Warning: Christmas memories

Another Christmas in the books. It was a good one, complete with snow storm. I hope everyone had an abundance of food, family, gifts, and more. Usually, we have just enough of everything to be thankful it’s over. It’s fun to add another chapter to the memories. I did have a bit of a reality check, though, as I watched the little ones play Christmas day.

My great-nephews were driving toy cars around their great grandma’s Christmas village. One particular car hot rodding through the Department 56 streets caught my attention and took me back to a past Christmas. I’m going to be honest and transparent here. My realization was a little disturbing.

When I was a wee lad, after the Christmas morning unwrapping carnage ended, the family would troop over to Lee and Carolyn’s for Christmas breakfast. I remember one particular trek as if it were yesterday. It was an unusually beautiful Christmas morning and mom and dad let me walk across the cornfield to Fear’s. The Fear’s would always give me a gift, and that year it happened to be two little Krazee Wheel cars. One of them was the hotrod pickup my nephews were playing with this Christmas.

That doesn’t seem that extraordinary, I know. But, hear me out. Somehow, some way, and much more suddenly than I was prepared to accept, that little Krazee Wheel car is fifty years old! The little cast iron car that I played with at my grandma and grandpa’s was barely fifty years old when I played with it as a boy.

I contemplated all of this deeply today as I watched the burn barrel. We had a nice heavy snow for Christmas, so it was a good time to light up the fire and get rid of a few months of wood and branches and things. I stared into the dancing fire and thought about my uncles playing with the little cast iron sedan. Their memories of it would have been the same as mine with the little toy pickup. To them, it was just yesterday. Their Christmas’s in the 30’s were as clear and colorful as mine in the 70’s and now my great-nephews present day.

I thought about all those faces that aren’t here to celebrate Christmas with us anymore. I could see them in the flames as I stared into the fire. I could hear their voices and laughter, smell the pipe smoke at grandpa and grandma’s and feel the oil stove burning my backside at Grandma Eva’s. I started wondering if I had a favorite Christmas.

Maybe when I was five, or eight, or twelve, or my junior year when I got five basketballs. My favorite could have been my first one with my lovely bride, or being a young dad myself with five little ones tearing presents open at light speed. It could have even been this one, but my beautiful bride would tell you that each Christmas, I’m a child.

It’s a comfortable place for me, somewhere between six and twelve. It’s so easy to look into the flames and relive those Christmas’s in vivid Technicolor and be a twelve year old boy again. I was so much a twelve year old boy again, that my twelve year old self reminded me that I had thrown away a can of spray paint the other day.

The almost adult version of me would like to make a recommendation to all of you fine folks who may read this. I’m not sure if there is an OSHA standard for this or not, but I would suggest being at least twenty………..twenty five, yes, definitely a minimum of twenty five feet away from the burn barrel should a much younger version of yourself decide to throw an empty can of black satin spray paint into it. I’ve made better decisions. I’ve made worse. But this one was…………………..GLORIOUS!

Happy New Year Friends

Christmas time is here

Here it is, December already. Is everyone putting on their Christmas?? Our house has been transforming into the season. Greenery, snow globes, nativities, etc, all began taking their places and reminding us at every turn that the season has begun. I must confess that I don’t need the ghost of Christmas past to show me my tombstone, shove me into the freshly dug grave and have the walls start closing in to get into the Christmas spirit. “I will honour Christmas in my heart, and try to keep it all the year. I will live in the Past, Present, and the Future. The Spirits of all three shall strive within me.” What a great story. Read it this season if you get the chance or at least watch ‘Mickey’s Christmas Carol’ or ‘Scrooged’.

We got the tree up and trimmed. That’s probably one of my favorite things each year. It’s filled with ornaments the kids have made throughout the years, things we have given each other as gifts, antiques we have received from moms and dads, grandmas and grandpas, and other random, fun, and unique things. Each ornament has a story and it seems, the older and more sentimental I get, the longer it takes to decorate each year.

I was sitting here in my chair tonight, enjoying the soft glow of Christmas, and had one of those memories that makes you happy, sad, nostalgic, grateful and blessed. It’s amazing how a little painted piece of paper can bring out so many emotions. This particular piece is one of my favorite decorations though. William must have been four or five. They made little gingerbread men, painted them brown, glued a picture of themselves in the middle, and decorated the gingerbread man with candy eyes, nose, mouth, gloves and other attire. I can’t remember if it was made in Sunday school or at pre-school, but lots of M&Ms and licorice made a colorful ornament. All these years later, said gingerbread man is missing most of his candy parts and is looking a little worse for wear. I will never part with it or fail to hang it on my Christmas tree though.

Many of you know that Eli had a little wiener dog for years. Red was a true character and faithful member of the family. He did love a good snack, however. It didn’t take long for him to discover there were tasty treats on this fantastic plastic tree his humans put in the living room each winter. Besides the gingerbread man, who wasn’t himself edible, but had sweet and tasty eye, nose, gloves and so on, there were also some reindeer treats. The kids had made the cutest little reindeer out of ‘Milk bones’. We came into the living room/crime scene to find the gingerbread man violated, ravaged, and lying on the floor beside a couple sets of pipe cleaner antlers, googly eyes and a few milk bone crumbs. The guilty party was on the couch, much satisfied with Christmas.

May your Advent and Christmas season bring back fond memories and create many new and wonderful ones.