Category: Family, Parenting

  • My Holidays are Black & White. Except When They’re in (Techni) Color.

    My Holidays are Black & White. Except When They’re in (Techni) Color.

    “Christmas won’t be Christmas without any presents,”
    grumbled Jo, lying on the rug.

    -Louisa May Alcott, Little Women

    335 days of the year, you’ll hear me harp on how bad TV is for your brain and how you should really be shutting it off, getting outside and moving your body.

    But 30 days of the year, I love TV.

    No screen time on school nights? Pshaw, in December I’m breaking all the rules.

    The specials are on.

    It starts on Thanksgiving Day with the parades, flipping back and forth between Macy’s and the Mummers. (It has recently come to my attention that not every town has grown men that dress up like fancy chickens and strut the streets playing strings and brass. If you don’t know what a Mummer is click here and enjoy… this is how we do parades here in PA.)

    Thanksgiving 2011 also meant A Miracle on 34th St.— the Natalie Wood version, black and white, don’t try to tell me any other exists— and A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving.

    As we near the big day, the coming of the man in red, I’ll insist on steaming up the hot cocoa, popping up the corn and watching:

    • White Christmas
    • Holiday Inn
    • Babes in Toyland (either Laurel & Hardy or the Keanu Reeves will do)
    • Scrooge (Seymour Hicks version), Scrooged (Bill Murray version)
    • Mickey’s Christmas Carol, Muppet Christmas Carol (but not the version that Jim Carrey ruined)
    • Little Women, Katherine Hepburn version (I also reread the book every year)
    • How the Grinch Stole Christmas (Chuck Jones and Boris Karloff, not the version that Jim Carrey ruined)
    • Jingle All the Way
    • Mixed Nuts (one of my favorite movies of all time)
    • Love Actually
    • Home Alone
    • National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation
    • The Year Without a Santa Claus (aka the Heat Miser & Snow Miser special)
    • Rudolph
    • Frosty
    • Santa Claus is Coming to Town
    • The Ref
    • The Santa Clause (not one of my favorites but the kids like it)
    • The Nutcracker (Baryshnikov, we also go see the local ballet troupe production)
    • A Christmas Story
    • Elf
    • A Charlie Brown Christmas
    • the Garfield Christmas special
    • Christmas Eve on Sesame Street
    • the Claymation Christmas special, available on YouTube (featuring the California raisins; if you don’t know what I’m talking about you must have been born after 1985)

    The holiday TV special extravaganza ends with It’s a Wonderful Life on Christmas Eve. I let the kids stay up to watch it and we all snuggle under blankets and struggle to keep awake until the end.

    Last year, Cassie stayed up for the first time to see it, and she was so emotionally captivated by the story that I fell wholeheartedly in love with it all over again.

    We grow so jaded, throughout the year and as we grow older. It’s a Wonderful Life in particular is such a regular, clockwork comfort that it has become a cliché. I don’t remember ever being saddened by it. But to Cass’s fresh eyes, it was an engrossing and heartwrenching story, and she sobbed with sadness and then with joy.

    In my first Comparative Religions class, we learned that “ritual” is a returning to a sacred time and place. Not just symbolically, but in some way a literal joining of those times and spaces.

    They may be so much pop culture schmaltz, but those familiar faces and voices and words that come from the screen are a ritual of my childhood. They reopen a door to my childlike mind, so excited and hopeful for the holidays ahead.

    They remind me of what it was like to believe. In magic, and in humanity.

    I revisit my childhood while snuggled with my children; my hope is that they may carry these same memories into their own adulthood and share them with their own children. It is, in some strange way, a gift.

    We have other rituals, some from my upbringing, some new, but no other that brings me so much comfort on so many levels.

    ______________________________________

    We never had much money when I was a kid, but I never noticed at Christmastime. There must have been some years when I was disappointed, but I don’t recall any.

    What I recall are the rituals, the hot chocolate, the warm blankets and the crackle of the fire.

    The memories of comfort, security, hope and love.

    As we swing into the hustle and bustle of the season, I hope we all stop to ask ourselves what memories we are creating for our kids; what moments they will choose to return to year after year.

    “Christmas won’t be Christmas without any presents,” Jo grumbled, but she discovered she was wrong.

    The Grinch found that Christmas couldn’t be bought from a store.

    The ever cynical Garfield takes a sentimental moment to remind us that “it’s not the giving, it’s not the getting. It’s the loving.”

    Take away the presents. What makes Christmas Christmas? What makes the holiday season merry and bright for you?

    (What’s your favorite Christmas special?)

     

  • Tidings of Comfort and Joy

    Tidings of Comfort and Joy


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    winter warmth

    “Hear! hear!” screamed the jay from a neighboring tree…

    “Winter has a concentrated and nutty kernel,
    if you know where to look for it.” 

    -Henry David Thoreau

    Spring, summer and fall are outdoor months. Months of frolicking and movement.

    But as Thanksgiving arrives and Christmas approaches, a nip enters the air and we start to move inward. Mentally, as we reflect and give thanks for all that is good in our lives. But also physically, as we fight off a hibernation instinct.

    Spring, summer, fall. Months of doing.

    The winter months are ones of reaping. Of enjoying.

    We yearn to come inside and bunker down. We seek warmth, comfort, security.

    We don’t hibernate, but we snuggle. We watch holiday movies on couches armed with hot chocolate, blankets and nostalgia.

    We bake sugar cookies and gingerbread to warm our kitchens and our bellies.

    We cuddle into soft mittens and slippers and afghans we crocheted ourselves when we were children. (At least, I do.)

    We take warm bubble baths before tucking between flannel sheets and under heavy comforters.

    We dress in turtleneck sweaters and tall boots, light crackling fires to endure no chill wind tiptoes down our spines.

    We bring nature indoors, decorating trees and wreathes made from their branches with construction paper, glitter, and glue, breathing in the delicious scent of pine needles and cold, brisk air.

    These are a few of my favorite things.

    I hate the cold and dread its return every year. I hate the stress of the holidays.

    But I love the cozy comforts: the textures, smells and tastes of the luxuries we allow ourselves.

    I love the sound and the particular scent of the heat kicking on.

    I love the hustle and bustle of the season as long as know I can always step away from it, snuggle into my refuge and watch it go by.

    This is the season where we really pay attention to the ways we make our house a home.

    Today is Black Friday, and we’re using our day off to declutter, clean, and create space for the cheerful decorations of the holiday season ahead. And rather on focusing on the presents I need to buy, I’m spending the day considering the way I can provide memories of warmth and security for my kids.

    Ways I can bring them comfort and joy.

    What are your favorite comforts of the holiday season?

    I’d love to add them to my list of things to be thankful for when the weather outside is frightful.

    ____________________________________

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  • Happy Thanksgiving!

    Happy Thanksgiving!

    killer turkey

    I feel a very unusual sensation-

    if it is not indigestion,
    I think it must be gratitude.

    -Benjamin Disraeli

    Happy Thanksgiving!

    May your meal be delicious and nourishing (to your stomach as well as your soul).

    May your house be warm and full of laughter.

    May no giant naked turkeys stand outside your window.

    (It’s probably not a good day for that.)

     

    For each new morning with its light,
    For rest and shelter of the night,
    For health and food, for love and friends,
    For everything Thy goodness sends.

    ~Ralph Waldo Emerson