For years, this couple skipped Christmas gifts for each other—money was tight, and the kids came first. But one year, hubby strutted in with a giant box ten days before Christmas. “It’s for you!” he grinned. She had a gut feeling it wasn’t.
Christmas Eve rolled around, and he couldn’t wait for her to open it. She peeled back the paper… and found a wet/dry vacuum. She didn’t need it. She didn’t want it. And then came the kicker—he admitted he needed it for his garage and had already “tested” it. Merry Christmas, indeed.
That night, she refused to sleep in their bed. He called her selfish, saying gifts should be for the whole family. She smiled to herself and started plotting. Oh, she’d wait a year if she had to.
Next Christmas, she struck. A giant box sat under the tree with his name. His eyes lit up as he tore it open… only to find a case of toilet paper. She looked him dead in the eye: “Remember? Gifts should be something the whole family can use.”
The room erupted in laughter. His brothers agreed he had it coming. And from that day forward, no man in the family dared to give their wife anything resembling a vacuum.
When someone later asked if his gift-giving improved, she shrugged. “He never gave me another present.” He passed away two years later—but the toilet paper Christmas has become legend.