Gift Giving Superstitions and Legends
Superstitions: There are a lot of superstitions and legends
involving the giving and receiving of gifts. For instance it
was at one time considered bad luck to give a pair of scissors
or a knife as a gift because it was feared that the act would
"cut" the friendship in half. Therefore knives were never given
as wedding gifts as it was believed they would lead to a broken
marriage.

Also never give anyone a pair of shoes as a Christmas gift
because they would make the person you give them to walk away
from you. When you give someone a gift of a wallet or purse be
sure to put some money into it, even if only a coin, to ward
off bad luck. At one time bakers would throw in an extra roll
when you bought a dozen as a "gift" in case any of the other
rolls were too small. This "gift" became known as the baker's
dozen.

Urban legends: Legends are told as having happened long,
long ago whereas urban legends are set in contemporary times
and told as having happened to people known either personally
to the teller or to someone known by a person the teller knows.
The places and names change as they are updated to fit current
times and all carry a warning or lesson of some sort. There may
even be some truth to the story although the people and places
have been changed so many times that it becomes hard to
determine what the truth actually was. One such tale recounts a king's offer of a
gift to a famous golfer (sometimes the golfer is named
other times he is just "a famous golfer") who after first
declining the gift asks for a golf club only to find to
his amazement that the king has bought him an entire golf
course.
In several different legends, although the people and
circumstances change the story and its warning are the same. A
son (nephew, daughter, niece...) is expecting a very expensive
gift (car, house, inheritance...) from his father (uncle,
aunt...) but receives a bible. In a fit of anger he throws the
bible at the giver and leaves not returning until the givers
death when he notices the bible from so long ago, opens it and
finds the (key to the car, check to the car dealer, will
leaving him everything etc.).

Then there are the one-up-manship legends. Two
or more siblings vie to get the best gift for their mother
(houses, cars, jewels) with one going to great expense to
get a bird (myna, parrot...) that has been specially
trained (to read the bible, sing opera, speak Italian...).
The mother politely thanks all (while letting them know
their gift wasn't very practical) then speaks proudly of
the child who had the sense to bring her the delicious
chicken.

There is also a true story of two brothers who re-gifted the
same pair of pants back and forth wrapped in very creative
ways, from rolling them into a 3' long 1" wide pipe to stuffing
them into the glove compartment of a car that they then had
crushed and delivered in time for Christmas. The pants went
back and forth for 25 years before they finally fell apart.
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