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Accepting gifts, gracefully
Dear Hilka,
I have a friend who lives very far from my home. We communicate
only by letters. On my birthdays, he sends me gifts by post;
sometimes it is dressing material, sometimes a diary. I feel very
uncomfortable with this. I value him as a friend but how do I
tell him to stop sending me gifts without offending his feelings?
With warm regards,
Gifted
Dear Gifted,
HOW fortunate you are to have a friend who remembers your
birthday, let alone sends you gifts. However, I can understand
how those gifts can make you feel uncomfortable. Very often
others, with the best of intentions, send us gifts that create an
unwanted obligation or gifts that we do not like, cannot use,
can't afford to reciprocate or don't know what to give in return.
Telling others you do not want to receive their gifts, for
whatever reason, can be awkward. It has to be handled very gently
so that you do not offend them and jeopardise the friendship.
Thank your friend for his generosity and let him know how much
you appreciate his thoughtfulness in remembering your birthday
every year, because even if you don't appreciate the gift, you
can appreciate his thoughtfulness and generosity. Then explain
how you feel uncomfortable, obligated, unable to
reciprocate, or whatever else by receiving these gifts. Do
not, though, tell him you do not like his gifts or that his taste
leaves a great deal to be desired. Let him know that you would
appreciate it even more if he would give you the gift of not
sending a gift the next time. Don't forget to reiterate how much
you value his friendship and the correspondence you exchange.
Do not send the letter immediately. Wait a day or two to reread
it to make sure you have not been accusatory, insulting or
negative in any way.
Your friend may or may not adhere to your wishes immediately. You
may have to write one or two more gentle letters requesting that
he stop sending the gifts. If he continues to send them even
after two or three requests to stop, then accept his gifts
graciously and let the matter drop. My mother and I both have
friends like that, who, no matter how often you ask them not to
send gifts, continue to do so. Some people feel a compulsion to
give, and the most gracious thing we can do is to accept
gracefully.
Sincerely,
hilka-hindu@hotmail.com
HILKA KLINKENBERG
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