM EST


Jeff Mack
Yeah, I remember stuff like that. Although ours was pretty good and I got my Mom a couple of really nice but inexpensive presents a few times.. One particular that i remember: We had a dog bone ornament (it was a real dog treat that had been shellaced) from my Parent’s first Dachshund, Strudel. Well, some rats or vermin of some sort had gotten into the attic and tore up a bunch of our ornaments. The bone was obliterated and my Mom was in tears.

So anyway, at that year’s elementary craft fair someone was selling personalized dog bone ornaments, and I decided this was a sign from God that that’s what I should get my Mom for Christmas. She was pretty elated about it, too…

Ghosted by Cameron T. @ 12/09/2008 1:00 PM EST


Oh right! The elementary Christmas store! I forgot about that. Thinking back, I feel bad for my parents. We had no allowance, therefore no money of our own, so I essentially had to ask them to give me their money so I could turn it into crap they’d never in a million years want. My mom got a bear figurine in an aerobics outfit (Merry Christmas, Mom! You’re fat!) and my dad got a perpetual calendar that I thought he’d love. The thing I remember most is that my sister’s class and my class just happened to be assigned overlapping times, so she knew what I got and couldn’t wait to spill the beans in the car on the way home from school. Little brat. I’m pretty sure I cried.

A few years later, I managed to convince my parents to give me money for Christmas presents. I think they gave my sister and me $20 to split, so we went crazy at Dollar Tree. That went on for a couple of years. My first real Christmas was after I got my first job. I took it upon myself to get my family the best presents I could to make up for all the years they sacrificed to do the same for me. I shocked my dad by giving him a PDA (this was 1998. That was a cool gift then.) He deserved it.

The worst thing about remembering Christmas gifts is that I find it very hard to get rid of stuff people have given me out of the kindness of their hearts, even if it’s some sort of hideous clothing item I’ll never wear or cheap, useless junk. I wish I could just forget where that stuff came from. I have so many ill-fitting sweaters taking up space in my closet, not to mention all the terrible gifts from my mother-in-law that pile up year after year.

On a final note: Ah….Bradlee’s…

Ghosted by Lori @ 12/09/2008 1:14 PM EST


The top of the refridgerator is a great place to sprout seedlings, there’s a nice flow of gentle warm air up there coming up the back from the condenser.

It’s sure to result in Chia Sprout’in Magic!

PS- loving the holiday blog!

Ghosted by MikeyD @ 12/09/2008 1:15 PM EST


I always asked for Chia Pets when I was a wee one. How could you go wrong growing a leafy pet?! Mom would not allow me such joys because she had a horrible experience with a Chia Pet that my older brother tried to raise. Apparently my brother didn’t notice it had died and it sat hidden somewhere for untold eons. She said the smell from the Chia Corpse was so horrible that she never wanted to see one ever again.

I was denied Chia Love indefinitely.

Ghosted by Morfnblorsh @ 12/09/2008 1:15 PM EST


“From Brazil to Europe.” Genius. I’m using that.

Ghosted by Vincent @ 12/09/2008 1:31 PM EST


When I was maybe 8, I gave my mom these wax chunks shaped like hearts. You were supposed to put them in a warmer and then they smelled nice. Thing was she did not have the warmer for them. So they really were an awful present on my part.

Ghosted by kb @ 12/09/2008 1:50 PM EST


I bet those greasy ear buds smell like Bradlees.

;)

Ghosted by Jim @ 12/09/2008 1:58 PM EST


Wow Bradlees. I miss that store. It was like, more upscale than Mars, and less expensive than Zayres.

(…I feel old.)

Ghosted by Cat the Vampire Slayer @ 12/09/2008 2:03 PM EST


Not shoestring cost by any means but has anyone seen this?

http://www.thegreenhead.com/2007/11/national-lampoons-christmas-vacation-advent-house-calendar.php

I know I’m pretty late on this but that is awesome! Of course just as with the Moose Mugs, the price is ridiculous but it is a beautiful piece of work for sure.

Rp

Ghosted by MessiahRp @ 12/09/2008 2:07 PM EST


I never had one of those magentic sculputures… Now I must get one!

My coin sorting bank was a million times cooler – it looked like a safe, with an actual combination number and a door that swung open to reveal your neatly sorted coins. I still have it, too!

And thanks for the great advent calendar so far this year, Matt!

Ghosted by christine @ 12/09/2008 2:08 PM EST


Weird question time… After the Chia blooms, how long do they live…

Ghosted by Bobby A @ 12/09/2008 2:13 PM EST


I see you have a pair of SkullCandy headphones in that mason jar. Awesome.

Ghosted by Steve @ 12/09/2008 2:15 PM EST


Is that blue thing in the jar one of the Pokemon Burger King gave out years ago? It looks familiar for some reason.

Ghosted by Jack @ 12/09/2008 2:25 PM EST


Those cheap gifts make great gifts for white elephant gift exchanges. I usually bring those or a homemade mix CD.

WTF is this Bradlee’s you people speak of?

I keep my change in an empty water bottle from a water cooler.

Ghosted by Teddy Ray @ 12/09/2008 2:27 PM EST


I didn’t get the Brazil to Europe reference… Maybe it’s because I’m Brazilian? I mean, we have a huge forest, and the tree looks like a desert right now. :?

Ghosted by Roddy @ 12/09/2008 2:28 PM EST


Just curious did anybody else have a Santa’s Secret Shop in elementary school where you could buy your family cheap gifts for Christmas. I think I bought my dad the same cheap screwdriver set every year.

Ghosted by Jack @ 12/09/2008 2:33 PM EST


Hooray, other people who remember the Elementary School Christmas Store! I’ve gotten my parents many a lame gift from there. Also, who else remembers the versions of the Plant Store?

As for the Coin Sorters, I’ve had both noisy and non-noisy varieties. It didn’t matter, coins still got stuck, and they were harder to get out of the ones that didn’t have moving parts.

I haven’t heard the name Bradlees in a long time. I don’t remember where one would be, or if they’re still open.

Ghosted by Invader Norbert @ 12/09/2008 2:34 PM EST


I’m ashamed of the amount of my youth I wasted making magnetic sculptures.

Ghosted by theyav @ 12/09/2008 2:43 PM EST


I recieved a coin sorter a long time ago for Christmas! It had letter stickers that you could personalize it with. I was very clever and put “BEER FUND” on there. A few years later, I thought it looked lame, so I scraped a few off with my thumbnail, now it says “BE FUN”

Ghosted by Surfing Pizza @ 12/09/2008 2:45 PM EST


>>I haven’t heard the name Bradlees in a long time. I don’t remember where one would be, or if they’re still open.<<

They closed in 2000. The one in my hometown however, closed in like 1989.

I have too many bad memories of me buying more crap for me than for my family at those Santa Secret Shop things.

Ghosted by Anita @ 12/09/2008 2:45 PM EST


That Magnetic Sculpture looks like a perfect Secret Santa gift for someone you hate.

And is that a bird’s ass in the mason jar?

Ghosted by Bill @ 12/09/2008 3:06 PM EST


Uh-oh. More rain down here in Texas.

But Im not gonna let it bother me. : )3

Ghosted by Hazard @ 12/09/2008 3:06 PM EST


Oh, the money I must’ve wasted at the school Christmas store and the plant sales…

And I think that magnetic sculpture is totally worth 5 bucks, just for the magnet alone. But, then, I’m easily distracted by shiny things.

Ghosted by Rhino @ 12/09/2008 3:31 PM EST


Phew! I’m glad you clarified, because I thought that was some sculpted ABC gum in the jar.

Even though now I have that x amount I’m supposed to spend on my brother, parents, girlfriend, and friends nowadays, I always break it up into a bunch of cheap gifts. Oh, you wanted SSBB? Too bad, here’s a glow in the dark dinosaur and $40 worth of other crap. Luckily, no one really minds since they get to open so many individually wrapped presents.

Ghosted by Eddie Lightning Frog @ 12/09/2008 3:35 PM EST


I’m pretty sure my family always took the kids off to buy presents for the other parent, siblings, etc, since infancy. Basically we picked out what we thought they would like, and if the price was acceptable to the parent, in the basket it went. For the most part I think my gifts were pretty good, but I occasionally misfired.

My kid brother wanted a Mad Ball. So I got him a Mad Ball.. cup. Why? Fuck if I know. Then I told him I got him an actual Mad Ball. I’m sure that made his Christmas when he opened that gift.

My Christmas budget is extremely tight every year, but that’s because I have a ton of people to buy for. I have twelve nieces and nephews, alone. I’m single, and a college student, so I start shopping early, and try to keep it under 15$ for each gift. Lots of books, stuff like that.

A lot of people get home made stuff, too. I’m making my grandmother a cookbook with personal favs from each family member, and my grandfather is getting chocolate and butterscotch chip cookies from me.

Ghosted by LemonWitch @ 12/09/2008 3:41 PM EST


Christmas gift for mom down! :)

Ghosted by Aaron @ 12/09/2008 3:46 PM EST


got my LEGO calendar in the mail today, got a ladder today.

Ghosted by jason @ 12/09/2008 3:59 PM EST


Jason
I’m glad you can follow along, but please don’t spoil it for us!

Ghosted by Cameron T. @ 12/09/2008 4:11 PM EST


The high school that I teach at is having the Secret Santa Store starting tomorrow… First time…

Ghosted by Bobby A @ 12/09/2008 4:19 PM EST


Never had a coin sorter, but I did have a toy safe that I briefly kept my money in. But I forgot the combination and that was it.

I once bought those glass angels that you see in Hallmark stores for my entire family (aunts, uncles, grandparents,etc). I did that just one time though, as I now limit my spending to my immediate family and a couple of friends. You’re also right about spending more as the years go by. Even with my limits, I spent more this year than ever before.

I’m sick :(

Garfield Christmas is on tonite. Haven’t watched that in years.

Ghosted by JLAJRC @ 12/09/2008 4:23 PM EST


I remember the elementary school christmas store. I had totally forgotten about it! Oh the things I bought for my parents and grandparents there. I still remember the year I bought my mom one of those decorated masks that you hang on the wall.. ya know the ones that look like they were from carnival and were really popular back in about ‘89-’90. My mom actually hung it on the wall of their bedroom and there it was for years. It was about 2 years after I bought the thing that I told my mom she should take it down and get rid of it and I wouldn’t be offended, as it was pretty ugly. Yet she kept it up there because it “matched the room”. I know my dad got equally bad gifts as well, but I don’t seem to remember them.

Ghosted by Alyssa @ 12/09/2008 4:33 PM EST


Oh man I remember my elementary school Christmas store. I bought my mom and dad all kinds of things I thought they’d like. My mom STILL to this day has something I got her there. As for coin banks, I honestly can’t count how many I’ve had over the years.

Ghosted by ULTRAMAN @ 12/09/2008 4:36 PM EST


My parents still have the stuff I got them at my elementary school’s Christmas Shop. Most of the time, I would just get them ornaments or other Christmas-related trinkets that I found interesting. One year, however, we had a craft day instead of the Christmas Shop so we could make our gifts. I made my parents a little decorative plate. It sat on an end table in the living room for years and they even took it and displayed it when the moved to Tennessee a few years ago. Thing is, now they are (finally) getting a divorce and they both want that damn plate! :-)

Alright, I’ll get back to lurking about and being scared of evil clowns now.

Ghosted by DarkSideofBrightness @ 12/09/2008 4:44 PM EST


I think I remember giving my Dad a pretty flimsy money clip and my Mom one of those stress-heads. You know, the eyes and ears inflate when you squeeze it?

My Mom is pretty cute when it comes to gift giving. It’s always something a little off. That scene in Better Off Dead when Lane gets TV dinners individually wrapped hit close to home.
“You like corn…”

Ghosted by Bill @ 12/09/2008 5:10 PM EST


Hehe…Roddy, here in the states “Brazilian” is sometimes taken to refer to a level of personal grooming with a particular attention to detail. As opposed to, say, the opposing stereotype we might hold about some other continent.

As a kid I always hit the Santa’s Secret Shop. Sometimes mom would throw me a BLANK check, which I would always get excited about. Looking back, I probably never spent more than maybe $27, tops.

Ghosted by squee4242 @ 12/09/2008 5:38 PM EST


I went to an early Christmas party yesterday, and everyone was asked to bring a $10 gift for a gift exchange. During the gift exchange, there were alot of mugs of hot chocolate mix, boxes of candy, and gift cards. I took it upon myself to get the white elephant gift- I brought a 10 dollar Walgreens toaster.

Also, that’s not a squid head. It’s Waiterbot’s foreign cousin!

Ghosted by PlantMonster @ 12/09/2008 5:54 PM EST


Wow, Bradlees. I haven’t thought about that wonderland in years, but I just realized the store I work in now was built after they tore our Bradlees down. This will give me something to think about at work now. (And like dimes trying to be pennies, I think the current store is a downgrade.)

Ghosted by glowsocks @ 12/09/2008 6:00 PM EST


I learned a few years ago that some of the best and cheapest gifts are found in the summer, especially at the local street fair. In good years I have all my Christmas shopping done by the end of that weekend.

Right now I’m sitting her sewing a bunny for my new niece from mostly recycled materials and a free pattern I found online, with the first snowstorm of the season happening outside and More Twisted Christmas in the CD player. It will shortly be changed to the Rudolph soundtrack ’cause that’s much more magical for toy manufacturing. :) I may be rusty in the embroidery department, but this is a very nice way to spend an afternoon, and if anyone wants to see it pre-assembly I posted it to my LJ after cutting it out last night.

Ghosted by Moony @ 12/09/2008 6:37 PM EST


Cameron T.: yeah, sorry, shoulda done **SPOILER ALERT**.

**SPOILER ALERT**

the ladder is to save the kitten in a tree. oh, the tree hasn’t appeared yet because the zombies were hiding in its box.

Ghosted by Jason @ 12/09/2008 6:42 PM EST


I’m sorry. I know I just posted, but you people NEED to see this. Thank you, http://www.spookyblue.com/.

Check it out!- http://spookyblue.com/gallery/halloween2008/hh-parade02.jpg

Ghosted by PlantMonster @ 12/09/2008 6:48 PM EST


My nephew is enrolled under the Comanche tribe, and the tribal complex is holding a kid’s Christmas store, he’s going down there sometime this week to get a few gifts for select family members. (there’s a limit of four per family)

Way back when, back in pre-school days, we used to play with a big version of the magnetic desk toy. I loved that thing. At Wal-Mart, I saw three different styles of it. Letters, hex nuts, and little humanoid figures.

Ghosted by kingklash @ 12/09/2008 6:50 PM EST


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