A Gift from a Stranger The message popped up in the company group chat, floating over spreadsheets and urgent emails like a bright bauble in a drawer of paperwork: “Colleagues, we’re launching Secret Santa! Anonymous gift exchange at the office party. Budget up to £20. Link to the form below.” Andrew re-read the text, glancing automatically at the corner of his screen where the clock ticked. Ten working days until year-end, two weeks until quarter close, three days until the mortgage payment. His whole life had been measured in milestones like this for years. The chat quickly filled with reactions—a GIF of a reindeer, someone typing “Again?”, someone asking about the budget. HR manager Katie promptly followed up: “It’s optional to join, but highly encouraged—we’re building Christmas spirit!” Andrew finished his cold coffee and clicked the link. The form asked for his name, department, and agreement to data processing. At the bottom blinked the “Join” button. He hesitated, picturing how another pointless candle or mug would end up on his already cluttered desk. Then he imagined his name left blank in the participant list. He pressed “Join”. “Did you sign up for the lottery too?” his neighbour Simon asked, poking his head into Andrew’s cubicle. “Hope I get someone with a sense of humour. I’ve already planned my gift: a time-management book for the boss.” “It’s supposed to be anonymous,” Andrew reminded him. “That just makes it more fun. Just imagine—he opens it and sees…” Simon pulled a long face and burst out laughing. Andrew smiled politely and turned back to his report. The numbers blurred together in a grey stream. Somewhere nearby, people debated which holiday gift sets to buy for partners—splurge on expensive chocolate, or save. Out by the smokers’ shelter, talk was about bonuses: Would there be one, would it get cut, would it be paid out “in kind”—in gift baskets. All of it flickered around him like a constant Christmas backdrop: the company tree in the lobby, plastic baubles, impersonal greeting cards—”Dear partners! Season’s greetings…” For Andrew, there were two main goals this year: earn the bonus for meeting his targets, and not snap at his son for bad grades. Both seemed equally hard. That evening, an email arrived: “Your Secret Santa recipient.” He opened it on his phone in the tube, squeezed between winter coats and backpacks. “Hello Andrew! Your recipient: Andrew Collins, Analytics Dept.” He read it again—and again. The tube rattled, someone bumped his shoulder. Already the chat was buzzing with screenshots: “Is this a bug?” “I got myself too.” “Guys, this is a new level of self-awareness.” Katie replied quickly: “Colleagues, yes, there was a glitch. We don’t have time to fix it, IT says it’s tied to user IDs. Let’s treat this as an experiment. Still bring a gift, just pretend you don’t know! Let’s keep the intrigue and mood.” “What kind of intrigue if it’s me?” someone wrote. “Imagine it’s a stranger who knows you very well,” Katie answered, adding a Christmas tree emoji. Andrew closed the chat and put his phone away. In the carriage, someone on speakerphone was loudly recapping how their “year-end close is going.” Andrew stared into his own reflection in the dark window. Forty-one. Still had most of his hair, but there were grey streaks at the temples. His face was tired, not old. High street blazer, watch bought on credit, phone meant to match his boss’s. A present to myself, as if from a stranger, he thought. And what could such a stranger possibly give me? He didn’t have an answer. By the next day, the smoking shelter conversation was all about the mix-up. “I think they should cancel the whole thing,” said Paul the solicitor, flicking ash. “Breaks the concept. Secret Santa’s not supposed to be un-secret.” “I like it,” argued Anna from Marketing. “You can finally buy yourself something decent. Not another reindeer scarf.” “But you buy yourself everything anyway,” someone pointed out. “Not everything. Some things feel too extravagant,” Anna smiled. “That’s what’s interesting.” Andrew listened in silence. His mind circled the usual options: headphones, power bank, new mouse. He could buy any of it, any day after work. None felt like a gift—just one more accessory for the desk. “What are you giving yourself?” Simon asked him at the lift. “I don’t know,” Andrew admitted. “Come on! I’d have gone for a PlayStation, but the budget’s not enough.” Simon grinned. “I’ll settle for a craft beer set and label it ‘from Santa’.” And me? Andrew thought on the way back to his desk. What would I actually want, if someone really saw me—not as a colleague, payer of the mortgage, father who’s always told he doesn’t spend enough time with his son, but as… what? As a person? He realised he didn’t even have the word. That evening, the shopping centre was glowing—music pumped, lights twinkled. Stores promised “the perfect gift”, “for him”, “for successful men”: on every other poster, a confident man in a smart coat—no eye bags, no credit card debt. He stopped at the electronics shop: the best-selling wireless headphones on display. An assistant was talking up one model over another. Headphones: practical. For music, podcasts. Feels like self-care, Andrew reasoned. He picked up a box, considered the price—just within the £20 budget, if not the premium option. But it’s just me buying myself something. What’s the point? He bought himself all the things “a man my age and status is supposed to have” anyway—phone, watch, boots, jacket not from a discount rail. Is that a gift? He put the box back and walked out. The bookshop was warmer. The entrance was stacked with motivational tomes: “Be Your Best Self”, “Getting Things Done”, “Happiness by Design”. He flicked through one, saw the usual talk of “comfort zones” and “productivity”, and felt even more tired. In the back: fiction shelves. He ran his finger over book spines, picking out names he used to read. In uni he’d devour a novel overnight, went to lectures with red eyes. Then the job started, then the mortgage, then his son—reading became another item on the “should do” list. Maybe a book? he thought. But which one? And would this hypothetical stranger buy me a book, when I never make the time to read it? He left the shop empty-handed, mind buzzing from adverts and Christmas playlists. At home, his wife asked: “What’s got you so glum?” “Oh, it’s fine,” he said, taking off his shoes. “Some game at work. Gifts and stuff.” “More candles and mugs?” she smirked. “This time, you have to give yourself a present. System crashed.” “That’s brilliant!” she said, putting pasta on the table. “Buy something you never feel you can justify.” “Like what?” “I don’t know. You know best.” He fell quiet. His son, at the table, thumbed through his textbook, pretending to study for a test. “Well?” his wife looked at him. “You always want something specific. New phone, watch, rucksack. You’re into your gadgets.” “I get those as I need them,” he said. “Then maybe not a thing?” she suggested. “A voucher—for a massage, weekend, or…” “I don’t need a voucher for a weekend,” he snapped. “I need a manager who doesn’t email on Sundays.” She smiled. “Well then, ask your Santa for that manager.” “That’s outside the budget,” he joked. That night, Andrew tossed and turned—images of shops and slogans, other people’s wishes: “career growth”, “new achievements”, “financial prosperity”. All important, but none felt real—like tinsel you pack away in January. What would I want, if nobody was judging? No colleagues, no wife, no kid, no bank? He still didn’t know. A week before the party, the office was buzzing louder. Gift bags appeared on desks—some hidden away, some brazenly on display. Chat lit up with talk of dress codes, menus, games. Katie posted that the programme included a host, DJ, and a “special Secret Santa moment”. Andrew still hadn’t bought anything. “What’s the hold-up?” asked Simon. “Soon there’ll be nothing left.” “I’m thinking,” Andrew said. “What’s to think about?” Simon shrugged. “Grab something practical. I ordered myself a grill kit—always wanted one, but never got round to it. Now I will.” At lunch, Andrew sat in the café downstairs. The queue snaked to the till—people talking about reports, kids, traffic. On the digital menu screen: “Treat Yourself—Holiday Gift Sets.” He pulled out his phone, opened an online shop. Searched: “gift for man 40 years old.” Immediate results: watches, wallets, gadgets, whisky sets, barbershop vouchers. All about what I should look like, he thought. Not how I feel. He closed the tab, checked his personal email. It was overloaded with messages: “We miss you on our website”, “Your exclusive discount awaits”, “Start the New Year with a new you.” Amid the spam: an email from an education portal he’d subscribed to ages ago. “New intake for photography course—sign up by Sunday.” Photography. He remembered the old SLR camera, bought ten years back—before the child, before the mortgage. Back then, he’d wander London taking photos of houses, people, shop windows. Eventually, the camera ended up in a cupboard. First, no time; later, no energy; finally, “it’s just a phase”. It’s a cliché, his inner critic sniped. Middle-aged bloke, remembers he used to like photography. Probably about to quit his job and become an artist. Pathetic. He shoved away his tray, feeling a sudden flush of embarrassment. I’m not quitting anything. I just… But he didn’t finish the thought. His phone buzzed—a message from his manager: “Need Q3 figures by tonight.” Andrew sighed and got up. That evening, he dug the camera bag out of the corridor cupboard. The camera was there—heavy, cold. He turned it on, battery dead. Found the charger in his desk. His wife raised an eyebrow: “You’re going to take pictures?” “Just checking if it still works,” he said. When the battery had enough juice, he stepped onto the balcony and snapped a few shots of the courtyard: cars, windows, snow, streetlamps. Nothing remarkable, but the moment he looked through the viewfinder, the noise in his head drifted—didn’t vanish, but faded back. He noticed himself breathing easier. Maybe that’s the gift? he thought. Not the camera, but permission to spend time on it. An hour a week—or two. Without feeling like it’s a waste. It felt both simple and scary. The voice in his head sneered: Oh sure, just buy yourself a photography course. Like that’ll change anything. But a quieter voice replied: Why not? You blow money on things you’ll forget in a year. At least this is something you actually liked once. He reopened the course email—a module on composition, understanding light, cityscapes. Evening classes, twice a week, online. The cost fit the Secret Santa budget, unless he took the premium option. A gift to myself from a stranger, he thought. A stranger who remembers what I used to enjoy, and doesn’t think it’s stupid. He clicked “Pay”. Now the formalities: present it as a gift from “Santa.” The game rules said the gift should be a physical item. He couldn’t just turn up and say, “I signed up for a course.” He’d need something to hold in his hands. He bought a plain, navy notebook and a simple envelope. Printed out the course confirmation and slipped it inside. On the first page he wrote: “For photos you haven’t taken yet.” His handwriting was shaky, but legible. He sat down to write a note—something honest, not like a motivational poster. After several crumpled drafts, he settled on: “To Andrew. Sometimes it’s good to remind yourself you’re more than reports and calls. Hope you get a little time to see the world, not just through spreadsheets. Use it if you can. Your Santa.” He read it through—his chest tightened, not from pride, but because the words felt both alien and dearly needed. “Santa” ended up more caring than he usually was to himself. He packed the confirmation in the envelope, put it in the notebook, wrapped it in brown paper and tied it with a thin red ribbon. The gift looked modest. No branding, no slogans. The party was in the banqueting suite on the office ground floor: white tablecloths, fairy lights, a DJ playing overdone hits. Colleagues filtered in—some in sparkly dresses, some in the same shirts as in meetings, minus name badges. Presents piled high at a dedicated table. Each had a sticker with the recipient’s name. Andrew set down his parcel, eyeing the pile: bright bags from chain stores, boxes with bows, oddly-shaped packages wrapped in foil. “Ready for reveal?” Katie smiled as she passed. “As much as possible,” Andrew replied. By mid-evening the host announced the “special moment.” Music dimmed, lights lowered. People were merry—some laughing too loud, some arguing at the bar. “Friends,” the host began, “this year our Secret Santa is extra secret. So secret that you’re each your own magician. But let’s pretend we don’t know, right?” The room chuckled. “One by one, collect your gift from the table and open it right here. Remember—the point isn’t what’s inside, but what you might discover about yourself.” Another one speaking in slogans, Andrew thought dryly. When his turn came, a strange anxiety tightened his throat. He picked his parcel marked “Andrew Collins” and returned to his seat. “Ooh, what’ve you got?” Simon leaned over. “Hope it’s not socks.” Andrew untied the ribbon, peeled off the paper. Inside—a notebook and envelope. His name on the envelope; his hands shook just a little. “Not a grill kit anyway,” Simon noted. Andrew opened the envelope—pulled out the paper. Around him, someone was cheering, “I got a spa voucher!” Someone showed off a board game. He glimpsed accountant Sophie hiding behind a yoga book; HR Katie laughing over a mug marked “Best Employee.” He read the note once, then again. The words he’d written himself felt, unexpectedly, like someone truly reaching out. You’re more than reports and calls. Something inside ached—shame at feeling seen in weakness, and relief that the “someone” didn’t judge. “So what is it?” Simon pressed. “A course,” Andrew swallowed. “Photography. And a notebook.” “Wow,” Simon whistled. “Someone went all out. Must be one of the creative lot. But we’re not supposed to investigate, right?” “Right,” Andrew said. “Ah well,” Simon already distracted by his grill set. “Next time you’ll be the official photographer. Handy that.” Andrew closed the notebook. The host was joking on stage, people danced. It was noisy, but inside he felt quieter. He glanced at his wife’s message on his phone: “How is it?” He replied, “Fine. The gifts are odd. I gave myself a course”—then erased that last part and wrote, “I’ll tell you later.” He walked home near midnight. The block was peaceful—above, a door banged. The flat was welcoming—warm kitchen light, scent of tangerines. His wife sat reading, son asleep. “So?” she asked. “What did you get?” He put the notebook and envelope on the table. “That’s it?” she asked. “There’s more inside,” he said, showing the envelope. She read the note and looked at him. “Did you write this to yourself?” she asked gently. “Yes,” he confessed. “And booked the course. Photography.” She nodded—didn’t joke, didn’t tease. “Good gift,” she said. “You did love it.” “That was ages ago,” he replied. “So? Old things aren’t dead things.” He shrugged, but inside, something shifted—as if a heavy piece of furniture had finally been budged. “We’ll see,” he said. On New Year’s morning, Andrew woke without an alarm. The sky was grey, the car park dusted with old snow. His head felt heavy, not aching. His wife and son were at her parents; he’d join them tomorrow. The flat was silent. He made coffee, sat down, opened the notebook. “For photos you haven’t taken yet” said the page. He opened his laptop, found the email with course access. The first module started in a week, but he played the intro now: the tutor’s voice spoke not about “self-improvement” or “growth”, but about noticing light and shadow. He listened, and realised he wasn’t checking work email. The phone lay in another room—he didn’t reach for it. Afterwards, he picked up the camera and went outdoors. The air was chilly but bearable. Others were throwing away post-holiday rubbish, someone walked their dog. An orphaned party popper lay on the playpark. He lifted the camera, framed the branches, wires, balconies—nothing special. But when he clicked the shutter, he felt he was doing something small, but important. Not for targets, not for KPIs, not for a presentation. Just for himself. He took more shots, uploaded them to his laptop. Some were clumsy; some boring. But one—where the flats opposite were reflected in a car window—caught his eye. He zoomed in on the details. In the reflection, his own silhouette with the camera showed faintly. A gift from a stranger, he thought. Who I turned out to be. And perhaps that’s ok. He closed the photo app and finished his lukewarm coffee. Ahead was the first working day—unfinished tasks, emails, meetings. And the course, starting next week. And a time slot he hoped to keep, just for himself. He took the notebook, dated a new page, wrote briefly: “Courtyard, morning, reflection in glass.” The line was modest, but something in it was his. He set down the pen, and realised—for the first time in ages—he was thinking about the future in terms other than bills and reports. There, in the future, was now a small space just for seeing and choosing what he wanted. It wasn’t much. But it was enough to breathe a little easier. He poured more coffee, opened the course calendar, and in the notes box wrote: “Don’t cancel for work.” He grinned, realising life would intervene. But now, at least, he had the right to try. And that, too, was a gift.

A Gift from a Stranger

The message popped up on the office group chat, floating above spreadsheets and urgent emails like a shiny bauble in a drawer of paperwork:

Colleagues, were launching Secret Santa! Anonymous present swap at the office do. Budget up to £25. Link to the form below.

Tom reread the text and glanced reflexively at the corner of his monitor, where the clock ticked on. Ten working days left in the year, two weeks until quarters end, three days till the next mortgage payment. His mind had long ago started measuring life by such deadlines.

Reactions poured into the chat. Someone posted a gif of a reindeer, someone grumbled, Again?, someone else asked about the budget. The HR manager, Charlotte, quickly added, Participation isnt mandatory, but its highly encouraged. Were bringing festive cheer.

Tom finished his cold coffee and clicked the link. The form asked for name, department, consent for data handling. At the bottom, an Opt In button pulsed invitingly. He hesitated, picturing yet another pointless scented candle or mug perched on his already cluttered desk. Then he imagined his name sitting empty on the participant list.

He tapped to join.

Joined the lottery as well? asked Sam from the next department, popping his head into Toms cubicle. I hope I get someone with a sense of humour. Ive got the perfect present: a book on time management for our manager.

Its supposed to be anonymous, Tom reminded him.

All the more fun! Imagine his face when he opens it Sam stretched his features in mock surprise, then burst out laughing.

Tom smiled politely, returning to his report. The figures blurred into one grey stream. Somewhere, colleagues debated gift baskets for partners, arguing if it was worth going for posh chocolates or saving a few quid. The smokers had speculated that morning about bonuses: will they drop, will they be given in kind as more hampers.

All around, Christmas shimmered on as an endless backdrop: the office tree in the lobby, plastic baubles, generic cards with Dear Partners! Seasons Greetings

This year, Tom had two goals. Onemake it to the year-end bonus for hitting target. Twonot snap at his son about his grades. Both seemed equally challenging.

That evening, an email arrived: Your Secret Santa Recipient. Tom opened it on the Tube, wedged between parkas and briefcases.

Hello Tom! Your recipient: Tom Spencer, Analytics Dept.

He read the line. Then read it again.

The Tube jolted; someone nudged his shoulder. Meanwhile, screenshots flooded the chat:

Is this a bug?
Me tooI got myself!
This is a whole new level of soul-searching.

Charlotte replied briskly, Yes, folks, system glitched. Too late to changeIT says its all linked to the IDs. Lets treat it as an experiment. Still bring gifts, act as if nothings amiss. Its all about the mystery and the mood!

What mystery if I know its me? someone wrote.

Just imagine youre receiving a gift from a stranger who understands you perfectly, replied Charlotte, with a Christmas tree emoji.

Tom closed the chat, shoveled his phone into his pocket. In the carriage, someone was theatrically sharing how they were wrapping up the year. He watched his own reflection in the blackened window. Forty-one. Hair still holding on, but lighter around the temples. Worn, but not old. A mass-market blazer, watch bought on credit, mobile like the bosss.

A present to oneself, as if from an unknown benefactor, Tom mused. What could such a stranger possibly give me?

No answer.

Next day, the smokers corner only had one topic.

I say scrap the whole thing, argued Paul from legal, flicking ash. It breaks the concept. Secret Santa cant be un-secret.

I rather like it, countered Alice from Marketing. Finally, I can buy myself something decent. Instead of another scarf with reindeer.

You buy yourself things anyway, someone pointed out.

Not everything. Some things you never justify spending on, Alice smiled. Thats the interesting part.

Tom listened silently. His mind turned over headphones, a power bank, a new mouse. All things he could grab on his own, just popping into a shop on the way home. None felt like gifts, just more office kit.

Whatll you buy yourself? Sam asked by the lift.

Im not sure, Tom replied honestly.

Classic! Id get myself a PlayStation. Budgets tight, though, Sam grinned. Fine, Ill go with a craft beer setwrite From Santa on it.

And me? Tom wondered, heading back. What would I want if someone really saw me? Not as a staff number, not a mortgage payer, not a father eternally told he doesnt spend enough time with his child, but as as what? A person?

He realised he couldnt find the word.

That evening, he wandered through the mall. Everything gleamed, glowed, the music relentless. Shops shouted about perfect gifts, sets for him, success packs. Every other window poster showed a confident man in a designer coat. No eye bags, no debt.

Tom popped into the electronics store. Wireless headphones were the top seller on the main display. A sales assistant pontificated to a lad in a puffer jacket about brands.

Headphones. Sensiblemusic, podcasts. Could tell himself he was looking after his wellbeing, Tom reasoned, handling the box. The price fit the budget, barring the top model.

But Im only buying for myself. Wheres the magic in that? I already buy all the things men my age and station are meant to own: phone, watch, good shoes, jacket not off the sale rail. Is any of it really a gift?

He put the box back and walked out.

The bookshop was warmer. At the entrance, stacks of motivational books: Become Your Best Self, Master Your Time, Happiness by Design. He picked one up, skimmed it, saw the familiar buzzwords comfort zone, efficiency, and felt instantly weary.

Further in, the fiction shelves. He ran his fingers along the spines, recalling once-favourite names. Back at uni, hed devour a whole novel overnight, then show up bleary-eyed to lectures. Then work happened, then the mortgage, then his son was born, and reading became a slot on the should do list.

Maybe a book? he thought. But which? And would this imaginary stranger even bother with a book, knowing he never has time to read?

He left empty-handed, head echoing with jingles and piped carols.

At home, his wife asked, Why the long face?

Its nothing, he replied, kicking off his shoes. Its some game at work. Gifts.

More candles and mugs? She grinned.

This year, each person has to give themselves something. System went wonky.

So whats the big deal? She placed pasta on the table. Buy yourself something you usually hold back on.

Like what? he asked.

She shrugged. Youd know better than me.

He fell quiet. Their son, across the table, flicked through his textbook, feigning revision.

Well? she pressed gently. You always want something. New phone, watch, backpack. Youre big on your bits and bobs.

I buy those anyway. When I need them, he replied.

Maybe dont get a thing, then, she suggested. Buy yourself a voucherfor a massage, a proper day off, maybe

I dont need a voucher for a day off, he interrupted. I need a manager who doesnt email on Sundays.

She smiled.

There you go. Ask Santa for that.

Thats out of budget, he joked.

That night, sleep was elusive. Images from shops and slogans and other peoples wishescareer growth, fresh achievements, financial stabilityparaded through his mind. All important, yet somehow as peripheral as tinsel packed away by January.

What would I want if no one was judging? Not colleagues, wife, child, parents, nor the bank?

Still no answer.

A week before the office party, the place buzzed louder. Gift bags crept onto desks. Some stashed away, some on show. The chat explored the dress code, food, competitions. Charlotte announced thered be a host, a DJ, and a special Secret Santa moment.

Tom still hadnt sorted a gift.

Hanging about too long, mate, Sam commented. Decent stuffll be gone soon.

Im thinking, Tom replied.

Whats to think? Grab something useful. I got myself a grill set. Meant to for agesnever quite got round to it. Now I have.

Over lunch, Tom walked down to the café. The queue wound toward the till, people nattering about work, school runs, traffic. On the screen over the bar: Treat yourself! Festive Sets.

He sat by the window with his tray and opened his phone. Searched Gifts for man turning 40. Results gushed forthwatches, wallets, gadgets, whiskey sets, barbershop vouchers.

Thats all about how I should look, Tom mused. Not how I actually feel.

He closed the tab and opened his personal email. Promo mail flooded in: You havent visited our site, Your exclusive discount awaits, Start the new year with the new you.

Amidst them: one from an online learning portal he’d once subscribed to. New Photography Course starts soon. Register before weekend.

Photography.

He recalled his old DSLR, bought a decade back before fatherhood, when mortgage hovered only as a distant threat. Back then, hed wander London, snapping buildings, people, shop windows. The camera ended up in the closet. First time vanished, then energy, then it all seemed silly.

Pathetic, his inner critic sneered. Forty-something thinking hell suddenly become an artist. Laughable.

He pushed his tray away. Something clenched inside, awkward and small.

I dont want to change my life. I just

He didnt finish the thought. His phone vibratedhis manager: Figures for Q3 before five.

Tom sighed and headed back up.

That evening, digging through the hallway cabinet, Tom found the old camera bag. The DSLR was heavy, cold. He switched it on; dead battery. Charger found in his desk drawer.

His wife raised an eyebrow. Whats thisgetting into photography again?

Just seeing if the things still working, he said.

With some charge, Tom slipped onto the balcony and took a few snaps of the street below. Nothing remarkable: cars, windows, snow, streetlamps. But looking through the lens, the noise in his head quietened. Didnt vanish, but faded.

He noticed he was breathing easier.

Maybe thats the gift, Tom thought. Not the camera, but permission to spend time on this. An hour a week. Or two. Without the guilt of it being frivolous.

The idea felt both obvious and daunting. His inner critic piped up: So, get a photography class. As if thatll change anything.

But a gentler voice insisted: Why not? You waste money on stuff youll forget about in a year. At least this, you once loved.

Back at his computer, Tom reopened the course email. Modules on composition, lighting, cityscapes; evening classes, twice a week, online. Bearing in mind the £25 budget, he could manage the basic package.

A gift to himself from a stranger, Tom thought. A stranger who remembered what he used to enjoy, and didnt call it pointless.

He clicked Pay.

Now the formalitieswrapping a physical present.

Instructions said the gift must be tangiblehanded over at the party. No just I signed up for a course. There had to be something to put in a box.

He bought a plain navy notebook and envelope at WHSmith. At home, he printed out the course confirmation and folded it neatly. On the first page, he wrote in careful print: For photos yet to be taken.

He wanted the note to sound like advice from someone who actually knew himnot another motivational poster.

Several scrapped drafts later, he had it:

To Tom.
Sometimes you need reminding youre not just emails and spreadsheets. May you find a moment to see the world beyond your data. Hope you use it.
Your Santa.

Tom reread the words. His chest achednot from sentimentality, but because they felt at once unfamiliar and deeply necessary.

Santa seemed a shade more compassionate than Tom usually managed for himself.

He tucked the confirmation into the envelope, slipped it inside the notebook, wrapped the lot in plain brown paper, tied it with a thin red ribbon.

It looked modest. But there was no branding, no sloganeering.

The party was held in a rented hall on the ground floor of their office block. White tablecloths, string lights, a DJ spinning old chart hits. Colleagues arrived in gold dresses and shirts fresh from the office, minus their usual name badges.

The gifts were piled on a table by the wall, each tagged with the recipients name. Tom placed his package, glanced at the heapglossy shop bags, ribboned boxes, mysterious parcels wrapped in foil.

Ready for the great self-reveal? Charlotte winked, passing by.

As much as anyone can be, Tom said.

Towards the middle of the evening, the host announced the special moment. Music dipped, lights dimmed. Everyone was merry; some giggled at the bar.

Friends, the host began, This year, our Secret Santa is more secret than ever. Youve all become your own magicians. But well keep up the actno spoilers, all right?

A ripple of laughter.

Well go one by one, pick up our present, and open it right here. And rememberthe real magic is what you learn about yourself.

More slogans, Tom thought, tiredly.

When it was his turn, anxiety shivered up his spine. He collected his parcel, found his name, sat back at the table.

So, whats inside? Sam leaned over. Bet its not socks.

Tom untied the ribbon, peeled back the paper. Inside: notebook, envelope. His name written on it. His hands trembled slightly.

Well, not a grill set, thats for sure, Sam quipped.

Tom extracted the note, unfolded it. Around the room, colleagues shouted with delightI got a spa voucher!, someone flashed a board game. He glimpsed accountant Sarah blinking away tears over a yoga book, HR Charlotte roaring at her Best Colleague mug.

Tom read his note. Then again. Words hed written now sounded as if someone else spoke them to him.

Youre not just emails and spreadsheets.

A nerve pinched inside. Embarrassmentcaught in a moment of weakness. And, strangely, relief, for the someone wasnt judging.

Well? Whats yours? Sam pushed.

A class, Tom replied, swallowing. Photography. And a notebook.

Blimey, Sam whistled. Someone put real thought in. One of the creative types, maybe? Were still not supposed to ask, right?

Were not, Tom said.

Never mind. Sam was already distracted by his grill kit. Youll be doing proper party snaps next time. Handy!

Tom closed his notebook gently. The host was cracking jokes up front; people started to dance. It was loud, but inside Tom, something had quieted.

His wifes unread message blinked on his phone: Hows it going? He replied, Fine. The gifts are a laugh. I got myself a course,then deleted the last line, replaced it with, Ill tell you later.

He got home near midnight. The block was silent, just one door banging upstairs. The flat glowed warmly, smelling of clementines. His wife read at the table; their son was already asleep.

Well? she asked. What did you get?

Tom placed the notebook beside the envelope.

Thats all? she asked, puzzled.

Theres more inside, he said, opening the envelope.

She read the note, looked up.

You wrote this for yourself?

I did, he admitted. And paid for the class. Photography.

She nodded. No laughter, no jokes.

Good present, she said. You used to love it.

That was ages ago.

So what? Ages ago doesnt mean its gone.

He shrugged, but inside something shifteda heavy wardrobe finally pushed into its rightful place.

Well see, he said.

On New Years Day, Tom woke without his alarm. The morning was grey, cars packed in the driveway, the snow patchy. His head was heavy, but not splitting. His wife and son had gone to her mums the night before; hed join them tomorrow.

The flat was unusually quiet. Tom made coffee, sat down, opened the notebook. The first page still bore his scrawled words: For photos yet to be taken.

He booted his laptop, found the course email. The first session was a week away, but the intro module was already unlocked. He clicked the linka calm instructor, talking not about personal growth or productivity, but about noticing light and shadow.

Tom listened, surprised at how he didnt check his work email at the same time. His phone lay forgotten in another room.

Afterwards, he grabbed his camera and stepped outside. The air was brisk, not biting. Neighbours dumped post-holiday rubbish, walked their dogs. On the playground, a solitary party popper glittered in the frost.

He raised his camera, peered through the finder. Branches, wires, balconies. Nothing special. But pressing the shutter, he felt itdoing something insignificant, yet necessary.

Not for a report, not for KPIs, not for a slide deck. Just for himself.

He took a few more shots, went home, uploaded them. Most were uninspired, others just plain dull. But one, capturing the house reflected in a car window, struck him.

He zoomed in, examining details. In the reflection, his own silhouette with the camera hovered.

A present from a stranger, he thought. One who happened to be me. And that, maybe, was just fine.

He closed the program and finished his cold coffee. Ahead lay the first working day, unfinished tasks, emails, calls. And the course starting next week. And an hour hed try to protect, just for himself.

He picked up the notebook, opened a fresh page, wrote the days date, then a line: Driveway, morning, reflected window. The writing was humble, yet somehow his.

He set the pen aside, and realisedfor the first time in ageshe was thinking about the future in terms other than payments and documents. In that future, there was a tiny space for simply noticing, and choosing what he actually wanted.

It wasnt much. But it was enough to let him breathe easier.

He poured another coffee and opened the course timetable. At the bottom was a notes field. Tom wrote: Dont skip for work. He smirked, knowing life would interfere anyway. But now, he had at least the right to try.

And that, too, was a gift.

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A Gift from a Stranger The message popped up in the company group chat, floating over spreadsheets and urgent emails like a bright bauble in a drawer of paperwork: “Colleagues, we’re launching Secret Santa! Anonymous gift exchange at the office party. Budget up to £20. Link to the form below.” Andrew re-read the text, glancing automatically at the corner of his screen where the clock ticked. Ten working days until year-end, two weeks until quarter close, three days until the mortgage payment. His whole life had been measured in milestones like this for years. The chat quickly filled with reactions—a GIF of a reindeer, someone typing “Again?”, someone asking about the budget. HR manager Katie promptly followed up: “It’s optional to join, but highly encouraged—we’re building Christmas spirit!” Andrew finished his cold coffee and clicked the link. The form asked for his name, department, and agreement to data processing. At the bottom blinked the “Join” button. He hesitated, picturing how another pointless candle or mug would end up on his already cluttered desk. Then he imagined his name left blank in the participant list. He pressed “Join”. “Did you sign up for the lottery too?” his neighbour Simon asked, poking his head into Andrew’s cubicle. “Hope I get someone with a sense of humour. I’ve already planned my gift: a time-management book for the boss.” “It’s supposed to be anonymous,” Andrew reminded him. “That just makes it more fun. Just imagine—he opens it and sees…” Simon pulled a long face and burst out laughing. Andrew smiled politely and turned back to his report. The numbers blurred together in a grey stream. Somewhere nearby, people debated which holiday gift sets to buy for partners—splurge on expensive chocolate, or save. Out by the smokers’ shelter, talk was about bonuses: Would there be one, would it get cut, would it be paid out “in kind”—in gift baskets. All of it flickered around him like a constant Christmas backdrop: the company tree in the lobby, plastic baubles, impersonal greeting cards—”Dear partners! Season’s greetings…” For Andrew, there were two main goals this year: earn the bonus for meeting his targets, and not snap at his son for bad grades. Both seemed equally hard. That evening, an email arrived: “Your Secret Santa recipient.” He opened it on his phone in the tube, squeezed between winter coats and backpacks. “Hello Andrew! Your recipient: Andrew Collins, Analytics Dept.” He read it again—and again. The tube rattled, someone bumped his shoulder. Already the chat was buzzing with screenshots: “Is this a bug?” “I got myself too.” “Guys, this is a new level of self-awareness.” Katie replied quickly: “Colleagues, yes, there was a glitch. We don’t have time to fix it, IT says it’s tied to user IDs. Let’s treat this as an experiment. Still bring a gift, just pretend you don’t know! Let’s keep the intrigue and mood.” “What kind of intrigue if it’s me?” someone wrote. “Imagine it’s a stranger who knows you very well,” Katie answered, adding a Christmas tree emoji. Andrew closed the chat and put his phone away. In the carriage, someone on speakerphone was loudly recapping how their “year-end close is going.” Andrew stared into his own reflection in the dark window. Forty-one. Still had most of his hair, but there were grey streaks at the temples. His face was tired, not old. High street blazer, watch bought on credit, phone meant to match his boss’s. A present to myself, as if from a stranger, he thought. And what could such a stranger possibly give me? He didn’t have an answer. By the next day, the smoking shelter conversation was all about the mix-up. “I think they should cancel the whole thing,” said Paul the solicitor, flicking ash. “Breaks the concept. Secret Santa’s not supposed to be un-secret.” “I like it,” argued Anna from Marketing. “You can finally buy yourself something decent. Not another reindeer scarf.” “But you buy yourself everything anyway,” someone pointed out. “Not everything. Some things feel too extravagant,” Anna smiled. “That’s what’s interesting.” Andrew listened in silence. His mind circled the usual options: headphones, power bank, new mouse. He could buy any of it, any day after work. None felt like a gift—just one more accessory for the desk. “What are you giving yourself?” Simon asked him at the lift. “I don’t know,” Andrew admitted. “Come on! I’d have gone for a PlayStation, but the budget’s not enough.” Simon grinned. “I’ll settle for a craft beer set and label it ‘from Santa’.” And me? Andrew thought on the way back to his desk. What would I actually want, if someone really saw me—not as a colleague, payer of the mortgage, father who’s always told he doesn’t spend enough time with his son, but as… what? As a person? He realised he didn’t even have the word. That evening, the shopping centre was glowing—music pumped, lights twinkled. Stores promised “the perfect gift”, “for him”, “for successful men”: on every other poster, a confident man in a smart coat—no eye bags, no credit card debt. He stopped at the electronics shop: the best-selling wireless headphones on display. An assistant was talking up one model over another. Headphones: practical. For music, podcasts. Feels like self-care, Andrew reasoned. He picked up a box, considered the price—just within the £20 budget, if not the premium option. But it’s just me buying myself something. What’s the point? He bought himself all the things “a man my age and status is supposed to have” anyway—phone, watch, boots, jacket not from a discount rail. Is that a gift? He put the box back and walked out. The bookshop was warmer. The entrance was stacked with motivational tomes: “Be Your Best Self”, “Getting Things Done”, “Happiness by Design”. He flicked through one, saw the usual talk of “comfort zones” and “productivity”, and felt even more tired. In the back: fiction shelves. He ran his finger over book spines, picking out names he used to read. In uni he’d devour a novel overnight, went to lectures with red eyes. Then the job started, then the mortgage, then his son—reading became another item on the “should do” list. Maybe a book? he thought. But which one? And would this hypothetical stranger buy me a book, when I never make the time to read it? He left the shop empty-handed, mind buzzing from adverts and Christmas playlists. At home, his wife asked: “What’s got you so glum?” “Oh, it’s fine,” he said, taking off his shoes. “Some game at work. Gifts and stuff.” “More candles and mugs?” she smirked. “This time, you have to give yourself a present. System crashed.” “That’s brilliant!” she said, putting pasta on the table. “Buy something you never feel you can justify.” “Like what?” “I don’t know. You know best.” He fell quiet. His son, at the table, thumbed through his textbook, pretending to study for a test. “Well?” his wife looked at him. “You always want something specific. New phone, watch, rucksack. You’re into your gadgets.” “I get those as I need them,” he said. “Then maybe not a thing?” she suggested. “A voucher—for a massage, weekend, or…” “I don’t need a voucher for a weekend,” he snapped. “I need a manager who doesn’t email on Sundays.” She smiled. “Well then, ask your Santa for that manager.” “That’s outside the budget,” he joked. That night, Andrew tossed and turned—images of shops and slogans, other people’s wishes: “career growth”, “new achievements”, “financial prosperity”. All important, but none felt real—like tinsel you pack away in January. What would I want, if nobody was judging? No colleagues, no wife, no kid, no bank? He still didn’t know. A week before the party, the office was buzzing louder. Gift bags appeared on desks—some hidden away, some brazenly on display. Chat lit up with talk of dress codes, menus, games. Katie posted that the programme included a host, DJ, and a “special Secret Santa moment”. Andrew still hadn’t bought anything. “What’s the hold-up?” asked Simon. “Soon there’ll be nothing left.” “I’m thinking,” Andrew said. “What’s to think about?” Simon shrugged. “Grab something practical. I ordered myself a grill kit—always wanted one, but never got round to it. Now I will.” At lunch, Andrew sat in the café downstairs. The queue snaked to the till—people talking about reports, kids, traffic. On the digital menu screen: “Treat Yourself—Holiday Gift Sets.” He pulled out his phone, opened an online shop. Searched: “gift for man 40 years old.” Immediate results: watches, wallets, gadgets, whisky sets, barbershop vouchers. All about what I should look like, he thought. Not how I feel. He closed the tab, checked his personal email. It was overloaded with messages: “We miss you on our website”, “Your exclusive discount awaits”, “Start the New Year with a new you.” Amid the spam: an email from an education portal he’d subscribed to ages ago. “New intake for photography course—sign up by Sunday.” Photography. He remembered the old SLR camera, bought ten years back—before the child, before the mortgage. Back then, he’d wander London taking photos of houses, people, shop windows. Eventually, the camera ended up in a cupboard. First, no time; later, no energy; finally, “it’s just a phase”. It’s a cliché, his inner critic sniped. Middle-aged bloke, remembers he used to like photography. Probably about to quit his job and become an artist. Pathetic. He shoved away his tray, feeling a sudden flush of embarrassment. I’m not quitting anything. I just… But he didn’t finish the thought. His phone buzzed—a message from his manager: “Need Q3 figures by tonight.” Andrew sighed and got up. That evening, he dug the camera bag out of the corridor cupboard. The camera was there—heavy, cold. He turned it on, battery dead. Found the charger in his desk. His wife raised an eyebrow: “You’re going to take pictures?” “Just checking if it still works,” he said. When the battery had enough juice, he stepped onto the balcony and snapped a few shots of the courtyard: cars, windows, snow, streetlamps. Nothing remarkable, but the moment he looked through the viewfinder, the noise in his head drifted—didn’t vanish, but faded back. He noticed himself breathing easier. Maybe that’s the gift? he thought. Not the camera, but permission to spend time on it. An hour a week—or two. Without feeling like it’s a waste. It felt both simple and scary. The voice in his head sneered: Oh sure, just buy yourself a photography course. Like that’ll change anything. But a quieter voice replied: Why not? You blow money on things you’ll forget in a year. At least this is something you actually liked once. He reopened the course email—a module on composition, understanding light, cityscapes. Evening classes, twice a week, online. The cost fit the Secret Santa budget, unless he took the premium option. A gift to myself from a stranger, he thought. A stranger who remembers what I used to enjoy, and doesn’t think it’s stupid. He clicked “Pay”. Now the formalities: present it as a gift from “Santa.” The game rules said the gift should be a physical item. He couldn’t just turn up and say, “I signed up for a course.” He’d need something to hold in his hands. He bought a plain, navy notebook and a simple envelope. Printed out the course confirmation and slipped it inside. On the first page he wrote: “For photos you haven’t taken yet.” His handwriting was shaky, but legible. He sat down to write a note—something honest, not like a motivational poster. After several crumpled drafts, he settled on: “To Andrew. Sometimes it’s good to remind yourself you’re more than reports and calls. Hope you get a little time to see the world, not just through spreadsheets. Use it if you can. Your Santa.” He read it through—his chest tightened, not from pride, but because the words felt both alien and dearly needed. “Santa” ended up more caring than he usually was to himself. He packed the confirmation in the envelope, put it in the notebook, wrapped it in brown paper and tied it with a thin red ribbon. The gift looked modest. No branding, no slogans. The party was in the banqueting suite on the office ground floor: white tablecloths, fairy lights, a DJ playing overdone hits. Colleagues filtered in—some in sparkly dresses, some in the same shirts as in meetings, minus name badges. Presents piled high at a dedicated table. Each had a sticker with the recipient’s name. Andrew set down his parcel, eyeing the pile: bright bags from chain stores, boxes with bows, oddly-shaped packages wrapped in foil. “Ready for reveal?” Katie smiled as she passed. “As much as possible,” Andrew replied. By mid-evening the host announced the “special moment.” Music dimmed, lights lowered. People were merry—some laughing too loud, some arguing at the bar. “Friends,” the host began, “this year our Secret Santa is extra secret. So secret that you’re each your own magician. But let’s pretend we don’t know, right?” The room chuckled. “One by one, collect your gift from the table and open it right here. Remember—the point isn’t what’s inside, but what you might discover about yourself.” Another one speaking in slogans, Andrew thought dryly. When his turn came, a strange anxiety tightened his throat. He picked his parcel marked “Andrew Collins” and returned to his seat. “Ooh, what’ve you got?” Simon leaned over. “Hope it’s not socks.” Andrew untied the ribbon, peeled off the paper. Inside—a notebook and envelope. His name on the envelope; his hands shook just a little. “Not a grill kit anyway,” Simon noted. Andrew opened the envelope—pulled out the paper. Around him, someone was cheering, “I got a spa voucher!” Someone showed off a board game. He glimpsed accountant Sophie hiding behind a yoga book; HR Katie laughing over a mug marked “Best Employee.” He read the note once, then again. The words he’d written himself felt, unexpectedly, like someone truly reaching out. You’re more than reports and calls. Something inside ached—shame at feeling seen in weakness, and relief that the “someone” didn’t judge. “So what is it?” Simon pressed. “A course,” Andrew swallowed. “Photography. And a notebook.” “Wow,” Simon whistled. “Someone went all out. Must be one of the creative lot. But we’re not supposed to investigate, right?” “Right,” Andrew said. “Ah well,” Simon already distracted by his grill set. “Next time you’ll be the official photographer. Handy that.” Andrew closed the notebook. The host was joking on stage, people danced. It was noisy, but inside he felt quieter. He glanced at his wife’s message on his phone: “How is it?” He replied, “Fine. The gifts are odd. I gave myself a course”—then erased that last part and wrote, “I’ll tell you later.” He walked home near midnight. The block was peaceful—above, a door banged. The flat was welcoming—warm kitchen light, scent of tangerines. His wife sat reading, son asleep. “So?” she asked. “What did you get?” He put the notebook and envelope on the table. “That’s it?” she asked. “There’s more inside,” he said, showing the envelope. She read the note and looked at him. “Did you write this to yourself?” she asked gently. “Yes,” he confessed. “And booked the course. Photography.” She nodded—didn’t joke, didn’t tease. “Good gift,” she said. “You did love it.” “That was ages ago,” he replied. “So? Old things aren’t dead things.” He shrugged, but inside, something shifted—as if a heavy piece of furniture had finally been budged. “We’ll see,” he said. On New Year’s morning, Andrew woke without an alarm. The sky was grey, the car park dusted with old snow. His head felt heavy, not aching. His wife and son were at her parents; he’d join them tomorrow. The flat was silent. He made coffee, sat down, opened the notebook. “For photos you haven’t taken yet” said the page. He opened his laptop, found the email with course access. The first module started in a week, but he played the intro now: the tutor’s voice spoke not about “self-improvement” or “growth”, but about noticing light and shadow. He listened, and realised he wasn’t checking work email. The phone lay in another room—he didn’t reach for it. Afterwards, he picked up the camera and went outdoors. The air was chilly but bearable. Others were throwing away post-holiday rubbish, someone walked their dog. An orphaned party popper lay on the playpark. He lifted the camera, framed the branches, wires, balconies—nothing special. But when he clicked the shutter, he felt he was doing something small, but important. Not for targets, not for KPIs, not for a presentation. Just for himself. He took more shots, uploaded them to his laptop. Some were clumsy; some boring. But one—where the flats opposite were reflected in a car window—caught his eye. He zoomed in on the details. In the reflection, his own silhouette with the camera showed faintly. A gift from a stranger, he thought. Who I turned out to be. And perhaps that’s ok. He closed the photo app and finished his lukewarm coffee. Ahead was the first working day—unfinished tasks, emails, meetings. And the course, starting next week. And a time slot he hoped to keep, just for himself. He took the notebook, dated a new page, wrote briefly: “Courtyard, morning, reflection in glass.” The line was modest, but something in it was his. He set down the pen, and realised—for the first time in ages—he was thinking about the future in terms other than bills and reports. There, in the future, was now a small space just for seeing and choosing what he wanted. It wasn’t much. But it was enough to breathe a little easier. He poured more coffee, opened the course calendar, and in the notes box wrote: “Don’t cancel for work.” He grinned, realising life would intervene. But now, at least, he had the right to try. And that, too, was a gift.
Din stora dröm är ett hus på landet. Om du inte lyssnar på mig, har du ingen mamma!