what kind of presents do you like and why what are the things you keep in mind when you buy a present for the right in 150 words
Answers
Answer:
For me, intention is everything.
Getting a present is almost always good, because it shows that to somebody has wanted to do something to please me and has been willing to give up something of their own (time, money…) to do it. It’s nice to think that somebody feels that way about me, and I don’t care what the present is or how much it cost — it really is the thought that counts.
I don’t celebrate Christmas or birthdays, so most gifts I receive are unexpected, which instantly improves them. The one exception to this is our wedding anniversary, where I’ve given my wife one rule: don’t get me anything that I need (too boring, she can do that any time of the year…)
So as an adult, the presents I’ve received that I loved the most are:
Gadgets for my guitar (tuner, new capo, plectrum holder etc.) — loved because they were all things I wanted but wouldn’t have spent the money on at the time.
A Calvin & Hobbes book (twice, two different books from different people) — loved because both of people gave me their own copies. One came with a note saying “I want you to have this, I don’t need it any more”, which makes me smile and want to cry at the same time. Also, Calvin & Hobbes.
A dried out dead frog in a bag, peeled off the road with a note saying “I saw this and thought of you” — loved because I simply couldn’t believe it. I didn’t keep that one.
Bottles of interesting whisky — any whisky makes a good present for me, but an interesting bottle is also something to share and talk about.
As a kid, I received some good presents, but one stood out from all the rest:
My dad had been struggling for work for some time, and money had been tight for ages. We were at the point where mum made clothes for us, and liking our food wasn’t a factor in whether we finished our meal or not, and it was like that for quite a while. Then dad got some work, and shortly afterwards he took my brother and I shopping and we came back with polystyrene planes to throw to (at) each other, a plastic space shuttle with a balloon in it (to power it somehow I think), a plastic submarine to fill with bicarb, and some cars and a few other bits of junk. We deliberately picked cheap stuff because we didn’t want him to spend his money, but I realised later that he wanted to spend it on us. That wasn’t the good bit though. The good bit was that dad then spent the whole day throwing those planes with us, and helping us to build a ramp out of books to see how high we could make the cars jump, and laughing with us at our failure to make the space shuttle do anything.
That day cost so little, and so much, and I’ll never forget it.
Mark as BRAINLIST
Answer:
Here is your answer
I hope this will help you
please mark it as brainlist answer