I had grand plans of a gift guide every Friday from the beginning of November until the week before Christmas and that hasn't happened. The more time I spent on social media, the more I saw how A. People were OH-VAH gift guides and B. People were stressed. It got me thinking about the items I own, have received as gifts, and have given as gifts that have made life a little sweeter, a little calmer, a little better. So yes, this is a gift guide but it's a gift guide of, for lack of a less cliché term, self-care.
A Less Cliché Self-Care Gift Guide
Colleen Rothschild Radiant Cleansing Balm
When I would have a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day I'd leave my desk and go downstairs to the CVS on the ground floor of my office building and wander the beauty aisles looking for inspiration. If I couldn't get away, I'd often scroll through Ulta or Sephora doing the same in a virtual manner. I'd buy things I didn't need, hoping I'd find some Holy Grail product that would make me look less tired, younger, healthier, fresher. All I did was blow my budget and stress out my skin. At some point, I was introduced to Colleen Rothschild Beauty. Likely the brand reached out and offered to send me product in exchange for a feature on my blog and social; I went through my email archives and can't find exactly when or how this happened so it's just a guess. And since I have a job that lets me essentially wander beauty aisles and try new things without pulling out my wallet, I said yes.
Aveda hand relief Hand Cream
I am terrible with my hands. I have chewed my cuticles and nails since I was a child. I am constantly getting paper cuts and burns, I use my nails as tools, and my palms are always smudged with ink from journals and to-do lists. Hand creams annoy me, they leave me greasy and flowery smelling and useless until it soaks in. I don't have time for that, I'm okay with dry and even cracked hands if they are functional hands.
Then I received a tube of Aveda hand relief as a gift from a coworker. I was a bit offended, is this a subtle jab at my bloody cuticles and calloused hands? But I put it on. Wow, it wasn't greasy. It absorbed quickly, and didn't smell of baby powder or roses or gardenias but also didn't smell like the plastic scent of unfragranced lotions. My hands weren't shiny, they weren't so soft and slippery that I gave creepy handshakes, I just had hands that looked not disgusting. And the not disgusting look and feel lasted for hours.
Lamo Slippers
My husband wanted a new pair of slippers; with size 14 feet it's not an easy task to find a decent looking pair that fits. Searching online I found these slippers from Lamo and gave them to him for Christmas. He is now on his third pair. He finds them so comfy and loves how they have a proper sole so he can let the dog out or go scrape the car windshield for me without getting soggy feet.
This fall, a PR firm that represents Lamo Footwear reached out asking if I'd feature the brand. I asked for a new pair for Karl (which I was planning on buying for him for Christmas anyway), and a pair of the boots for me and for Emerson. If you follow me on Instagram Stories you may have noticed that these have become favorites for the entire family. While I wear mine primarily as slippers (though okay, they have been worn with leggings to the grocery store and maybe this weekend to a Girl Scout parent meeting), Emerson wears hers all the time. I have wide feet, high arches, thick ankles and calves and they have molded to fit me perfectly. They also fit Emerson great and they spot clean quite easily. They're added to this gift guide not out of obligation (all I had to do was share once on Stories which I did months ago), but because we truly love them.
Rascal Honey Merchandise
I met Sarah Conley, the woman behind Rascal Honey, over a decade ago. We were OG bloggers, and connected through a fashion and blogger network she worked for. We became GChat buddies, sharing music we ripped from Napster and LimeWire, discussing lipglosses, comment trolls, and HTML code. I never met Sarah in person until 2014 when my family and I went to NYC but it didn't matter, the Internet has a way of making strangers feel like besties. And we got along just as great in person (and my daughter will forever idolize her as one of my "cool famous fashion friends."). For Sarah has worked with amazing brands, and written for amazing publications like Time, Teen Vogue, and Glamour. She's a champion for body positivity, and this year she created a line of merchandise that supports that.
With the two messages, "My Body is Not a Problem to Be Solved," and "Your Body is Not a Problem to Be Solved," Sarah has created size-inclusive t-shirts and sweatshirts as well as other merch like stickers, mugs, and magnets that reminds society that there is nothing wrong with our bodies and our bodies are none of their business. I have the t-shirt in pink and the stickers adorn my journal, my daughter's mirror, and there's one in my closet to remind me I am fabulous just the way I am as I pick out my outfit (or should I say armor) for the day. A few of you have received some of these shirts and stickers from me in gift packs I've mailed out this year. The collection of positive message merchandise is available on Tee Republic and if you order by the 18th you can get it in time for Christmas.
Leuchtturm1917 Medium A5 Hardcover Notebook and a Fabulous Pen
It's easy to forget about the benefits of putting pen to paper with the convenience of phones and computers. But writing can be so cathartic, so meditative, and open up a different part of your mind to help creativity and ideas flow. This year I treated myself to one of these notebooks which elegant and well-made and beautiful and available in a bunch of beautiful colors. I prefer the ruled pages, but Leuchtturm1917 has dotted, grid, and blank page notebooks as well for whatever your style of journaling. They also come in a variety of sizes; I find the A5 a perfect size for my needs.
Each morning, I put the date on the top of a page in the notebook and make my to-do list. Anything not completed from the day prior is transferred over to the new list. I cross off each item as they are completed, but I also write little notes in the margins, doodle when on a call, jot down random ideas for future blog posts or funny things Emerson and Karl say. When I make my capsule wardrobes, I use pages in the same journal to draft up sample outfits, and then list the winners to keep track during a photo shoot. I take the notebook with me when we do multiple outfit shoots in a day, so I can track which accessories with which look and to scratch off when one has been completed. In the back pocket are business cards of people I need to contact and receipts I need to enter for taxes. Each year I choose a different color so they create a rainbow in my bookcase, for these go beyond to-do lists and become a diary of the year.
I can't think of a more thoughtful gift than the gift of writing; add a personal touch with a pen that expresses their personality. The pen can be blingy or beautiful or badass, motivational, hysterical, political, or just fun to write with. Below are some fun pens, all that have Amazon Prime shipping so they'll arrive in time for Christmas. FYI a lot of the pens below are from Goodey Studio; I ordered myself some of their message pens last year and they're still going strong and write nicely!
Reusable Cotton Makeup Wipes and Rounds
A Really Great Pillow
Two years ago, I treated myself to a Casper pillow. I had never before spent so much on a pillow. I had bought memory foam ones, I got the MyPillow, but I usually stuck to ones I found at TJ Maxx or Target and they were fine. All pillows are the same, right? I realized that wasn't true when I got the Casper pillow. It was soft yet firm and my head sunk into it and felt like luxury and it didn't get hot and I could wash it in the machine and my neck pain diminished and Karl said even my snoring diminished! A great pillow is a thing of luxury but also good self-care.
I can't say the Casper is the right pillow for you, but I can say if you're looking to upgrade your pillow or treat a loved one, now is the time to find a great one. It seems direct to consumer pillow and bedding companies are cropping up everywhere, taking over your Facebook and Instagram feeds and sponsoring your favorite podcasts (I'm looking at you Bad on Paper and Night Pillow). It's one of those gifts where someone will open it and say, "Oh. A pillow. Wow, um thanks," and maybe roll their eyes or look at your strangely because who the heck gifts a PILLOW? And then two weeks later you'll get a text or an email or a call where that same unenthusiastic gift recipient will be raving about the pillow and their great sleep and happy neck and back. I can't review any of the pillows below except the Casper, but I share them because they've all received raves from friends and influencers I trust.
Silk Pillowcase
An App Subscription
Why is it that we'll spend money on take-out lunch instead of brown-bagging it, we'll buy a latte instead of drinking the office coffee, we'll wander the aisles of CVS and buy a face wash we don't need, but the idea of spending a couple of dollars on a phone app seems indulgent?
I felt this way, and refused to pay for an app like Calm. I could search videos on YouTube, I could find free resources. But the time to find those things dug into the time I needed to rest or meditate or decompress. So last year I bought Calm as a gift to myself. I don't use it daily, but I love having it when I need to center myself before a big event, I need to rest when I have limited time, I want to fall asleep on a cross-country flight, or my mind is racing too much for me to get to bed at night. It was money well spent, and money I will spend again this year for the same positive results.
A Bathrobe
Snore. Every gift guide has a bathrobe Alison, this is so cliché. Okay, maybe it is, but let's take a moment. What condition is YOUR bathrobe in? It is as soft or absorbent or warm or roomy or fitted or long as you really want it to be? How about your bestie, your boyfriend, your mom, your friend who just had a baby, your friend recovering from surgery, your friend who is going through a divorce, your friend who just retired, your friend who gives and gives and gives but never takes time for herself? How do their bathrobes look? Maybe they need some faux fur to feel like royalty or really absorbent yet washable terry to let them lounge in lotions and oils until they absorb and turn their skin into butter. Maybe their life would be easier with one that zips up the front. Maybe they need one with deep pockets for their phone and thermometer and baby monitor and a bottle and a spit-up rag. Maybe they want to recreate the experience from that resort or spa. Maybe they need one with their new monogram.
Last year I got a lovely robe. It was thick faux fur with a soft silky lining and felt great on, but the lining would get caught on my lotioned skin and it was a bit too thick and Karl would joke that it looked like innards because it was a soft pink color that okay, maybe resembled the shade of a wound or an organ and it would need to go through the dryer twice to get fully dry. So this year I upgraded to this robe from Soma which is soft and lovely but not at all resembling flesh and much lighter weight while still being warm and dries with just one visit in the clothes dryer and pockets deep enough for all the random things I end up carrying around the house on a Sunday morning. It seemed like such a waste; I had a perfectly good robe. But once I had it I was so glad.