The Lazy Genius Podcast - #442 - Thoughtful Gift-Giving When Budgets Are Tight

Episode Date: November 3, 2025

We are entering the season where we’re beginning to think about holiday gifts, especially on a limited budget which many of us are right now. I’m going to share my five rules of thoughtful gift-gi...ving, six budget-friendly categories of potential gift ideas, and seven themes you can use as a family or friend group that put everybody on the same gift-giving playing field. Helpful Companion Links Order my book The PLAN or ask your library to consider carrying a copy. Joyful by Ingrid Fetell Lee Projects Playbook Sign up for our every-other-week podcast recap email called Latest Lazy Listens. Sign up for my once-a-month newsletter, The Latest Lazy Letter or if you’re just looking for book reviews, sign up to receive The Book List Grab a copy of my book The Lazy Genius Kitchen or The Lazy Genius Way! (Affiliate links) Download a transcript of this episode. Want to share your Lazy Genius of the Week idea with us? Use this form to tell us about it. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Okay, when I sell my business, I want the best tax and investment advice. I want to help my kids, and I want to give back to the community. Ooh, then it's the vacation of a lifetime. I wonder if my head of office has a forever setting. An IG Private Wealth advisor creates the clarity you need with plans that harmonize your business, your family, and your dreams. Get financial advice that puts you at the center. Find your advisor at IG Private Wealth.com.
Starting point is 00:00:30 Hi there, you're listening to the Lazy Genius podcast. I'm Kendra Adachi. This podcast is not about hacking the system to find more time or hacking your energy to get more done. Hustling to be the best or to make the most out of every opportunity is exhausting and unsustainable. So here we do things differently. On this podcast, we value contentment, compassion, and living in our season. We favor small steps over big systems. Here we are lazy geniuses, being.
Starting point is 00:01:00 a genius about the things that matter and lazy about the things that don't, and I'm so glad that you are here. Today is episode 442, thoughtful gift giving when budgets are tight. We are entering the season where we'd like to start thinking about holiday gifts, and I'd like to give you some ways to think about it, especially on a limited budget, which many of us are on right now so that your thinking can evolve into action before you get desperate and spend more than you have on gifts that you wouldn't have even chosen if you had a little more time. So I'm going to share my five rules of thoughtful gift giving. I will share six budget-friendly categories of potential gift ideas that act as lenses to help you come up with fun and thoughtful gifts for your people.
Starting point is 00:01:50 And then I'm going to share seven themes that you can use as a family or a friend group that put everybody on the same gift giving playing field, which can be helpful when you're financially not on the same playing field. I did not intend for the numbers to be five, six, seven, but it's always fun when it works out that way. After that, we're going to have a little extra something where I share a fun, new to me way to plan a trip to a new place. We're going to celebrate the lazy genius of the week with one of the sweetest, easiest ways. to care for a friend. And we will close with a mini pep talk for when you're struggling with the monotony of life. Before we get into that, here is your friendly reminder that this week is when our next pair of newsletters will get sent out.
Starting point is 00:02:35 So on Wednesday, folks are going to get the latest lazy letter, which is our monthly newsletter with stories and ideas from me that I don't share anywhere else. I'm a lot more open about my personal life in that newsletter, sharing things that I'm trying and learning and struggling through. Last month I shared what my life looks like day to day and the responses to that were so fun. I also shared the recipe for a fire pork than I mentioned like a week or two ago on the show, but the newsletter folks, they got it first. They kind of get everything first. One woman tried it, tried the recipe, and responded that her 16 year old asked for it weekly. So there's a lot of fun gold in that newsletter. If you'd like to get it
Starting point is 00:03:15 this Wednesday, you can try it out and see what you think. You can head to the lazy genius collective.com slash join to sign up. The other newsletter that will go out on Wednesday is the book list. So this is where I share all the books that I read the past month, which is usually around 10 books, and it's a fun way for you to find new reads and also know what to skip, what is not going to be for you. So one book I read in October was Elizabeth Gilbert's new memoir all the way to the river, and I definitely have some thoughts about that one. So I'll share that in the newsletter. I've also read several newer releases this month, which is kind of unusual for me. I don't usually read new releases. So if you would like my reviews of Wally Lambs, the River is Waiting, Patrick Ryan's Buckeye,
Starting point is 00:03:59 or another half dozen books I read, you can go to the lazy genius collective.com slash book list to sign up for that newsletter. You can sign up for one or both, but just remember, they only come out once a month. And for this month, it's this Wednesday. It's the first Wednesday of every month. So you can sign up. So you don't miss it. If you don't miss it, if you. you don't want to miss it. All right. Let's get into thoughtful gift giving when budgets are tight. Now, whether you're on a tight budget or not, I do think this episode is going to be helpful. It is chockful of tools and ideas that you can use for your own gift giving this holiday season. But this is coming from someone me who genuinely loves giving gifts. Like it's one of my favorite things.
Starting point is 00:04:42 So let's start with the five rules that I use for thoughtful gift giving, okay? Rule number of one is there's no such thing as a perfect gift. No such thing. I've been saying this for years, but this language of like, find the perfect gift, it is a marketing ploy that is meant to make you keep shopping and feel bad about whatever it is you got. Just let it go. You don't have to feel the pressure to make someone like so impressed or so elated by whatever you gave them. There is no perfect gift out there for a person. And even if there is, you know, it's a person. And even if there is if someone's like, this is perfect. Like there's more than one. There's a ton of them. So stop the search, especially if that search is causing you stress. Let go of the myth of the perfect gift.
Starting point is 00:05:29 Rule number two. Give joyfully. Now, I mean this in two ways. The first way is likely what you first thought. You know, be a person who joyfully gives gifts. If you're feeling some kind of way about giving a gift to a certain person that maybe you don't like very much or you're resenting for some reason or you're just feeling down about it. Like, pay attention to that feeling. Examine how you might give to that person joyfully. And if you can't, maybe you don't need to give them a gift. Like maybe there's a shift that you need to make in your actual gift giving or in your
Starting point is 00:06:05 emotions. Like, maybe you don't know them as well anymore or that relationship has shifted, right? The giving is meant to be joyful. So pay attention when you're not feeling that way. Now, the second take on that rule of give joyfully is to pay attention to the joy created by the gift. Now, don't try to impress, but try and create joy. And joy can be found in the simplest things. I have mentioned this book before, but Joyful by Ingrid Fetell Lee.
Starting point is 00:06:34 It is a handbook on how to create joy in your regular life, mostly in your like aesthetics and your surroundings. but I love using her research to enhance gift giving. So she found 10 qualities that bring joy aesthetically, but I do think they apply to gifts. One in particular is abundance. Abundance creates joy, which is why I love giving someone like a whole load of their favorite snack or like a stack of books that I found at used book sales and bookstores that I think that person would like, or like every kind of sour candy at the store for somebody who likes sour candy. Abundance, even for the tiniest things. It brings a lot of joy.
Starting point is 00:07:16 Another element of joy that works well for gifts that is in her book is surprise. Now, obviously, gifts inherently are a surprise. But things like a box in a box and a box, that creates an environment of surprise that requires no extra money, but adds so much joy, right? A lot of the gift ideas that I will share later in this episode, they do have kind of an element. of surprise to them because there's a thoughtfulness to them. But ultimately, I just want you to think about creating joy in your gift. Don't seek to impress. Don't try to find the perfect gift. Just create joy. Give joyfully, both in your spirit and with the gift itself. Rule number three, give in your season. Obviously, lazy geniuses live in the season. But when it comes to giving,
Starting point is 00:08:02 you also need to give in your season. Your budget might be really tight. A family member might be sick, which changes the gathering, right? This might be the first Christmas where your extended family is not gathering on the same day that they have for the last decade. All of that is okay. We go through seasons and our gifts should match that, which sometimes means no gifts in the traditional sense at all. It's good to remember that even in a season that is saturated with like tradition,
Starting point is 00:08:33 that you can change something based on the season you're in. Give in your season. Remember, now is not forever. So tend to the way that things are right now without assuming it's always going to be that way. There is so much freedom in that. All right, rule number four, treat holiday giving like a project because it is. If you struggle with doing things last minute, that's okay. You know, if you even like the last minute rush of finding gifts, that's also okay.
Starting point is 00:09:00 Like, keep doing that if you like it. That if you're trying to be a bit more thoughtful with your gifts, whether it's because you would like to get things that the person would enjoy, or because money is tight, consider channeling whatever planning energy you have into this project because it is a project. It's many steps. If you need a place to put all of that planning, you could check out the project's playbook that is available in our store. It just came out last week.
Starting point is 00:09:25 It'll walk you through the steps of planning any project with space to, like, write things down that matter to you. So that could be a nice place or you could just use a notebook. It's totally fine. But ultimately, I want you to treat holiday giving like the project that it is. so you're not overwhelmed by it. And then finally, rule number five, don't apologize. I would like for you to put away gift disclaimers.
Starting point is 00:09:48 I'd like for you to not enter a moment where you're giving someone a gift. And I don't want you to immediately lead with like, it's okay if you don't like it, we can take it back. You know, give joyfully. You don't have to perch on that person's shoulder waiting for them to open it, you know, but try and remove apologies out of your language. I know in your heart that those apologies, are coming from a place of care for the person that you're giving this gift to.
Starting point is 00:10:12 And there's something in you that thinks that the gift is like maybe not going to make them quite as happy as you like because of like the time you were able to give or your money or your creativity or whatever. But really those apologies, they make the giving more about you than about that person. So just keep your apologies out of the conversation. You know, when you give, you can just say like, this made me think of you. and let that's it like let it breathe right apologies strip the joy out of gift giving sometimes so pay attention when you try and sneak it in even when you're thinking about it is you get a gift at all if you
Starting point is 00:10:49 find yourself being like well take that out of this this is not this is not thoughtful gift giving right okay so these are your five rules there's no perfect gift give joyfully given your season treat holiday gifts like the project they are and don't apologize those five things offer for a solid foundation to start from. All right, before we get into some gift ideas and themes you can borrow for your family or your friend group, let's take an ad break, which makes this episode free for you to listen to. So thank you sponsors for that. At a time where a lot of content is understandably going behind a paywall, we are really
Starting point is 00:11:25 grateful that we get to keep making shows that are completely free for you. So if you would like a recap of our podcast episodes to come to your email inbox so you don't have to, you know, take notes or whatever. You can sign up for the latest lazy listens, which will land in your inbox every other Friday. For episodes like this one with a lot of lists, it's really nice to have that recap in black and white. You can sign up at the lazy genius collective.com slash listens. Aw, isn't something we need to travel for. It's something waiting for us in everyday life, whether in a city street or a moment with a work of art. I'm Dr. Keltner, host of the Science of Happiness podcast.
Starting point is 00:12:09 Join me for Cities of Aw, a special series on how our public spaces can spark awe, wonder, and enhance the quality of public life. You can find us wherever you listen to your podcasts. All right. So we've covered the five rules of thoughtful gift giving. And now I want to share six lenses or categories where you might find creative, budget-friendly gifts for the people in your life. Those categories are make help. experience, encourage, curate, and remember. All right. Now, you do not have to do this for every single person on your gift list. But spending a little time with that list of folks and these categories,
Starting point is 00:12:56 it could offer some surprisingly easy, joyful ideas that require very little money, but give a lot of joy. So our first category is make. You can make something for that person. Now, this is a pretty common idea, one that a lot of people who say they aren't creative get really discouraged by as well. But I want to pause that feeling for a second. There are things that you can be creative with when it comes to making a gift. But there are other things that are easy enough to make even if you don't see yourself as a creative person.
Starting point is 00:13:27 You can make a playlist. Find out what platform your person listens to their music on and then make a playlist specifically for them on that platform. Playlists are the most fun when they are weirdly specific. So think of a specific time of the day or the week where this person would enjoy a specific kind of music. It might be a playlist called Rage Resetting the House after Christmas Chaos, and it's just like 90s dance bops. A playlist I recently came across is fall grocery shopping in 1999. It's hits from 1999 that make wandering the grocery store aisles more fun. that kind of thing is so much fun you can personalize it to the person right and it requires no artistic ability
Starting point is 00:14:15 like just make a playlist you can give it to the person on like an actual CD you know like write a note on a CD or even a cassette tape if you're as old as I am and you can like write the link on the old CD or tape or you can make a CD or tape out of like cardboard you know there's so many fun ideas to physically give someone a playlist that you made them you can make you can make a a game. If your person is really into games, you can create one. You can make up a board game or a card game or a scavenger hunt. You can make your own version of monopoly where like all the properties or nostalgic places where like you and your siblings went or something. I don't know. So make a game. Box it up. Call it good. You can make fabric crafts like a scarf. You can make jewelry or a painting or
Starting point is 00:15:00 cross stitch or you can hand letter or even type out a rendering of that person's like favorite poem or a passage from a book. You can make one of those homemade book trackers with like the empty book spines for your friend or family member to write in the books that they read that year. You can make food, make baked goods or meal kits or even a meal plan. If you're a meal planner and you know unless someone who hates meal planning but wishes they had one, make like, I don't know, like a little cookbook of your family favorite recipes, maybe some of their family favorite recipes, and then create a couple versions of meal plans with like overlapping ingredients at a shopping list. If that is something that comes naturally to you, do you know how fun it would be for someone you love to get that who doesn't enjoy that?
Starting point is 00:15:49 Make meals for someone's freezer. Make like homemade pie crust or cookie dough balls that someone can pull out of the freezer anytime. You can make spice mixes or homemade coffee syrups that you put in like thrift store mason jars. Make some kind of food. You might start either with the person and what they love or with something you personally enjoy making. Like for example, if you're a bread baker, for the love, please just make your people a loaf of bread. Do you know how much people love homemade bread? Depending on your budget, you could just make the bread.
Starting point is 00:16:22 But beyond that, if there is a little money beyond the bread, you could pair that loaf of bread with like a favorite tea towel or like flower sack towel or a stick of really good salted butter. Thrift stores are piled high with baskets so you could just get a few and fill them with bread for your people. The point here is make something. Making might be a really helpful lens for you. The second lens that you might try is help. What is a way you can offer someone help? Ideas here are, you know, you can help that person do chores or finish a project. Like if you're an organized friend and you know that your pal hates organized.
Starting point is 00:17:03 but she's been talking about like needing to clean out the basement or a big closet or like her mom's recently vacated house you can gift your time and your organizational prowess if you love to garden and you have a friend who doesn't but also would love to have like cut flowers in her yard gift her your green thumb you can write like a sweet note and maybe wrap it up with a pair of gardening gloves or a spade or a pack of seeds to offer that if you're like an organizing person or a cleaning person and you want to offer that, you could like write a note with a cute set of sponges or a bottle of windex. You could even like make the windex have your own label, you know, that's make the label personal or tie a tag on the bottle of cleaner that says something like to be opened on the
Starting point is 00:17:50 most epic closet clean out day ever with take out Chinese food after or something. I've also mentioned this before, but one of the sweetest ways that you can give a gift of help is to think of something you enjoy doing that other people hate. For example, I hate researching stuff so much. My husband loves researching stuff. It is the greatest gift ever that he loves doing something I hate doing. And it's so helpful for me too. So like, let's say you're a researcher.
Starting point is 00:18:18 You could make that a gift to someone that you love. Like maybe your friend, you know your friend is looking for a new washer and dryer and has mentioned it multiple times, but she keeps putting it off. You could gift her a printout, a love. of like washer and dryer research. You could make it fun, almost like a little choose your own adventure book. But helping someone do research who hates doing research, especially when you know them well enough to know what matters to them, are you kidding me?
Starting point is 00:18:45 That is a tremendous gift that really is just your time. It's something you're already really good at. You can help walk a dog, help babysit, help plant tomatoes when the season is right, help decorate a living room, help organize photos. You can give the gift of. your help. So that's the second lens you could consider. The third lens that you might like is experience. Give an experience. Now obviously, this one is not a new idea. It can also be very expensive. But outside of the typical things you're thinking of, like going to a theme park or a big
Starting point is 00:19:21 concert or something that does cost a good bit of money, let's think about experiences that are full of joy, but not dollars. You could schedule a day to go through. go to bookstores, wander around a fun downtown. You could plan an experience like a craft night or a trivia night or a game night or a movie marathon night. Create an experience where you have a fun dinner party where you make that person's all favorite foods. You can give the gift of an album release party or a book release party for an album or book that that person is really excited about. And all you do is like get together and like eat fun food and have silly decorations and like listen to the album or hold the book up or whatever. Start with that person. What would you love to do with
Starting point is 00:20:08 them? Whether it's like with their family, your family, if it's just the two of you, it's a group of friends. It could even be that they want to experience solo. They don't get to be alone very often and love being alone. So you could create like a whole day for that person where you sort of figure out like a fun solo walk through a downtown if they like wandering. you know, around a city or like a hike on a new trail and it ends with a cup of coffee with you at the end or something like that. You can look through the lens of an experience. The fourth lens that you might enjoy looking through is encourage. How can you create a gift that encourages this person? You can write notes that are like dated for the first or last day of
Starting point is 00:20:56 a month or a week or, I don't know, important dates in that person. life. And it's just words about how much you care about them or like a joke that you know is going to make them laugh or like favorite stories that you remember about them. You can encourage a person by writing notes, kind of like how we do many pep talks here, for that person to open when they're feeling a certain kind of way. So you could make notes that are labeled like read this when your children are too loud. Read this when you're lonely. Read this when you're excited about something you did that feels too small to celebrate. You know, create notes that meet the moment and encourage that person.
Starting point is 00:21:36 You can encourage them with a jar of like qualities that you love about them, written on little pieces of paper and they like pull one out every day or something. You can encourage by giving a friend or a family member that lives far away. Like imagine if they're a tea drinker, you give them like a dozen tea bags of like really good tea with a note that says these are for our tea phone dates. and then once a month you talk on the phone and you drink the same tea and you're together. How can you encourage someone, especially with words? Words are free, man.
Starting point is 00:22:09 Use them up. The fifth lens that you can look through, this is one of my favorites and it is curate. What can you gather up specifically on purpose that can bring joy to someone in your life? So a playlist is a form of curation, so that can count here too. But let's say you're friends with me and you know that I love birds. you could find all of the cute little bird things at like thrift stores or even like little birds you've collected in your own house and have like a sweet curation of bird products they can be a mix of used things new things your things but like curate a little gift based on something that a person loves
Starting point is 00:22:47 you can curate a list of the best things to pack for an international trip if you know that a friend or family member is going somewhere you can curate a list of house things for that niece or nephew or sibling who's about to move into their first apartment, or even like a little collection of thrifted things they might enjoy, curated for their first home. You can curate snacks for the perfect movie night. You can curate a route through bookstores or gardening stores or parks or hiking trails that that person would love to explore.
Starting point is 00:23:17 You can curate a list of the best pizza in your state and make it like a fun checklist for your pizza-loving friend. You can curate a blueberry muffin crawl through the bakeries in your tent. that all boast a good blueberry muffin because your friend loves a blueberry muffin. You can curate your favorite trader Joe's snack bundle or a movie list or a reading list for a person based on what they already love to watch or read. Gather together a collection of things or ideas that would bring that person joy. And your final lens to consider is remember you can tap into nostalgia for practically no. nothing, if not free, and bring so much joy to a person in your life.
Starting point is 00:24:03 So that's your last lens is, remember. You can frame an old photo of you and the person. You can create like a little book full of stories or photos or memories, kind of like a little scrapbook or stroll down memory lane. You can have a nostalgic dance party where you listen to all the music that that person loved from the year they graduated high school. You can recreate a memory or a photo or do something you used to do that you haven't done in years. You can make one of those old school photo collages we all had, like on those
Starting point is 00:24:34 our bulletin boards and our bedrooms. Make one now of your friend. Like look back and create something joyful from the memories with this person. All of these lenses, make, help, experience, encourage, curate, and remember. They might require a little bit more time depending on what you're going to do. But they will almost certainly fill you with joy as you come up with them, and you will definitely pour joy into that person that you're giving them to. And they don't cost much of anything at all. Gift guides are great, and they have their place for sure. And getting something new, that's a good time. But back to one of our rules, to give in your season, this season feels like one where we might enjoy some connection and some homegrown versions of
Starting point is 00:25:24 thoughtfulness as opposed to only just getting more stuff. Now, stuff isn't bad, and we all get stuff for people to some degree and we enjoy it. But there might be opportunities on your list of people who you want to give gifts to this season. We're tapping into those connections and the relationship itself offers like a really beautiful gift opportunity you hadn't thought of yet. These lenses might help. So look through them, see what shows up. Remember, there's no such thing as a perfect gift.
Starting point is 00:25:56 So don't worry about finding the most amazing idea ever. Just think about it. Come up with something that sounds joyful and doable for your season of life and theirs. And just see what happens. You might be surprised. Okay, one final list to run through if you're looking for thoughtful gift giving when budgets are tight, is a list of some kind of theme to put gift givers within a group like a family or a friend group on the same place. playing field. Now, a lot of people set price limits on gifts, which is great. But these are themes that
Starting point is 00:26:29 have a limit built into them that isn't necessarily about money. I've definitely been in a situation where I was the like, hey, can we have a cap on this person? And I felt a little embarrassed about it. So presenting another kind of limit that's not money puts joy back into the giving without making anyone feel uncomfortable. So there are seven of these. There are seven of these themes that you could go with. Theem idea number one, thrifted. All gifts have to be purchased in a thrift store, a secondhand store. I kind of love that because like there's so many cool, weird, sometimes highly functional
Starting point is 00:27:07 things that you can find at thrift stores. There might be like a cool purse or an oversized jacket or a collection of like coop glasses for someone's bar card at home or a fun painting or like belts that come in every color. I don't know. Thrifted is a really fun theme. And things at thrift stores are not terribly expensive on purpose. Theme idea number two, food. The gift has to be some kind of food.
Starting point is 00:27:33 You can make it, buy it, whatever, but the gift has to be food. There's so much freedom in that kind of theme and an opportunity to create a lot of joy without spending a lot of money. Theme idea number three, games. Everybody gets a game. It can be a board game or a card game or a travel game or a brain teaser. or like a book of Sudoku puzzles, whatever. You can get creative by making your own game or by adjusting the board on a thrifted game
Starting point is 00:28:03 to make it like personal and funny. But everybody loves some kind of game. And if you have that limit, it's okay if it doesn't cost a lot of money, right? Theme idea number four, the dollar store. All guests have to come from the dollar store. There's definitely a price limit there, although you can certainly say that you can get as many things as you would like from the dollar store. They just have to come from the dollar store. There's a lot of creativity and fun that can happen there. Theme idea number five, from your house. It's like a re-gifting
Starting point is 00:28:33 holiday. But there are a lot of great opportunities here too. Maybe there's jewelry you don't, you don't wear, but you know your sister would actually really like it. Maybe there's a sweatshirt that your brother always comments on when you wear it and you're just going to give it to him. Like whatever the gift is, it comes from everyone's house. Theme idea number six. Color. I love this. The price here can be flexible if you want to put a cap on it.
Starting point is 00:28:59 But can you imagine being like, okay, everybody, your gift has to be green or whatever? Like, I think that's so much fun. Limits create, creativity, and joy. And honestly, color does too. Color is one of the elements of joy from Ingrid's book. So what a great way to structure gifts with a group. or like everybody picks a color from the rainbow. You like draw, instead of drawing names, you draw color.
Starting point is 00:29:21 Like, it could be so fun. And then finally, theme idea number seven is white elephant or dirty Santa. I love a gift exchange where all the gifts are weird. It's my favorite. Our church community group, we have been together for several years now, and there's this King Charles mug, like from King Charles' is, is it a cold inauguration? It's not his crowning, whatever it is. But there's like a King Charles mug that's been in rotation in our group for like five years now.
Starting point is 00:29:45 It's in my cabinet currently. It's one of my favorite things. So if you're in a group of people, whether it's siblings or extended family or co-workers or friends, pitch a theme to the group. You can suggest, like, hey, to make gifts more fun this year and more flexible based on budgets, let's do a theme of fill in the blank. These seven are obviously not the only options, of course, come off with whatever you like, that these are good places to start.
Starting point is 00:30:12 So again, those seven themes are thrifted food. games, the dollar store, your house, a color, or a silly gift exchange. As you think about gifts for specific people, where a group theme might not be as appropriate, you consider new lenses to make your gifts more intentional and joyful without making them more expensive. So those lenses, you can make your own, but the lenses from today are make, help, experience, encourage, curate and remember. And to help you have the right mindset as you start this process, this project of thinking through gifts this year, remember your five rules. There's no such thing as a perfect gift. So feel the freedom to just choose and enjoy the choice and let it go. Two, give joyfully,
Starting point is 00:31:06 both within yourself and create joy for that person, whether it's with abundance or color or surprise or whatever. Three, give in your season, recognizing that what you choose this year does not have to be true every year. Four, treat holiday gifts like the project that it is so you can actually enjoy it rather than just rush through it. And then five, don't apologize, which puts the focus on you rather than on the person that you're wanting to bring joy to with your gift.
Starting point is 00:31:36 And that is thoughtful gift giving when budgets are tight. Amazon presents Jeff versus Taco Truck Salsa Whether it's Verde, Roja, or the orange one. For Jeff, trying any salsa is like playing Russian roulette with a flamethrower. Luckily, Jeff saved with Amazon and stocked up on antacids, ginger tea, and milk. Habaniero? More like habanier, yes. Save the everyday with Amazon. Welcome aboard via rail. Please sit and enjoy. Please sit and stretch. Steep. Flip. Or that. And enjoy. Via rail, love the way.
Starting point is 00:32:30 For today's a little extra something, I want to tell you about my maps. Do y'all know about my maps? I could be the last one who knows about my maps. But I did not know about them until just a couple of weeks ago. And it changed how I planned a trip, making it so much easy. to have a budget-friendly trip too. So if you already use My Maps, forgive me for being so behind. But My Maps is an offering of Google. So it's free, super easy if you already have a Google account. But it's basically a way to gather up pins on a map, color code them, and it helps you decide how to best experience a place you're wanting to visit. So the way that I've learned to use it is to simply create a pin for everything in a city that I'm visiting that could be fun. Everything. You can create layers or categories within those pins if you want. Like, here are all the restaurant pins and then here's the shop.
Starting point is 00:33:22 There's a layer for restaurants. There's a layer for shopping. There's a layer for landmarks, whatever. But you just pin everything you think would be cool. You don't think about where it is in the city. Just pen what you think is cool. Then because that list is on a map, you can see where those places are grouped together. So you can see that like certain places,
Starting point is 00:33:44 or some are not around anything else. They're sort of outliers all far away. So you're just going to be like, you know what? I'm going to scrap that one ramen place that sounded cool to try because it's not close to anything. Or if you're in a big city, you can see where like all the walkable things are, what requires public transit to get to. I think this is particularly helpful for like sightseeing trips or big places.
Starting point is 00:34:09 Using my maps is the biggest win. You can just see what's close together. It's kind of like a brain dump for travel planning. You just literally throw everything up there. You see what's close to each other and you just start to organize it. Again, I did not know that this existed until just a couple weeks ago. And it has transformed the ease of gathering places to visit and eliminating what just doesn't quite fit.
Starting point is 00:34:34 So I just want to make sure y'all know about it. I want you to know about my maps. And that is our little extra something today. All right, now we have our lazy genius of the week. This week it's Heidi from Temecula, California. Heidi writes, I've started adding into the notes of my contacts, my friends go to coffee orders.
Starting point is 00:34:54 Maybe I just ask them outright what it is, or maybe we've been out a couple times and I take note. Then if my friend is having a tough week, or I just happen to have some margin, I can drop a coffee off to brighten their day. It's such a simple way to make someone feel seen and cared for that there's no way I could keep track of all my friend's coffee preferences floating in my head. This is so brilliant and so kind,
Starting point is 00:35:15 and I love it so much. I think a lot of us think about the gift of bringing a friend a coffee, especially a surprise one. We kind of like the fact that it's a surprise. But a coffee order is so personal that getting it wrong might keep us from making the choice, that this solves that problem. Like just keep their orders in your phone with their contact info. It's amazing. I love this, Heidi. So thank you for sharing. And congratulations. on being the lazy genius of the week. Okay, as we close, let's have a mini pep talk for the monotony of everyday life. Really, this pep talk is more of a story and a reminder. So last weekend, I went to New York City with Jamie Golden to celebrate her birthday, and we spent some time in
Starting point is 00:36:00 Central Park. Well, there was this guy out there with a sign, like a, you know, like a clapboard sign that said, six-minute poems. You give this guy a topic of your choice, and he'll write a write a poem for you. And then you pay them whatever you like. Well, we were both like, well, we got to stop. We got to get a six-minute poem. So we did. And since he had a little line in front of us, we both had time to think about what our topic would be. I knew that choosing something really specific would make a better poem. And I also wanted something that felt singular to me right now. So I chose carpooling. This is my last year of driving my kids everywhere, simply because Sam, my oldest, gets his license soon. And next school year, he's going to drive himself and Ben,
Starting point is 00:36:47 my middle, to the same school. They're both going to be in high school. I don't like that sentence. Annie, my youngest, she's still going to be attending our walkable elementary school. And even when she gets to middle school, though, the high school and middle school, they're right across the street from each other. so chances are good she'll still get a ride with a brother. And even if she is getting a ride from me, it's just one kid in one school versus three kids in three schools like it is right now. I mean, I'm just, I'm in the car all the time. And the monotony of carpooling is coming to an end.
Starting point is 00:37:19 And in some ways I'm excited and in some ways I'm like, and I want to mark that. So it was our turn. I walked up to Zen, the poet, and I told him that I wanted a poem about this season of driving my kids everywhere and the bittersweet aspects to that. I gave him a few details. And a few minutes later, he waved me over. He slid this handwritten poem into like a little plastic sleeve for me to take. And he said, I've written thousands of poems over the years sitting out here. And this is the first
Starting point is 00:37:47 time that one made me cry. So here is the six minute poem that Zan wrote for me in the middle of Central Park about carpooling. Mirrors and eyes and hair and fights and giggles and garbage and songs and gripes and locks and mud and belts and doors one day i'll be looking at the window and you'll ask me about my day and all i'll remember are yours isn't that so beautiful i'm going to post a photo of the handwritten poem itself with it's like the backdrop of the changing trees in central park i'm going to put that in the next podcast recap email if you want to see it that's the lazy genius collective dot com slash listens but that's honestly my pep talk to you today in the monotony of everyday life there is so much beauty in the ordinary
Starting point is 00:38:37 the most beauty and when we can take a minute to just pause and remember that good is here right now even the things that drive us crazy that never seem to end they have power to bring contentment and joy where you are is a season maybe a super long difficult one but monotony it can be an opportunity for liturgy, for deep grooves of awareness and contentment and presence and honesty wherever you are. And that's a mini pep talk on the monotony of everyday life. If this episode was helpful to you or if you've been looking for a way to support the show, it would mean the world if you would share this episode with a friend or you can leave a kind review on Apple Podcasts. Both of those things seem small and in some ways they are, but we all know,
Starting point is 00:39:32 art and small, baby. So thank you so much for listening, sharing, and supporting this work. This podcast is part of the Odyssey family and the Office Ladies Network. This episode is hosted by me, Kendra Adachi, and executive produced by Kendra Adachi, Jenna Fisher and Angela Kenzie. Special thanks to Leah Jarvis for weekly production. If you'd like that podcast recap every other week, be sure to sign up for the latest BlazyListons email that goes out every other Friday. You can get that at the lazy genius collective.com slash listens. Thanks guys for listening. And until next time, be a genius about the things that matter and lazy about the things that don't. I'm Kendra and I'll see you next week.
Starting point is 00:40:08 You ever felt like you were living just a B or B plus life? It's so dangerous to live that. More dangerous than a B minus or a C plus life because when you're living a B or B plus life, you don't change it. You think it's good enough. Is it? I'm Susie Welch. I host a podcast called Becoming You.
Starting point is 00:40:55 People think, okay, an A plus life is not available to me, but there is a way. We are all in the process of becoming ourselves. Listen to Becoming You wherever you get your podcasts.

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