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Christmas Gifts for Toddlers: How to Enjoy Them for Days Instead of Minutes

  • Posted on March 5, 2010 at 2:08 pm

When I go to the toy store or Wal-Mart with my three years I know exactly what he will say. “Oh,” he’ll exclaim with a mixture of excitement and surprise. “I want for Christmas!” What boy toddler does not want a new train, truck, race car or jet fighter? It’s a safe guess your toddler has a long list too. The question is how parents can make the last Christmas? How can you help your child enjoy and appreciate his new things for many days instead of five minutes of fame? Here are some ideas that have worked for us and our friends: 1. Enjoy 12 days of Christmas. Did you this pile of grandma, grandpa, aunts and uncles? Or maybe you bought this 5 or 6 for Junior yourself. Try to start Christmas December 13 and allow your toddler to open one present each day until Christmas. This will spread the excitement and allow your toddler enjoy each gift. Why have just one day of Christmas, when you can have twelve? Now, many of us do not have enough gifts stacked so as to begin to open on December 13. Try to open one gift per day effective December 20, or one that just opened on Christmas Eve, most of the gifts on Christmas day, and record a gift for the new year. The idea is to spread the joy of Christmas. 2. If you’re traveling, open some gifts before and after your trip. If you head towards the house of grandmother, the last thing you want to do is load your bag already packed with new bike for your child. You can open your gifts at home before or after. It is always fun to save a gift to the house so when you need encouragement for your child to perform well during the trip by plane something, you have to offer. 3. Do something special for someone else. Teach your child to give gifts to less fortunate so that it can be more grateful for the avalanche of things he will receive. This year, our family has filled a shoebox filled with toys for Operation Christmas Child, a ministry of Samaritan’s Purse. This shoe box will be delivered to a boy who may live in the slums of Calcutta, or an orphanage in Johannesburg. Your child will remember the shoe box and begin to understand that there are many children around the world that has very little. 4. Re-gift! Find a forgotten toy in the house, something that your toddler used to love playing with six months ago. Wrap It Up, and give him again. You’ll be amazed how much fun he’ll have with her long lost friend or toy. Your child will have a Christmas to remember as you try these gift ideas!

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