Anonymous wrote:I'm not remotely consumerist -- more anti than anything. When I buy anything, I try to buy vintage, pre-owned, open-box, all the stuff minimizes impact.
But I've grown to have real empathy for many of the kinds of people OP describes. I've observed that they often seem to be trying to give to children (theirs, but also often others, sometimes including mine) something that they themselves didn't get as a child. As soon as I realized this — that this is just another way of trying to do the right thing, and to heal what ails -- I softened quite a bit.
I wholeheartedly agree. In a neighboring town there is an annual Halloween decorating extravaganza: at least an acre of skeletons doing all kinds of activities. A baseball game, etc. Lights and sound effects. They add to it every year. After Halloween, they dress the skeletons in Christmas costumes, add multiple blow up snow men, santas, elves reindeer.
It's over the top tacky as get out but small children love it. I don't know these people but I love them, smile every time we drive by.
Meanwhile at my house, total exterior decorating is one tasteful natural wreath on each door.