My aunt gives stockings with nuts, oranges, sweets etc to her daughters. They are in their thirties!
I never had a stocking!!!!!!:rain: I did get a diary wrapped on its own usually.
Awful tactics! £57 is a huge amount of money - and in the current climate every purchase (for me at least) is very very considered these days and indeed this Christmas. I have had to seriously reconsider where every single penny goes this year as have many others and I find this sort of statement (and lets be honest when you break it down it's £57 for less than half a teaspoon of product in some fancy packaging) totally angers me.
Another case in point last night was Jill Franks, who was urging people to buy EMU slippers at over £40 (which OK, is not as much - and as a present would last much longer) but then saying why not buy all the different colours together as well as they'd make great 'stocking fillers'...I'm with minim here - when I was a kid, a stocking filler was chocolate...and not much else!!!
Never mind Donna, neither did I. I always got books from my parents. "Just as well you're bright" said my father "because your face is never going to be your fortune." Probably why I have always spoilt myself with beauty products and pretty things when I grew up.
He was teasing right...?
Sorry to say he wasn't minin and it still hurts all these years later. At least there is man in my life now who thinks I'm beautiful. Still prefer cats to people though!
Was it only me who couldn't wait to get to the sugar mouse in the toe every year?
Sorry to say he wasn't minin and it still hurts all these years later. At least there is man in my life now who thinks I'm beautiful. Still prefer cats to people though!
Did anyone see the newspaper report that the item most requested by three year olds visiting Santa at Selfridges was the iPad?
I love a selection box at Christmas. Julian makes me laugh when he talks about trying to eat Christmas dinner after having selection box for breakfast, he seems more in touch with reality than some presenters.