It all started the very first year I got my drivers’ license.
I did my Christmas shopping on my own for the very first time. I drove to the local shopping centre, parked my car, bought some stuff and returned to my car. Except my car was not there. My car, as far as I could tell, was not anywhere.
If you, too, have ever had to sit outside McDonalds for four hours wondering whether Santa spirited your car away in some kind of Christmas prank and waiting for the other cars to leave so that you could perhaps locate your own by a process of elimination, you’ll know that I did not have a good day. I may have cried a little into my cheeseburger.
Okay, I ate six cheeseburgers, and I cried into all of them. A lot.
The good news is, I found my car (eventually). The bad news is, I’ve never gotten over it. And I never will. Because somehow, every year, Christmas shopping seems to get EVEN WORSE. Especially if, like me, you leave it to the last moment.
There are three distinct stages of Christmas shopping horror. I hate all of them, and I can only assume that every other sane person does too.
WHERE WILL I PARK?
Before I even venture inside to the shops where they sell the things that will bring me closer to the ultimate goal of leaving the godforsaken place, I have to find a park. The rules of Christmas parking go like this: if you don’t want to drive around in circles for hours on end, you have to follow an unsuspecting shopper back to their vehicle, which I can only imagine makes them very uncomfortable.
I want to shout out the window ‘Just following you for your parking spot! I swear I’m not a serial killer!’ But that’s just what a serial killer would say. I swear, you cannot win with Christmas shopping.
I often get really uncomfortable and chicken out from this low-speed chase at the very last second, at which point a soccer mum in a mini-van invariably swoops in and steals the spot that was rightfully mine. Eventually I stalk someone to the bitter end, and they jump on their motorbike. That’s just the way Christmas shopping goes for me.
Top Comments
I have always shopped at the last minute. Either late night 23rd or 24th early. I just got home from this years shop. I have 15 to buy for I have something they will all like and I spent around $30 on everyone. Done and dusted. No muss, no fuss. Aaaaaaannd as I have an mark apartment no need to find space for gifts if I was to shop so early. I plan my gifts in my head and then I just do it.
I have two small children so adding them to a XMAS shopping trip would see me being a bad mummy and making them sit in the corner of the pub while I down vodka.
I did almost entirely online this year, I can do awesome things late at night with a credit card and an iPad :)