I used to have a stocking in the morning which always included an annual, presumably to keep me occupied while mum dealt with the turkey. I had one present in the morning and we opened all our presents in the afternoon, after lunch. Dad was the head consultant in a hospital and he always worked on Christmas morning and so the Christmas activities were put on hold until he got back.
The “tradition” was carried on when my son was young ….. a stocking, a present at breakfast and the rest in the afternoon once both of his grans arrived. He said he preferred it like that because Christmas lasted all day, instead of everything being opened minutes after midnight.
Even now, it’s fairly similar although obviously we’re now all adults. I go up to their house, my son cooks the meal (he’s a superb cook) and my contribution is doing the washing up.
The difference now is that there are no stockings and we open everything in the afternoon and eat Christmas dinner in the evening.
As a teacher for 44 years, I received numerous gifts at Christmas and at the end of the school year for which I was obviously very grateful, but the ones that meant the most (and which I still have) were the thank letters and cards from the pupils and their parents.