chalet05 wrote:The Reason for the Season is why we were able to create so many memories that might not have been otherwise. I know we get caught up in the preparations, but what joy we have in giving and making special times for family! Amidst all the décor I’m sure many of us have a crèche and a star or angel on the tree, and Christmas Carols playing. Wishing you all a Merry Christmas no matter your circumstances!
We always had a star on our tree growing up (with Christmas music playing!), and when, as an adult, I began to create my own Christmas, I always had an angel. We didn't have a creche when I was a child - but as an adult I added one under my tree.
One of the great joys of my life was creating Christmas memories for my children, when they were small.
So many wonderful posts! I would like to express my sincere thanks to each and every one of you who have joined in on this thread. It makes me feel as though I have my friends gathered around me, close beside me, as we talk and laugh and reminisce.
It makes me feel warm, and comforted, when otherwise, just now, I might be feeling lonely.
Interesting how each of us grew up celebrating Christmas differently - but the same basic traditions are there.
Please, all, continue to join in, share a new memory or two, for the first time, or as a new memory comes to mind.
Sue, I especially enjoyed your long post. Brought a tear to my eye, as well!!
Colliemom wrote:. . . When we go, those Christmases past that we had will go with us and not return in this fast paced world.
So cherish you memories, shed a tear once in awhile and remember.
Extremely well said! Thank you.
As a very young child, I can remember winter snow where I was born, in the midwest. But jobs were scarce in Kansas City - my Dad worked at the local radio station there, and when television came along, he wanted to transfer into television. His boss told him that if that happened, that my Dad would need to be trained to work in television - and he would also need to train some new person to do my Dad's radio job.
So the answer was "No". My Mom and Dad had deep roots in the Kansas City area. Her parents (my grandparents) were there, and they had just almost completed building a house with their own hands. But a friend of my Dad's had gone to Hollywood, and wrote to my Dad to tell him that television jobs were going begging, and that he (my Dad) should come to Hollywood.
A short time later, my Dad took the train out west (Way too far to drive in those days, no interstate's like there are today! This would have been about 1951) to see what was what. I remember waiting for him to come home, looking out our big picture window, as snow drifted down.
During his short visit out west he scored a job, came home, packed up (I was the only child at that time, then three years old. More children came later!) and off we went.
He must have been in his mid-30's then, and he worked in television the rest of his working life (he was a technician, not a performer).
That was the end of living in snow country for me. I have longed for a snowy Christmas ever since. Even hearing a bad version of "White Christmas" blaring over the speakers at the mall will bring a misting to my eyes.
Living in the Sierra foothills for nearly thirty years, I always hoped for snow. It does snow there, once in a while, but it never did at Christmas - except once.
After so many years of waiting for Christmas snow, I began to feel, somehow, that if snow ever did come at Christmas, that might be the last Christmas that I would live there.
Wouldn't you know, one Christmas, when my children (now adults), were visiting for Christmas I was up just before dawn, looked out the window, and was amazed to see large white snowflakes gently wafting down. I think I wept to finally see the snow, that I had hoped for and waited for for so very many years.
By the time my kids got up, the clouds were gone, and the sun was shining. Even the slight dusting of snow that had patterned the ground with white had already melted. I excitedly told them about the morning snow, but they looked out the window at a bright sun-shiny day, and just rolled their eyes.
And, wouldn't you know, late the following year I moved from the foothills to the valley, and sold my foothills home. My premonition had been a true one.
I have never had snow at Christmas since that one special time. Maybe again. . . someday.
I still dream.
Anne