Is it for people who can write it off or people like me that know what it is like to go without
I look forward to the angel tree every year dh thinks I am depriving people of big corporations the opportunity for a tax right off but as selfish as it sounds I want to give because that is what Christmas is about
I look forward to the angel tree every year dh thinks I am depriving people of big corporations the opportunity for a tax right off but as selfish as it sounds I want to give because that is what Christmas is about
Is the Angel Tree project where you live an "adopt a family" type of thing or just take a tag and buy a gift? If it's the former, they usually have a minimum-spend guideline for an entire family that's (at least here last year) about $500 and includes a specific wish list for every member of the family as well as groceries and household necessities. In my opinion, it would be wrong to commit to a family without being willing and able to spend at least the minimum.
We sponsored a family through church a few years ago; I totally know what you mean. It turned out to be an "us or them" situation for us and while we took great joy in giving, it required a choice to go without ourselves that year. The program stopped during Covid and turned into just cash donations and the church distributing gift cards to the needy so they could acquire what they wanted. I also love giving to the charities that have catalogues of sustenance items going to families in the third-world. I usually go for the infant-and-child-nutrition packs (powdered milk and vitamin supplements) but one time we bought a goat.
The gift that keeps on giving!!