Libmonster ID: ID-1694

How Often to Give Gifts to a Child During the Christmas Season: Tradition, Psychology, and Modern Challenges

Introduction: The Calendar of Gift-Giving in a Multicultural World

The Christmas season, extending from Advent (four weeks before Christmas) to Epiphany (January 6) in Western tradition or the New Year's holidays (January 7-19) in Orthodox tradition, creates a complex "schedule" of possible gift-giving. The frequency and rhythm of gifts to a child during this time is not just a domestic issue but a problem at the intersection of cultural traditions, child psychology, family values, and commercial pressure. A scientific approach requires analyzing these aspects to avoid extremes — from devaluing the gift through overpayment to frustrating the child due to its absence.

Historical-Cultural Models: From One Gift to an "Advent Calendar"

Classical model: one main gift. Historically (in Europe and pre-revolutionary Russia), the Christmas gift was the only significant event of the year, often practical (clothing, footwear) with the addition of a small toy or sweets. It symbolized the culmination of a long period of anticipation and fasting, which enhanced its value. This model, reflected in literature (for example, the dream of a wooden horse or a doll), built the child's understanding of the hierarchy of values and deferred reward.

The "Santa Claus - Christmas - New Year" model (Central and Eastern Europe). In countries where Saint Nicholas is revered (December 6/19), a three-phase period has been established:

Day of St. Nicholas: Small, often symbolic or sweet gifts in a shoe or sock. Function — to encourage good behavior, to start the festive mood.

Christmas (December 24-25 / January 6-7): The main, often the most expensive and awaited gift, associated with the religious meaning of the holiday.

New Year (December 31 / January 13): More secular, "entertaining" gift, sometimes from another character (Grandfather Frost).
This model sets the rhythm of escalation and culmination, involving the child in distinguishing the levels of significance of events.

The Advent calendar as a model of micro-giving. The widespread tradition of the Advent calendar in Germany and its global spread offers the daily presentation of a micro-gift (chocolate, a small toy, a note with a good deed) for 24 days in December. This is a psychologically effective technique: it structures the time of anticipation, reduces anxiety, and creates daily positive reinforcement. However, it risks shifting the focus from spiritual preparation to consumer enthusiasm.

"Twelve Days of Christmas" (from December 25 to January 5). In Western tradition, reflected in the song of the same name, theoretically implies the giving of small presents each of the twelve days. In practice, this is a rare and more symbolic model for a narrow family circle, emphasizing the duration of the holiday.

Psychological Aspects: What Does Science Say?

Effect of devaluation (saturation): Neuroscientific research shows that a constant stream of gifts leads to a decrease in the feeling of joy and gratitude. The dopamine system, responsible for anticipation and reward, stops reacting acutely. The child stops valuing individual gifts, perceiving them as a given.

Formation of materialistic attitudes: Research (such as the work of psychologist Marsha Richins) indicates a correlation between a large number of gifts and the growth of materialistic values in children at the expense of internal ones (curiosity, relationships).

The importance of anticipation and anticipation: The period of anticipation, if filled with meaningful rituals (decorating the house, cooking, reading stories), is not less important for the development of emotional intelligence and imagination than the moment of receiving. Extended gift-giving "kills" this anticipation.

The "Four Gifts Rule": A popular recommendation among modern psychologists suggests giving a child on the holiday:

Something necessary (clothing, hobbies items).

Something to read.

Something desired (a dream toy).

Something "to take away" (for experience: tickets to the theater, a trip).
This structure helps limit the number but increase the significance of each gift.

Modern challenges: commerce, grandparents, and social pressure
Industry pressure: Advertising and marketing create the illusion that "love is measured by the number of gifts." Parents often feel guilty if they cannot provide a "mountain" of gifts and compensate for this with quantity.

"Problem of multiple sources": In an extended family, gifts may pour in from parents, two sets of grandparents, godparents, friends. Without common agreement, this leads to an avalanche. The solution is open communication in the family about the budget and priorities.

Cultural code and identity: In multicultural or interconfessional families, the question "which Santa do we expect and when?" requires a thoughtful decision that will help the child build his own identity.

Practical Recommendations: Building an Conscious Tradition

Determine the "main holiday" of the family. What is the culmination: Christmas, New Year, Epiphany? Focus the main resources and attention on it.

Use the calendar of anticipation meaningfully. The Advent calendar can contain not goods, but "activity tags" ("today we bake cookies", "we play a board game", "we go for a winter walk with a lantern"). This shifts the focus from consumption to shared experience.

Introduce the rule "one giver — one significant gift". Discuss this with relatives. Quality is more important than quantity.

Observe a balance between "desired" and "developing". A gift can and should take into account the child's interests, but does not have to be exclusively entertaining. A tool for creativity, a scientific set, a quality book are also gifts.

Consider the age. For children aged 2-4, an abundance of gifts creates a sensory and emotional overload. One or two, handed over in a calm environment, are enough. A teenager may value one, but carefully chosen gadget or a ticket to a concert of a favorite band, more than several small ones.

Conclusion: Gift-Giving as the Art of Creating Meaning

There is no ideal formula for frequency. The key is awareness and ritual. The frequency of gift-giving during the Christmas season should not lull joy with consumption but awaken it with anticipation, enhance it with culmination, and extend it with warm memories.

The optimal model appears to be a combination of anticipation (through symbolic details like the Advent calendar or "Santa Claus letters") and culmination in the form of one or two significant, thought-out gifts on the main day of the holiday. This preserves the magic, does not blur it, and teaches the child to value not only the object itself but also the context: family unity, tradition, and the special, extended-time joy that distinguishes the holiday from an ordinary shopping trip. Ultimately, the most valuable gift during the Christmas season is not the number of boxes under the tree, but the quality of time spent together and the feeling of wonder that arises not from abundance, but from depth and sincerity of the family ritual.


© library.tz

Permanent link to this publication:

https://library.tz/m/articles/view/How-often-to-give-a-child-gifts-during-the-Christmas-period

Similar publications: L_country2 LWorld Y G


Publisher:

Tanzania OnlineContacts and other materials (articles, photo, files etc)

Author's official page at Libmonster: https://library.tz/Libmonster

Find other author's materials at: Libmonster (all the World)GoogleYandex

Permanent link for scientific papers (for citations):

How often to give a child gifts during the Christmas period // Dodoma: Tanzania (LIBRARY.TZ). Updated: 18.12.2025. URL: https://library.tz/m/articles/view/How-often-to-give-a-child-gifts-during-the-Christmas-period (date of access: 07.02.2026).

Comments:



Reviews of professional authors
Order by: 
Per page: 
 
  • There are no comments yet
Related topics
Publisher
Tanzania Online
Dodoma, Tanzania
42 views rating
18.12.2025 (51 days ago)
0 subscribers
Rating
0 votes
Related Articles
Gift Day ceremony in the UK
37 days ago · From Tanzania Online
Gifts from Santa Claus
51 days ago · From Tanzania Online
What gifts do modern children like from Santa Claus?
64 days ago · From Tanzania Online

New publications:

Popular with readers:

News from other countries:

LIBRARY.TZ - Tanzanian Digital Library

Create your author's collection of articles, books, author's works, biographies, photographic documents, files. Save forever your author's legacy in digital form. Click here to register as an author.
Library Partners

How often to give a child gifts during the Christmas period
 

Editorial Contacts
Chat for Authors: TZ LIVE: We are in social networks:

About · News · For Advertisers

Digital Library of Tanzania ® All rights reserved.
2023-2026, LIBRARY.TZ is a part of Libmonster, international library network (open map)
Preserving Tanzania's heritage


LIBMONSTER NETWORK ONE WORLD - ONE LIBRARY

US-Great Britain Sweden Serbia
Russia Belarus Ukraine Kazakhstan Moldova Tajikistan Estonia Russia-2 Belarus-2

Create and store your author's collection at Libmonster: articles, books, studies. Libmonster will spread your heritage all over the world (through a network of affiliates, partner libraries, search engines, social networks). You will be able to share a link to your profile with colleagues, students, readers and other interested parties, in order to acquaint them with your copyright heritage. Once you register, you have more than 100 tools at your disposal to build your own author collection. It's free: it was, it is, and it always will be.

Download app for Android