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Showing posts with label christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christmas. Show all posts

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Yes, there really is a Santa Claus ...

Yes, there really is a Santa Claus.

I felt him residing in my heart this Christmas. As you know, my daddy has been very ill, and deep in my heart I fear that this may be my last Christmas with him. It proved to be a better day than I could have possible hoped for. Daddy came home from the Nursing Home for the afternoon. He didn't go to his home, he came to mine. It took a lot to get him here, but there were no obstacles that were so large we couldn't solve them.

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I don't know who was more excited to have him home, my momma who didn't sleep at all the night before because he was coming home, me who stood in the kitchen with tears streaming down my face as he was pushed up the walkway, or my grandson who was literally screaming, "HE'S HERE! BIG GRAMPA IS HERE!!"

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My boys were all here for Christmas. Ben and Larry who were at my house more than at there own when the kids were all growing up, surprised me this Christmas. Ben home from Iraq and Larry out of the service and living in Chicago decided to pay this momma a sweet visit.

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My daughter and her husband bought the itty bitty ones, who were the best behaved babies I could have imagined. They ate and opened thier gifts and simply delighted everyone with their antics.

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After brunch and gift opening we sat with coffee and soft drinks relishing each other with vivid stories. We talked of the upcoming birth of Miss Daisy Ray - She's coming on December 29... Brody crawled up into his Big Grampa's lap and slept, Big Grampa relaxed in the recliner and did the same for a bit.

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Daddy went back to the nursing home about 5:00. My momma and me cleaned up the house and did the dishes while we waited for the men to return from taking him back to the home. I had asked Santa Claus for a good day. I got the best day I could have hoped for.

The ice held off till everyone was safely back in their own homes.

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I hope that all your Christmas dreams came true as well!

Monday, December 24, 2007

My Christmas Wish For You

          (My Sweet Santa Daddy and his Great-Grandchildren)

 

My Christmas Wish For You My Friend

My Christmas wish for you, my friend
Is not a simple one
For I wish you hope and joy and peace
Days filled with warmth and sun

I wish you love and friendship too
Throughout the coming year
Lots of laughter and happiness
To fill your world with cheer

May you count your blessings, one by one
And when totaled by the lot
May you find all you've been given
To be more than what you sought

May your journeys be short, your burdens light
May your spirit never grow old
May all your clouds have silver linings
And your rainbows pots of gold

I wish this all and so much more
May all your dreams come true
May you have a Merry Christmas friend
And a happy New Year, too!

love me later~tj

Sunday, December 23, 2007

It's not "...eight strapping, virile reindeer..." for a reason

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If they were male

it would be "...eight strapping, virile reindeer..." or "...eight beer swilling, slovenly reindeer..."

While both male and female reindeer grow antlers in the summer each year, male reindeer drop their antlers at the beginning of winter, usually late November to mid-December. Female reindeer retain their antlers till after they give birth in the spring.

Therefore, according to EVERY historical rendition depicting Santa's reindeer, EVERY single one of them, from Rudolph to Blitzen, had to be a girl.

We should've known... ONLY women would be able to drag a fat man in a red velvet suit all around the world in one night and not get lost ... and get the job done right!

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Interesting

The German spelling of "Donner and Blitzen" translate as "Thunder and Lightning" in English.

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A Visit from Saint Nicholas
IN THE ERNEST HEMINGWAY MANNER

By James Thurber

It was the night before Christmas. The house was very quiet. No creatures were stirring in the house. There weren't even any mice stirring. The stockings had been hung carefully by the chimney. The children hoped that Saint Nicholas would come and fill them.

The children were in their beds. Their beds were in the room next to ours. Mamma and I were in our beds. Mamma wore a kerchief. I had my cap on. I could hear the children moving. We didn't move. We wanted the children to think we were asleep.

"Father," the children said.

There was no answer. He's there, all right, they thought.

"Father," they said, and banged on their beds.

"What do you want?" I asked.

"We have visions of sugarplums," the children said.

"Go to sleep," said mamma.

"We can't sleep," said the children. They stopped talking, but I could hear them moving. They made sounds.

"Can you sleep?" asked the children.

"No," I said.

"You ought to sleep."

"I know. I ought to sleep."

"Can we have some sugarplums?"

"You can't have any sugarplums," said mamma.

"We just asked you."

There was a long silence. I could hear the children moving again.

"Is Saint Nicholas asleep?" asked the children.

"No," mamma said. "Be quiet."

"What the hell would he be asleep tonight for?" I asked.

"He might be," the children said.

"He isn't," I said.

"Let's try to sleep," said mamma.

The house became quiet once more. I could hear the rustling noises the children made when they moved in their beds.

Out on the lawn a clatter arose. I got out of bed and went to the window. I opened the shutters; then I threw up the sash. The moon shone on the snow. The moon gave the lustre of mid-day to objects in the snow. There was a miniature sleigh in the snow, and eight tiny reindeer. A little man was driving them. He was lively and quick. He whistled and shouted at the reindeer and called them by their names. Their names were Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen, Comet, Cupid, Donder, and Blitzen.

He told them to dash away to the top of the porch, and then he told them to dash away to the top of the wall. They did. The sleigh was full of toys.

"Who is it?" mamma asked.

"Some guy," I said. "A little guy."

I pulled my head in out of the window and listened. I heard the reindeer on the roof. I could hear their hoofs pawing and prancing on the roof.

"Shut the window," said mamma.

I stood still and listened.

"What do you hear?"

"Reindeer," I said. I shut the window and walked about. It was cold. Mamma sat up in the bed and looked at me.

"How would they get on the roof?" mamma asked.

"They fly."

"Get into bed. You'll catch cold."

Mamma lay down in bed. I didn't get into bed. I kept walking around.

"What do you mean, they fly?" asked mamma.

"Just fly is all."

Mamma turned away toward the wall. She didn't say anything.

I went out into the room where the chimney was. The little man came down the chimney and stepped into the room. He was dressed all in fur. His clothes were covered with ashes and soot from the chimney. On his back was a pack like a peddler's pack. There were toys in it. His cheeks and nose were red and he had dimples. His eyes twinkled. His mouth was little, like a bow, and his beard was very white. Between his teeth was a stumpy pipe. The smoke from the pipe encircled his head in a wreath. He laughed and his belly shook. It shook like a bowl of red jelly. I laughed. He winked his eye, then he gave a twist to his head. He didn't say anything.

He turned to the chimney and filled the stockings and turned away from the chimney. Laying his finger aside his nose, he gave a nod. Then he went up the chimney. I went to the chimney and looked up. I saw him get into his sleigh. He whistled at his team and the team flew away. The team flew as lightly as thistledown. The driver called out, "Merry Christmas and good night." I went back to bed.

"What was it?" asked mamma. "Saint Nicholas?" She smiled.

"Yeah," I said.

She sighed and turned in the bed.

"I saw him," I said.

"Sure."

"I did see him."

"Sure you saw him." She turned farther toward the wall.

"Father," said the children.

"There you go," mamma said. "You and your flying reindeer."

"Go to sleep," I said.

"Can we see Saint Nicholas when he comes?" the children asked.

"You got to be asleep," I said. "You got to be asleep when he comes. You can't see him unless you're unconscious."

"Father knows," mamma said.

I pulled the covers over my mouth. It was warm under the covers. As I went to sleep I wondered if mamma was right.

Gotta Love Hemingway!

and I am smiling ...

love me later~tj

Sunday, December 24, 2006

December 25, 2006

Here it is Christmas Day. I’m not going anywhere. I’ve got no dinner planned. No one is coming to visit. I’ve gotten phone calls this morning from my people. This truly is the most wonderful time of the year. This is the first day in over a week that there is no place to be. No dinner to go to, no children to play with. I am sore, and tired and so happy.

I had Christmas early with my daughter and her family. Then the rest of the grandkids came. I had a neighborhood (which is the town) party. I held our family party - all the cousins and Aunts and Uncles. Iwent to two work parties, one very intimate, and one very loud and rambunctious. At one point during the week, I tiptoed downstairs to get a drink of water, and I counted 11 bodies in my home. Now, this is not a biggie until you know my home. Tiny. It was wonderful. We baked sugar cookies and decorated them. We made dinners and breakfasts, I worked as little as possible and when I did work, I took assortments of my people to work with me.

I wrapped presents and somewhere in there Santa snuck off with my truck to have a CD Stereo System installed as a Christmas surprise for me. I opened the faceplate this morning, confused as to what it was. Then it hit me and I ran out in my pj’s and coat to listen to a CD. It was a truck Christmas for me. My son, daughter and Santa Claus hooked my truck up with the goodies I said I wanted. It will sport a lighted hitch plate. I have air fresheners, bungee cords, straps, tire gauges and key chains.

I went to mom’s last night. Christmas eve is her night. My son and his fiancé were there. We ate King Crab Legs and steaks. We laughed and ate and opened a mountain of presents. I opened a 1950's style turntable, so today I plan on listening to my albums that I saved from my teen years, a little Pink Floyd, some old Bob Seger, Aroesmith’s Toys in the Attic. I was giggling. I love the sound of an album playing, The scratchy white noises, the sounds. So different from a CD.

The best memory in this recent Christmas season was with my dad and my baby grandson. My dad played Santa Claus for years and years. He would do schools and churches and an occasional town party. He would visit the homes of dear friends on Christmas Eve. He put his suit away when he got ill a few years back and I haven’t seen Santa Daddy in half a decade. Becca wanted a photo with Santa and my Boog. To get one we would need to travel to Kalamazoo, Jackson, or Fort Wayne. Any one of the malls would have one. Instead she called the North Pole hotline and asked Santa Claus is there were any helper’s nearby. He pointed to my daddy. Daddy dug out his suit and put it on, transforming himself into a jolly old St. Nick. We took a zillion photos and laughed and cried and couldn’t get enough of the sweet surprise. My first photos of my own children with Santa are of my Santa Daddy. Now some 23 years later, I have my grandson on Santa Daddy’s knee. The best. We got photos of all the grandkids, even the dog got a photo with Santa Daddy. Sweet, precious and priceless are the photos and the memories.

The night we went to get photos made at the Rite Aid, it was a girl’s only adventure. My daughter, my soon to be daughter-in-law, and myself took off in the truck. We headed off and in the twilight of the evening, we ran into a heard of deer. I hit one, and two hit me. A small dent is all the truck sustained. Another Christmas accident, but we were all okay and the only deer that was injured that night was the one I hit. The rest ran off. There were about 8-10 crossing the road, in the rainy twilight. It scared the girls. We bonded with a story of Christmas past for the years to come. My son bought me critter whistles for my truck. I just shook my head and realized that maybe we need to get a new truck. That truck seems to draw chance events to it. Not bad luck, I can’t even consider it bad. In the events that took place we are all safe and sound. The truck didn’t even sustain anywhere near the damages it should have.

So hear I sit, in the calmness of Christmas Day. The house is quiet. I am going to read and listen to some old time rock and roll. I am washed in the love of my family and friends. I rejoice on this holiest of days. Our Lord Christ’s birthday. I know the love of God. I know it in the memories I hold of this season.

To all a very Merry Christmas, It is my hope that you have loved ones surrounding you, and you too feel the love of Jesus Christ this season.

And I smile ...

love me later ~ tj