• Merry Christmas

SASJAM

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MMC Member
Hello to All!
I am the mother of four children and Christmas has always been a great time for us to be together. We draw numbers to see the opening order of the gifts then everyone watches as we take turns opening the gifts. This always makes the gift opening last longer and since we clean up the paper after each gift is opened, we don't risk something being thrown away as happened to me one Christmas at my grandmother's house. I enjoy adding to my kids suspense as to which gifts are theirs because I code the gifts. I do not put names on the gifts. Instead I create a unique code that keeps them guessing as to which gift is theirs. I am having trouble creating a code this year so I would like some suggestions. Examples I have used in the past: bows that matched the color of their soccer teams, a different paper for each child with something on the paper that depicted what they had accomplished that year (Santa in his sleigh driving his reindeer for my son who had his driving permit etc.), the first letter of their teachers last name. As they have grown, the codes became harder: using an alphabet/number code to add the letters in their name and continuing to add the digits until it was a single digit. I gave them a clue sheet for this one. This one took some time for them to figure out. They all seemed to get frustrated with it so I told them I would not use codes again. The next year, I put the correct names on the gifts, and the kids were disappointed there was not a code to solve. I have used a quater, dime, nickle, and penny then added the value of the coins along with the year on each coin. I again reduced the number to a single digit. For this code, I gave the kids the bag of coins I had used for their gifts and they had to figure it out. I am totally stumped as to how I should do the gifts this year. Does anyone do something like this? I would appreciate any suggestions on a code I can use this year. My kids are 21, 19, 17, and 14. :gift:
 
Hello to All!
I am the mother of four children and Christmas has always been a great time for us to be together. We draw numbers to see the opening order of the gifts then everyone watches as we take turns opening the gifts. This always makes the gift opening last longer and since we clean up the paper after each gift is opened, we don't risk something being thrown away as happened to me one Christmas at my grandmother's house. I enjoy adding to my kids suspense as to which gifts are theirs because I code the gifts. I do not put names on the gifts. Instead I create a unique code that keeps them guessing as to which gift is theirs. I am having trouble creating a code this year so I would like some suggestions. Examples I have used in the past: bows that matched the color of their soccer teams, a different paper for each child with something on the paper that depicted what they had accomplished that year (Santa in his sleigh driving his reindeer for my son who had his driving permit etc.), the first letter of their teachers last name. As they have grown, the codes became harder: using an alphabet/number code to add the letters in their name and continuing to add the digits until it was a single digit. I gave them a clue sheet for this one. This one took some time for them to figure out. They all seemed to get frustrated with it so I told them I would not use codes again. The next year, I put the correct names on the gifts, and the kids were disappointed there was not a code to solve. I have used a quater, dime, nickle, and penny then added the value of the coins along with the year on each coin. I again reduced the number to a single digit. For this code, I gave the kids the bag of coins I had used for their gifts and they had to figure it out. I am totally stumped as to how I should do the gifts this year. Does anyone do something like this? I would appreciate any suggestions on a code I can use this year. My kids are 21, 19, 17, and 14. :gift:

Hi and welcome to MMC, SASJAM! You will love this place!

I love your idea, but I don't have any suggestions for you. My kids are 2 and 4 months. Even if they were old enough to do this, I don't think I would be creative enough to do this. Google it. The interent has EVERYTHING! I think it's really neat you do this though. Sorry I don't have a better answer!
 
Hello and welcome! :hi:

For the code---maybe something like the child's birthdate plus 25 (for December 25th), or plus 12 (for the 12 days of Christmas)? You could do all sorts of numerical "riffs" on the birthdates.
 
Howdy & Welcome, SASJAM!

Perhaps symbols of your children's interests could be codes.
 
What a great idea! I could see using favorite Disney/cartoon character names; titles of Christmas carols; names of favorite sports teams, or movie/literary characters; reusing some of your previous name codes, only using middle names instead...
 
Hello & Welcome, SASJAM! :merry:
 
Hello to All!
I am the mother of four children and Christmas has always been a great time for us to be together. We draw numbers to see the opening order of the gifts then everyone watches as we take turns opening the gifts. This always makes the gift opening last longer and since we clean up the paper after each gift is opened, we don't risk something being thrown away as happened to me one Christmas at my grandmother's house. I enjoy adding to my kids suspense as to which gifts are theirs because I code the gifts. I do not put names on the gifts. Instead I create a unique code that keeps them guessing as to which gift is theirs. I am having trouble creating a code this year so I would like some suggestions. Examples I have used in the past: bows that matched the color of their soccer teams, a different paper for each child with something on the paper that depicted what they had accomplished that year (Santa in his sleigh driving his reindeer for my son who had his driving permit etc.), the first letter of their teachers last name. As they have grown, the codes became harder: using an alphabet/number code to add the letters in their name and continuing to add the digits until it was a single digit. I gave them a clue sheet for this one. This one took some time for them to figure out. They all seemed to get frustrated with it so I told them I would not use codes again. The next year, I put the correct names on the gifts, and the kids were disappointed there was not a code to solve. I have used a quater, dime, nickle, and penny then added the value of the coins along with the year on each coin. I again reduced the number to a single digit. For this code, I gave the kids the bag of coins I had used for their gifts and they had to figure it out. I am totally stumped as to how I should do the gifts this year. Does anyone do something like this? I would appreciate any suggestions on a code I can use this year. My kids are 21, 19, 17, and 14. :gift:
put their names on them, only the one for greoge is really for mary and the one for mary is really for anne and the one for anne is really for henry. (does
welcome20.gif
that make even a bit of sense?)
 
Welcome, SASJAM!
 
Welcome to MMC!

I have coded my kids presents before using some of your methods and some of my own. I have done a wrapping paper for each child, a color, a character, or a Christmas shape (snowflake, stocking, snowman, tree, etc.) and I have even done numbers. I took all the numbers in their birthdate, added them together and marked each of their presents with that number. I started doing codes because after years of using a wrapping paper per child; I had a bunch of leftover odds and ends I wanted to use up. So, the next couple of years I used codes until I used up a lot of odd paper.

In our tradition, the kids don't have to figure out the code. But, just for fun we have them try to guess which group of presents belong to them. They were stumped when there was a lot of mismatched wrapping paper. So, I had to tell them that there were a group of presents that all had the number 14 somewhere on them; and another group that had 27 and another that had 112; they each tried to guess which number was theirs. Then, I told them to add together all the digits in their birthdate to get their correct number.
 
Welcome to MMC, SASJAM! cheesy

The code idea is neat, but I can't come up with any better suggestions than have already been offered. Have a great Christmas!
 
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