When Holiday Traditions Cost More Than Your Sanity
Sometimes a financial advice call isn't really about the money. Take Dale, who recently phoned "The Ramsey Show" with what sounded like a straightforward Christmas budget problem but turned into something far more entertaining.
Dale and his wife have been married 15 years and pull in a comfortable $210,000 annually. Sounds good, right? Except his wife comes from a family with holiday traditions that have spiraled into something resembling a small retail operation.
Here's where it gets weird. "We each get a book from Santa, like a children's Christmas book," Dale explained to hosts Dave Ramsey and Rachel Cruze. "And there's about 12 of us." Each book runs about $30, totaling $360. The kicker? "We look at them for like 20 seconds and then they just go away," he admitted.
Ramsey couldn't let that slide. "I don't understand why these adults are getting children's books? Once you're 40, you don't really need a children's book."
But wait, there's more. The family also does elaborate stockings to the tune of $1,200. Add in regular gifts, and the grand total surges past $6,000. The tradition encompasses the wife's father, sister, nieces, and even a great-grandchild, complete with handwritten notes from "Santa."
The Real Problem Isn't The Price Tag
When Ramsey pressed Dale on why this mattered so much, the answer revealed the emotional weight behind the spending. "My wife was really big on her grandparents. She has fond memories of Christmas at their house... she just wants to continue those traditions," Dale explained.
Here's where Ramsey surprised everyone. He pointed out that $6,000 represents roughly 1.5% of their annual income. "This is not that big a deal," he said. The actual problem? Zero budgeting discipline and apparently no meaningful conversations about money management.
Ramsey offered a simpler approach that his own family uses. "We draw names," he shared, describing how his family of 16 adapted to avoid the madness. "Everybody buying every adult something got out of hand and it just was dumb."
The suggestion makes sense. You can preserve the spirit of holiday traditions without turning December into a second mortgage payment. Drawing names means each person buys one thoughtful gift instead of twelve mediocre ones that get glanced at for 20 seconds.
Setting Boundaries Without Killing Joy
The deeper lesson here goes beyond Christmas budgeting. No holiday gift should cost you your peace of mind. If a relationship depends on what you spend on someone for Christmas, that reveals something fundamental about the relationship itself.
Ramsey's advice boils down to a simple principle: make a plan when you're calm and stick with it. That's budgeting in its purest form. The goal isn't to eliminate joy or tradition—it's to ensure you're not financing sentimentality with stress and resentment.
Dale's household earns enough to afford their current approach, technically speaking. But affordability doesn't equal wisdom. The fact that he called a financial advice show suggests the spending pattern bothers him enough to seek outside perspective.
Perhaps the real gift this season would be an honest conversation between Dale and his wife about which traditions truly matter and which ones have become expensive autopilot habits. Because nothing says holiday spirit quite like opening a $30 children's book you'll stare at for 20 seconds before storing it away forever.