Holidays,
People!
RETRORATING: 16
RETRORATING: 19
CONTEST WINNER!
- HOME
- YOUTUBE
- ARTICLES
- VIDEOS
- THEATER
- CLASSIFIEDS
- VHS COVERS
- CEREAL BOXES
- GAME BOX ART
- READ ALONGS
- PODCASTS
- FORUM
- FAQ
- POINTS STORE
Don't mess
with the bull.
JOIN!!!
A Mature Gift Exchange
(not the actual scrunchie)
In my fifth grade class, we had another gift exchange. I was weary of it after the fourth grade one. However, I was at a different school this time, so I decided to give it a chance.
So, my dad took me to
the mall after school. We went to the Disney Store and picked out a Donald Duck
stationary set. It was so nice I wanted to keep it for myself! When we passed the Kay
Bee Toys on our way out, I noticed that fashion dolls were on sale.
We wrapped up the gift, and I took it to school in the morning. Bbefore class, the girls were talking about the kinds of gifts they brought. My friend joined in on the conversation, and held up her gift wrapped in Peppermint Rose wrapping paper. She had a sheepish look on her face. Judging by the shape and size of the box, we all knew what it was; a Barbie. Then I remembered I had seen them on sale in the Kay Bee Toys at the mall the night before.
When we had the
gift exchange we played a game to exchange the gifts. It wasn’t numbers picked
at random. We played a Hot Potato like game. None of the other girls wanted the
doll. While we were playing the game they whispered to me meanly, “Take the
doll!” At first I was confused and offended. Out of all the girls in my class I
was apparently viewed as the most immature one. They based this on some of the other immature things
I did; liking Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, having a
strange sense of humor, taking bad photos (not being photogenic), wearing childish
clothes, not being concerned about my appearance, playing with toys in general,
drawing cartoons, and eating weird sandwiches. I think I was the only girl in my class who still
played with Barbies, or at least admitted to playing with them.
After I thought
about it, I concluded that a Barbie wouldn’t be such a bad gift. At least it beat a homemade
scrunchie. So after much contemplation and hesitation, I took it. The other
girls were more interested in “mature” gifts like jewelry and perfume. When I
opened the present it wasn’t just any Barbie, but Princess Jasmine Water Jewel
Magic doll!
She would go perfectly with my other two Disney Princess dolls, Belle and Ariel! She would also go with my two beach themed dolls, Sun Sensation Barbie and Hawaiian Fun Ken. I was happy with it. I’m not sure if I would have enjoyed some jewelry or perfume that much. I wasn’t into those things back then, and I’m really not into them now. One of my other friends got the stationary set. After the exchange, the girls who got jewelry were wearing it.
I gotta say that
the boys seemed to give better gifts. Somebody gave a mini pool table, the kind
that are low to the ground and are about two to three feet wide. I could have
played mini pool with my dad.
After all these years, I still have the doll. Her neck has some problems, and she is a little beat up. A few years later, in 1996, I fashioned her a crude Sailor Mars outfit (I used to play Sailor Moon with my Barbies before I had some official Sailor Moon dolls).
I thought the jewel on
her bathing suit looked like jewel that the Sailors have on their bows. That
made her a perfect candidate.
My gift exchange record ended at 1-1.
Hoju Koolander Posted on Dec 14, 2015 at 05:55 AM
At my work Gift Exchange the only thing offered seems to be various bottles of booze, so I really miss the days when an action figure or Ace of Base CD could be up for grabs. This was a very fun story and the fact that you made your own Sailor Moon costumes is awesome. I used to do the same thing for my Spider-Man toys, building him armor and doing re-paints.
MarshMellow Posted on Dec 11, 2015 at 03:38 AM
I would have loved to receive a Jasmine doll in my class's gift exchange. For some reason we had a "random household item" gift exchange in fourth grade, and I ended up with a dishrag.
Vaporman87 Posted on Dec 11, 2015 at 01:25 AM
This reminds me of a bad experience in our fourth grade gift exchange. I received a heavily used Star Wars figure wrapped in newspaper and sealed in a cardboard box ( no wrapping paper ). It came from one of the less fortunate students in the class. But me being a spoiled little 10 year old, I took it upon myself to cry about it.
Looking back on it now, I cringe and hate myself for my reaction. I guess I had witnessed my friends and others getting these nice new gifts, and felt cheated.
pikachulover Posted on Dec 10, 2015 at 07:13 PM
That sounds like a really fun play set. And thanks.
mickyarber Posted on Dec 10, 2015 at 06:06 PM
I used to love those Christmas parties at school with the gift exchanges. I can remember a couple of things I got from them.
Probably the coolest thing I got was a Fall Guy playset. It was a truck that you pulled back and let go and it would run on it's own. It came with a Lee Majors figure in a pose with his arms up in the air, and it also came with, I think, a traffic light.
You would put Lee Majors standing in the back of the truck, and run it towards the traffic light. When it went under it, the figures hands would grab the pole and hang on while the truck kept going.
It was a really well designed toy that really fit the theme of the Fall Guy show, where Lee played a Hollywood stunt man.
Fun article.
I am a kid of divorced parents. One of the benefits at least to my juvenile mind was that when my twin brother and I visited dad every other weekend t...
(Writer's note: Text format may look odd, but that is because of the method I had to use to get the article back, I also fixed some grammar errors and...
“Cheers” is a show that’s been with me for a long time. Back in the early nineties before we were wired with cable, “Cheers” repeats played ...
The Shadow, a 1994 adventure film starring Alec Baldwin was a special effects extravaganza produced by Universal Studios that did not pay-off. It's no...
Old comic books often act as a time capsule. They’re full of advertisements of products from long ago. Some are still with us, while oth...