Relational giving – we all love the idea, but man, coming up with something to give that seems useful and doable and actually wanted can be stressful. And since the very last thing this season needs is more stress, I’ve come up with a handy-dandy giving guide for you to use or share with those who are hoping to give to you this season.

These seven ideas will hopefully inspire you with ways to bless the parents of young children in your lives. Some of them cost a few dollars, some of them hundreds, some of them just your good will and time. Pin them, share them, make them your wish list, or use them as a starting point to come up with relational giving ideas of your own!

Giving Guide: 7 Relational Gifts to Give Young Families

Giving Guide: 7 Relational Gifts to Give Young Families

Part of the deal with this parenting gig is the nagging fear that you are constantly doing stuff wrong.  Crap, I nursed her to sleep again – no college.  Oh no, I caved and fed her mac ‘n cheese when she wouldn’t eat her broccoli – chronic eating issues and probably tantrums until at least age 30.  You get the idea.  Honor the new parents in your life by celebrating and witnessing their successes.  Get out your rusty old pen and paper and write a letter, a real, scribbly, hard-to-read letter, in which you list or highlight all the things you think they do well as a parent.  That beautiful way he sings to his son to calm him down, the times she shows up for meetings obviously tired but still prepared and carrying the picture she drew with her daughter that morning, the way their newborn is growing and thriving, that awesome idea he had that saved the day during the great shopping cart meltdown – write them down.  Applaud them.  Give them lots of shiny time in the light.

Giving Guide: 7 Relational Gifts to Give Young Families

Parents of young children have precious little “me time.”  Between kid time and couple time, it’s easy for self-care to get a little lost.  Find yoga classes in your area that offer childcare and gift a tired at-home parent a 10-class pass.  Schedule a couple’s massage for your daughter and son-in-law who have been pacing and rocking their chunk of a newborn for the last four months.  Pair up with your BFF and offer to push the stroller or wear the baby as the three of you go on a regular AM hike and chat about things that have nothing to do with bedtimes or poop.  Give new parents space and opportunity to get out, stretch their legs, and focus on themselves for a bit.

Giving Guide: 7 Relational Gifts to Give Young Families

For the first several weeks of parenthood, many of us are treated to an amazing Meal Train set up, during which dinner is lovingly delivered to our doorstep and very little thinking or planning is involved.  But then, well, then it stops.  Offer to reignite the meal-bringing fire – schedule a time to deliver a fully prepared meal, hot and ready, in (heck) disposable containers (biodegradable, obviously) that can be carelessly tossed away.  Don’t forget dessert!  Deliver your dinner with a smile, stay and chat if you’re invited, and leave the fam to a peaceful, stress free evening of culinary delight as they savor not doing dishes for once.  Or go all out and create a magical “in home restaurant” experience, complete with full service waiting and dish washing and lots of laughter.  Bonus points if you bring crayons for the kiddos and an after dinner cocktail for mom and dad.

Giving Guide: 7 Relational Gifts to Give Young Families

Know a new stay at home parent?  Figuring out what to DO all day with a young baby or toddler is a monster of a task.  If you’d like to give an incredible gift to someone who has days to fill, get out your Google and do some research. Build her or him a 2014 calendar (online or on paper – this is your excuse to buy that dang kitten calendar from the stand in the mall) filled with activities in and near your hometown – storytimes at the library, concerts for kids, movies in the park, new-mom meet-ups, holiday events.  All that research takes time and energy, two resources that can be at a bit of a premium when you have tiny people to tend to day in and day out.  If you really want to invest in getting them out and about, gift a membership to a local museum or amusement park, or sign them up for a music or movement class that parents and kids can do together.  Our OMSI membership here in Portland is one of the best gifts we’ve ever received (I can even bring a friend and her kids for free during the week while Fave is working!)

Giving Guide: 7 Relational Gifts to Give Young Families

Are you handy with a camera?  Do you scrapbook like a pro?  Take a young family out for an informal holiday photo shoot.  Everyone wants beautiful photos of their family, and most of us try to hire professionals whenever possible, but it can be expensive and overwhelming to try and capture all the crazy changes that kids go through.  Your time and editing skills could be a huge blessing.  If photography isn’t your gift, get your hands on existing photographs from the past year and craft them into a memory book for the family – something I’m always trying to do and always running out of time to finish.  Little ones LOVE looking at photos of themselves and people they know – make them a storybook starring all their favorite folks!  For the technologically savvy, one of our readers suggested a gift of literal memory – gift a hard drive to store all the photos and videos they’ve collected of the kids over the year.  It’s amazing how quickly those suckers fill up, and more space is a wonderfully practical gift.

Giving Guide: 7 Relational Gifts to Give Young Families

Send your favorite couple out for a night to reconnect and recharge.  Offer to babysit while mom and dad head out to a romantic, quiet dinner on your dime, or switch things up and steal the kids away while you leave the couple with a movie and some snacks and a hot toddy and some time to snuggle.  Put together a date box with some gift cards or tickets and babysitting coupons.  Gift a bottle of your favorite artisan spirit for post-bedtime nightcaps.  Go with the family to a holiday event and declare yourself in charge of kid-care while parents kick back, sip cider, hold hands, and gaze at lights.  Every.  Little.  Bit.  Helps.  Seriously.

Giving Guide: 7 Relational Gifts to Give Young Families

Time is the rarest and most precious gift you can give these days, in my humble opinion.  This Christmas, make the gift a bit of yourself.  Time to babysit, time to hang out, time to play – a girls’ night out, a coffee date with the kids where you snuggle and love and appreciate them and give the evil eye to anyone who complains that they are too noisy – an offer to do laundry or clean the kitchen, a weekend away, an hour of down time – these gifts are precious and needed and loved.  If you want to really go the extra mile, follow up with scheduling – even in the face of incredible generosity, scheduling can feel overwhelming to young parents, and it can be awkward to call someone up and say “Hey, give me that babysitting you promised!” (I know, what a bunch of whiners, right?  It’s amazing what not sleeping ever will do to a person.)  Persist.  Call.  Text.  Email.  Get on the books and into the lives of those babies and those lovely mamas and daddys and give them the gift of YOU.  What more could we possibly ask for?

What are you hoping to give and get this season? How do you bless the young families in your life? How has someone blessed you? Leave a comment below!

Girl of Cardigan

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Images by the incomparable Shannon Hannon Photography.

  • Jeanette December 5, 2013 at 10:05 am

    Love your writing, Karen. And, what a brilliant, practical gifting guide.

  • Andrea December 5, 2013 at 11:08 am

    YES! all of these are wonderful, easy, cheap, and impactful gifts! I am mom of a 14 month old and I often feel so lonely or like I am marching through this mom life by my self, and these ideas would all make me feel thought of, included, and loved! thanks for your honesty, and great ideas!

    • karyn December 11, 2013 at 1:10 pm

      My pleasure, Andrea! I hope some of these make their way into your stocking this year. Wishing you and your little one a very Merry Christmas.

  • Katie December 5, 2013 at 12:58 pm

    Such lovely ideas! This new mama would be so blessed by any of those gifts. And shouldn’t Christmas be about blessing, more than giving stuff?

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  • Lisa December 11, 2013 at 8:24 am

    A wholehearted, resounding YES to all of these. I have a 16 month old and am often on my own for weeks at a time when my husband works away in camps.

    Beautiful writing. I’m glad to have found you via Cori.

    • karyn December 11, 2013 at 1:07 pm

      Aw, thanks Lisa! I’m glad you’re here. Wishing you tons of willing babysitters for Christmas. 😉

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