Happier Holidays: How to Give and Receive the Perfect Gift
Dr. Laurie Santos hosts happiness experts Dr. Jamil Zaki, Dr. Liz Dunn, and Dr. Nick Epley to discuss science-backed strategies for a happier, less stressful holiday season. They focus on transforming gift-giving and receiving into a source of joy and strengthening relationships.
Deep Dive Analysis
15 Topic Outline
Introduction to Holiday Gift-Giving Stress
Misunderstandings in Gift-Giving Psychology
Maximizing the Giver's Joy from Gifts
Improving the Experience of Giving and Receiving Money
Psychological Foundations of Giver's Pleasure: Connection and Competency
The Importance of Being a Good Gift Recipient
Happiness-Promoting Gifts: Time and Experiences
Extending Happiness through Segregated Gifts and Anticipation
The Undervalued Role of Cards and Letters in Gift-Giving
The Power of Compliments and Compliment Calendars
Time-Saving Purchases as Thoughtful Gifts
The Impact of Gifts on Romantic Relationships
Strategies for Choosing the Right Gift: Asking and Listening
Enhancing Recipient Behavior: Clarifying Preferences and Expressing Gratitude
Gifts that Foster Strong Social Relationships
6 Key Concepts
Egocentric Bias in Gift-Giving
Givers often assume recipients value the thought, time, and effort put into a gift as much as the giver does. However, recipients primarily evaluate the gift itself, leading to a mismatch in perceived value and potential disappointment.
Joy of Giving
The pleasure derived from giving is significantly enhanced when the giver can directly witness the positive impact their gift has on the recipient. This allows the giver to feel closer to the recipient and competent in their ability to make others happy.
Relational Needs and Competency
Pro-social actions like gift-giving satisfy two core psychological needs for the giver: drawing closer to others (relational needs) and feeling effective in their actions (competency). Seeing a recipient's appreciation fulfills both of these.
Happiness and Scope Insensitivity
Positive mood tends to respond more to the frequency of positive events rather than their intensity. A small, frequent positive event can generate as much happiness as a large, singular one, suggesting that spreading out positive experiences can maximize overall well-being.
Deadweight Loss of Christmas
An economic concept suggesting that a significant amount of economic value is lost during Christmas gift-giving because givers often spend more money on gifts than recipients would value those gifts. This highlights a mismatch between giver intent and recipient satisfaction.
Perspective Getting
This refers to the active process of seeking and extracting another person's perspective by asking questions and listening carefully, rather than merely attempting to simulate their perspective (perspective taking). It is a more reliable way to understand what someone truly wants or feels.
9 Questions Answered
People often misunderstand gift-giving due to an egocentric bias, where givers assume recipients value the thought and effort put into a gift as much as the giver does, while recipients primarily value the gift itself.
Givers can maximize their joy by seeing the positive impact their gift has on the recipient, such as being present when they open it or receiving feedback on how they used and enjoyed it.
If giving money, the recipient can enhance the giver's joy by using it for something specific and sharing a photo or story of them enjoying it, making the monetary gift feel more personal and impactful.
Gifts of time, such as offering to babysit or complete a dreaded task, and experiences, like a shared activity or a future event, tend to promote more happiness than material possessions.
Happiness can be extended by giving gifts that can be experienced in the future or spread out over time, allowing for anticipation and separate boosts of positive mood rather than a single intense moment.
Cards are crucial because they allow givers to express their thoughts and appreciation, which can be the most rewarding part for the recipient, especially when online gift notes have restrictive character limits.
Recipients can contribute by clarifying their preferences (dropping hints), showing how they use and enjoy gifts, and expressing genuine gratitude, which makes the giver feel competent and connected.
The most effective way is to directly ask the recipient what they would like, or subtly probe their interests by asking what they've enjoyed recently, and then listen carefully to their responses.
A bad gift can call into question the giver's understanding of the recipient and their perceived similarities, potentially harming the relationship by making the recipient feel misunderstood or unappreciated.
20 Actionable Insights
1. Give Shared Experiences
Give gifts that involve co-experiencing something together, like reading a book simultaneously and discussing it weekly, to foster social connection and shared joy, especially when physical distance is a factor.
2. Segregate Gifts Across Time
Give experiences that can be enjoyed in the future (e.g., tickets to a show or a restaurant reservation) to spread out holiday cheer, allowing recipients to anticipate and then experience the joy separately, extending happiness.
3. Give Time-Saving Services
Offer time-saving services (e.g., babysitting, gift wrapping, or completing a dreaded task) as gifts, as recipients often feel guilty buying these for themselves, and receiving them as a gift removes that guilt, allowing them to experience the joy.
4. Write Thoughtful Cards/Letters
Write a thoughtful card or letter with your gift, as it allows you to express appreciation for the recipient, which they value, and can be more rewarding than the physical gift itself, especially when online gift notes have character limits.
5. Ask Directly What They Want
Ask recipients directly what they want for a gift and listen to their answer, as this ensures they receive something they truly like and reduces the difficulty of guessing, even if it feels unromantic.
6. Practice ‘Perspective Getting’
Subtly ask people about recent fun experiences or things they enjoy, then use that information to choose a thoughtful gift, rather than relying solely on your own assumptions about their preferences.
7. Be a Good Gift Recipient
Recognize that choosing gifts is difficult and givers often try their best; practice forgiveness if a gift is not ideal, as this can significantly enhance the giver’s experience and protect the relationship.
8. Show Givers How You Use Gifts
As a recipient, make the giver feel great by showing them how you actually use their gift, especially money or experiences, to validate their effort and boost their sense of competency and joy.
9. Drop Clear Hints as Recipient
As a potential recipient, drop clear hints about what you like or might like to help loved ones choose good gifts and unburden them from guessing or having to ask directly.
10. Express Positive Gratitude
Express positive gratitude to givers for their gifts, as this boosts well-being for both parties and ensures that appreciation doesn’t get lost in the holiday rush.
11. Implement Gratitude Letter Rule
For children, implement a rule where they must stop and write a gratitude letter for a present before opening another or playing with the new toy, which ensures thank-you cards get done and encourages reflection.
12. Create a Compliment Calendar
Create a ‘compliment calendar’ for loved ones by writing a series of daily compliments or things you appreciate about them, rolling them up, and having them open one each day to extend positive feelings and share unspoken appreciation.
13. Practice Silent Compliments
For families with fraught dynamics, practice ‘silent compliments’ by thinking something nice about a person without verbalizing it, as simply knowing someone is thinking positively about you can feel surprisingly good.
14. Focus on Shared Interests
When choosing gifts, focus on what you have in common with the recipient, as this can help you make a better choice and reduce the ’egocentric gap’ in understanding their preferences.
15. Foster Social Relationships
When unsure what to give, consider gifts that foster quality social relationships, especially during challenging times, such as creating a space for safe social contact.
16. Embrace the Joy of Giving
Actively embrace the good feeling that comes from doing nice things for others, as the act of giving itself creates positive value for the giver.
17. Focus on Recipient’s Liking
Prioritize what the recipient will actually like and appreciate in a gift, rather than solely focusing on the thought or effort you put into it, which the recipient cannot see.
18. See Recipients Open Gifts
If you can’t be with your recipient when they open their gift, try to connect via Zoom or video call to see their reaction, as witnessing their positive impact promotes the joy of giving for you.
19. Give Money for Autonomy
Consider giving money as a gift to grant recipients the autonomy to use it on whatever would make them happiest, especially when you are unsure of their specific preferences.
20. Follow Up on Money Gifts
As a giver of money, follow up with the recipient to see how they spent it and if they enjoyed it, to get an extra well-being boost from noticing their positive experience.
8 Key Quotes
We assume that other people value the thought we put into a gift. And mostly we as gift-givers value the thought we put into a gift.
Nick Epley
Emotions are nothing but signals that you have achieved a goal that you value.
Nick Epley
Happiness responds to the frequency of positive events, not the intensity of them.
Nick Epley
Anticipation is in general a way to extend happiness and wellbeing, but gosh, I mean, right now, I think many of us really need things to look forward to.
Jamil Zaki
Other people appreciate your thoughts when you reveal those thoughts to other people.
Nick Epley
It's just very hard to know what's on the mind of another person. It's just shockingly hard.
Nick Epley
The only thing that we find allows you to understand what's on the mind of another person is to ask them and then to listen.
Nick Epley
We don't think enough about how we can be better at being understood. Can we clarify our perspective more? Can we verbalize it more?
Jamil Zaki
3 Protocols
Maximizing Giver's Joy from Monetary Gifts
Liz Dunn- Get the money out in cash.
- Use it for something very specific.
- Send the giver a photo of you enjoying it.
Family Compliment Calendar
Nick Epley- Write a series of compliments (things you're grateful for, things you like) to each family member.
- Roll them up into a ring and staple them together to create a chain.
- Open one compliment each day to get something nice a family member thought about you.
Gratitude Letter Protocol for Children
Laurie Santos (describing Tim Hartford's practice)- After opening a present, stop.
- Write a gratitude letter for that present.
- Only then can the child open another present or play with the first one.