Happy
holidays! This is Amy Sorensen for Big Picture Scrapbooking,
telling you about my holiday class, called Gift of Words.
There's
this idea floating around out there about making holiday
gifts. Somehow, people think you'll spend way less money
on something if you make it yourself. Or that you'll
be less stressed because you won't have to visit store
after store.
For
those idealistic people, I have one word: wrong!
I've
discovered that, usually, making your gifts is just
as stressful as anything else. There was the year I
was up until 2:00 a.m. on Christmas morning, putting
the finishing touches on the coated-with-flowers picture
frames I made for my mom and mother-in-law. Or the time
I decided that my children absolutely needed a quilt
made by me, despite the fact that I had a new baby that
year and so hardly any time for actually making the
quilts, except for the rare midnight hours when said
baby was actually sleeping. Or the time I spent an entire
year working on an intricate counted cross stitch I
was certain to give to my sister. That half-finished
fiasco is still waiting to be finished, more than a
decade later!
And
then there's the cost. Have you been inside a fabric
store lately? Flannel is costly! As are scrapping supplies,
and woodworking supplies, and anything else that's crafty.
Yep: handmade gifts usually don't save you much money
either.
Still,
though, despite the stress and the cost, I still have
this deep-seated belief in a handmade gift. Maybe it's
because I haven't ever forgotten the year my grandma
gave me a pair of slippers she'd knitted herself, or
of how much I cherish the porcelain nativity set my
mother gave me fifteen years ago. A handmade gift just
seems to mean something more, because it's imbued with
the time, effort, and talent of the person who made
it.
Worth
the stress and the cost, yes. But honestly: a handmade
gift doesn't have to be either stressful or costly,
and that is what the Gift of Words is all about. Words
are the only thing I have discovered that are simple
and yet completely personalized and meaningful to give.
Plus: they're cheap!
Let
me explain. So often, we find ourselves searching for
the perfect gift for someone we love. Because we love
that person, we want the gift to say something to them
about how we feel about them. We try to put the language
of our emotions into an object. Sometimes it's even
a useful object. But when I really stop to think about
it, no one on my shopping list really needs anything.
We all have homes and food and clothing. And each other,
of course. Everything else is just extra. And while
those handmade gifts of years past probably do suggest
something about my feelings for the friends and family
I made them for, they can't really come out and say
it. And that's why words are what I love giving most.
My words-the way I feel about the people I love, the
things I want them to know. It's not letting things
tell someone how I feel about them. It's just opening
up and telling them.
If
you're ready to give something that really is a little
piece of you, this class is perfect. It's just two weeks,
so it'll fit easily into your rush of holiday preparation.
During week one, you'll learn how to quickly personalize
nearly every single Christmas card you send out. Because,
really: why go to all the effort of making or mailing
Christmas cards, when you simply write a bland "Happy
Holidays" inside of it? With the techniques I've
developed, you'll be able to write something with substance
in just a few seconds, in every card you mail out.
During
week two, we'll go about learning how to write word
gifts. What's a word gift? Think of it as a sort of
reunion with the lost art of writing letters. Only more
valuable. It is a way of giving of yourself, of truly
making something that comes right from your heart.
Plus
there are all the goodies that Big Picture is known
for, like reminder emails, downloadable audio, fantastic
handouts. And you won't want to miss the bonus-and completely
optional-downloads. One's full of techniques you can
use to improve your writing. The other is brimming with
creative ideas for your Christmas letter that will help
you get past your usual way of doing it.
I
hope you'll find time during your busy holiday schedule
to join me for The Gift of Words. You'll find yourself
less stressed about finding or making the perfect gift
and devoted to the idea of the word gift. See you in
December!