100 Ways to Make the Holiday Season More Twinkly and Bright

by DeeAnne on 02/12/2010

1. Make a gingerbread house

2. Volunteer to serve dinner at a homeless shelter during the Christmas season

3. Go ahead, throw your first New Year’s Eve party

4. Along with a group of friends, adopt a family that needs help with clothing, blankets, gifts, dinner and a tree this season

5. Serve rose champagne rather than your normal wine at the holiday meal

6. Light dozens of candles

7. Put flowers in every room

8. String white twinkle lights on all the trees, both inside the house and outside in the garden/on the terrace

9. Make homemade marshmallows for your hot chocolate

10. Learn about another country’s, or religion’s, holiday tradition, and have a mini celebration in that style

11. Be certain that no friend or family member spends Christmas alone

12. Attend Midnight Mass

13. Attend the Fete Des Lumieres in Lyon, France

14. Make christmas candies, like divinity and fudge

15. Host a night of board games or cards, and serve coffee and dessert

16. Have friends over for a warm night of fondue and mulled wine

17. Go out for an evening of holiday light sightseeing in your favourite local neighbourhood

18. Invite friends to go caroling, and serve wassail and hot chocolate afterwards

19. Volunteer during the holidays at the local animal shelter, so that those that care for these lonely animals all year can have a break

20. Offer to babysit for friends, family or neighbours, so that young parents can have a holiday date night

21. Take the family away to a cabin in the snow for Christmas

22. Invite friends and family over for an old fashioned tree decorating party

23. Visit Harrod’s glorious food hall at Christmas time

24. Spend Christmas in New York City

25. Spend Christmas in Vienna

26. Spend Christmas at the Four Seasons Hotel in Budapest, and get bargain rates for a winter getaway

27. Spend Christmas in Paris

28. Play charades

29. Stay in, and have an intimate New Year’s Eve candlelit dinner for two

30. Take the children to a Christmas pantomime, or to the Nutcracker ballet

31. Host a Christmas Eve brunch for friends

32. Make black eyed peas on New Year’s Day for good luck all year long

33. Offer to take an elderly neighbour who doesn’t drive out to do their holiday shopping

34. Set a holiday table to be proud of, including cloth napkins

35. Give the children a holiday budget, and help them learn how to manage money when buying gifts

36. Stick to your own budget this season, so there aren’t any credit card disasters in January

37. Host a whiskey tasting party (fudge is the perfect compliment!)

38. Put together a holiday music playlist, featuring all the family members favourite holiday songs

39. Visit family members that you haven’t seen in years

40. Have a family holiday film festival, with each member choosing their favourite holiday movie to host one evening

41. Have a white elephant gift party for close friends, and share a laugh

42. Finally learn how to properly wrap a Christmas gift

43. Take a scrapbooking class, and make your parents’ holiday gift with their vintage family photos

44. Shovel your neighbour’s walk

45. As a family, choose a volunteer project for the New Year

46. Roast chestnuts

47. Have your carpets cleaned before the guests arrive

48. Make sure there’s always a fire in the fireplace

49. Bundle up, and go for a walk in the city at night

50. Read “Twas the Night Before Christmas” to the children on Christmas Eve

51. Open just one gift on Christmas Eve

52. Wake up early on Christmas morning, make a cup of coffee, and just sit in the quiet with your twinkling tree

53. Make a pecan pie, just like Nonie used to make

54. Make a list in your journal of all the blessings you’ve received this year

55. Have a small dinner party on New Year’s Eve, and invite your guests to stay overnight

56. Put Christmas tree lights on the house, just for the kids

57. Make a special memory with each member of your family

58. Deliver Meals on Wheels on Christmas Day, to those that are alone and homebound

59. As part of their gift, start a college savings fund for the younger members of your family

60. Give yourself the gift of optimism for the New Year this holiday season

61. Take loads of photographs, and post them online for the whole family to see

62. Go ice skating

63. Have a karaoke party with friends (the local Koreatown or Japantown often have private rooms for parties)

64. Use another time zone’s midnight, and host a party to celebrate ringing in the New Year in that city’s style (Los Angeles, NYC, Paris, Rio de Janiero)

65. Go black tie on New Year’s Eve

66. Serve your holiday dinner on Christmas Eve, so that you can enjoy Christmas Day (and the leftovers) with the family

67. Play outside with the children on Christmas afternoon

68. Go for a walk on Christmas afternoon

69. Spend a girl’s weekend in the city in early December, and finish all your holiday shopping together

70. Hang crystal drops on existing lighting fixtures, and elsewhere around the house, to catch the candlelight

71. Watch a New Year’s Day cricket match in South Africa

72. Make homemade Christmas pudding, with brandy butter

73. Make your own Christmas crackers

74. Make homemade pesto or tapenade to give as gifts

75. Be very grateful and gracious about EVERY gift you receive

76. Make time to quietly enjoy the holidays with your partner

77. Call your parents if you can’t spend the holidays with them

78. Be available to loved ones that are struggling through the holidays

79. Stock up on small gifts, for anyone you might have accidentally overlooked (especially children)

80. Remember what the season is about, and be kind and considerate to others while holiday shopping

81. Give antique poetry books as gifts. Tie with a simple piece of ribbon.

82. Give the gift of fine stationary and note cards

83. Find the perfect stocking stuffer for him

84. Find the perfect stocking stuffer for her

85. Find the perfect stocking stuffer for kids

86. Use the china

87. Toast each person around the table individually, with a special message just for them

88. Give the gift of forgiveness

89. Vow to set aside differences, and have harmonious holidays (bite your tongue, if you must)

90. Don’t forget thoughtful holiday gifts for those that make a difference all year long (delivery people, house cleaners, pet walkers, babysitters)

91. Don’t forget a gift for anyone that hosts you this season

92. Be sure to have vegetarian and sugar free choices at dinner for guests with health concerns

93. Cut out paper snowflakes

94. No excuses, send holiday cards

95. Don’t procrastinate, it will only bring unnecessary stress to a wonderful season

96. Make, or buy, only thoughtful gifts that are within your budget

97. Be certain to teach your children what the season really means to your family

98. Plant your winter bulbs, like daffodil and tulips

99. Start a window herb garden to use in holiday meals, and all winter long

100. Make sure to take the time to relax, reflect and savour the moment

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{ 12 comments… read them below or add one }

sandy@oohlafroufrou December 2, 2010 at 21:32

ALWAYS love your “100″ things lists! LOVE lots of these … especially the girl’s shopping trip … I’m on it! Also, I’m a big believer in not forgetting to play as we get older and your tip of making paper snowflakes made me smile. We definitely should do things like get out and make snow angels, know the joy again of sipping hot chocolate after coming in from the cold and take a family drive to look at all of the sparkly lights in different neighborhoods. As you know, my blog is sort of a “big girl’s playground” … and that’s largely in part because of my philosophy of not forgetting to play … a part of me has never grown up! ;)

Reply

DeeAnne December 7, 2010 at 09:52

Good morning Sandy!

Thank you for the comments, and the girl’s shopping trip has been one of my aunt’s family traditions for years. I know you’ll love it!

I love your other comments too, and your blog, for your unending sense of fun!! You always make me smile.

xoxo,
D

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Priscilla December 3, 2010 at 13:17

Love #27 Spend Cheistmas in Paris! ;)

Reply

DeeAnne December 7, 2010 at 09:50

Hello Priscilla!

Thank you for the comment, and #27 just happens to be at the very top of my wish list ;-)

Best wishes for a wonderful holiday season,
DeeAnne

Reply

Erika December 3, 2010 at 16:01

What a delicious list! I will definitely have to try these. Two favorites: Mulled wine and fondue, and of course a whiskey tasting with fudge – how delightful that sounds.

Reply

DeeAnne December 7, 2010 at 09:49

Hello Erika!

Thank you for the sweet words, and I can’t wait to hear how your whiskey tasting turns out!

xoxo,
D

Reply

pc brady December 4, 2010 at 17:54

you manage to make simple into elegant and minimal into Divine… I like it :)

Reply

DeeAnne December 7, 2010 at 09:48

Hello PC~

That is the nicest thing you could have said to me! Thank you for the kind words, and I hope that I’m able to live up to that mantra on a consistent basis.

Very best wishes,

DeeAnne

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Simply Luxurious December 5, 2010 at 16:11

What a fantastic post with oodles of ideas and inspirations. Thank you for taking the time to include so many links. Today, I will be decorating the house (the tree comes next weekend) and taking time to write all of my Christmas cards. I love the idea of making an individual toast to each person at the table. A lovely idea.
Again, thank you for the beautiful thoughts and focus on what the holidays are all about.
:)

Reply

DeeAnne December 7, 2010 at 09:46

Thank you so much for the kind comment Shannon! I’m wishing you the very, very best of the holiday season!

xoxo,
D

Reply

Cindy Swanson December 9, 2010 at 03:14

Wonderful post! So many of these things are actually do-able! I’m off to read the links inside the suggestions. Thank you!

Reply

DeeAnne December 9, 2010 at 10:08

Thank you Cindy! I hope the links are helpful, too!

Happy Christmas,
D

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