Below is a repost from last year’s Christmas Eve blogue. It
is reposted because it is one of my favorite posts and also because it is
Christmas Eve, I’m in a really good mood and don’t feel like posting anything
new about something as beautiful as Christmas Eve!
Thursday, December 13, 2012
IT WAS ALL SO SPECIAL
Growing up, we all have our own favorite
Christmas memories, and there are so many. Mine for some reason have stayed
with me and seem to get although more distant, more etched into my mind.
The little things that seemed so important
were meaningful to me, important yet, shaping my life and making me whole.
Buying a Christmas tree was Dads job, and he
NEVER did it right, but we loved him for doing it. Dad believed that it wasn’t
important that the tree looked like it was left for bare, the price was right,
and as he climbed the two flights of stairs, the anticipation became great in
the hopes that he did it right for once. If you couldn’t see his face as he ascended
the stairs, it meant he DID do it right, but if you knew who was carrying up
that tree by looking and seeing whom, he got another bargain, and you put away
a few strings of lights and a couple dozen balls.
Of course if you wanted to see where he bought
the bargain, all you had to do was follow the fallen needles until they
stopped. Aside from the anemic look, the smell was always right, right for the
spirit and right for Christmas. Dad would walk into the dining room and place
it between the dining room and the parlor, while he went down the cellar to get
our tree stand. The balls were all the same, coming in; gold, green, blue and
red, with these large bulbs in the same colors with thick electrical cord that
was black and white. The star that weighed down the top was of the same colors,
each color bulb on a silver star.
The tradition in my house was for my older
sister Tess (Much older) knocking down the tree at least once and Dad having a
swearing fit in Italian. We would put up most of the tree and THEN she would do
something to knock it down. Dad who was watching his favorite child and his
second born work together, standing on kitchen
chairs as we decorated the tree,
and he would of course have to come and rescue the whole thing.
Mom was never part of this routine: instead
she would wait in the kitchen for Dad to jump up, my sister to say ‘OOPs!’ and
Dad to do his Desi Arnez routine in Italian. “ANTHONY, WATCH YOUR LANGUAGE!
IT’S CHRISTMAS!”
Mom was the religious fanatic in the
household, and Dad was the sinner, or so I thought. Tess my older sister (much
older) would wake me up about 1:00 am from a deep sleep and announce that she
thought: “Santa was here!” “Go in the dining room and see.” She said. Me, like
the developing schmuck I would later in life perfected, did as she suggested
once she untwisted my arm. We would tip toe out to the dining room where we
would find empty boxes scattered in the kitchen and the toys under the tree.
The suddenly there would be a sound at the front door and we would jump,
thinking that Santa was taking back the stash, when it was Mom returning form
Mid-Night Mass.
“WHAT ARE YOU DOING UP!!!???”
“Who, us? We heard a noise.”
“I’ll give you a noise, go to bed.”
Of course we never did, but Mom HAD to fire a
shot before going down.
A few nights before Christmas, Mom would do
her shopping along Broadway under the Broadway Junction. She would darn her fur
coat and take me along for the walk. As she window shopped, I would see a toy
store, all lit up with a set of American Flyers and another set of Lionel
trains, running through this incredible scenery, making we want them so much,
in their magical wonderland, the smoke coming from the engine, the little man
with a lantern standing close enough to the oncoming locomotive I was afraid it
would knock him on his plastic ass! For the rest of the evening wanting and
dreaming of having a set of trains under my Christmas tree if it was still
standing was all I did.
Then the next morning when the trains were
under the tree, and I was happily playing with them, Mom would make her
announcement.
“GET DRESSED. We have to go to church!” She
was pulling me away from my trains and making me go to church!! Tess, my older
sister (much older) had to do the same thing, so at least I wasn’t miserable
alone. This meant I had to sit quietly and listen to a boring sermon and try
not to dream of my trains. When the Mass was over, they marched us all over to
the school, to our classrooms and they took attendance, and who went to
communion! God how I hated them all in spite of what great good they did do for
me!
Dad got to stay home and in bed, and I
suspect to this day, once we left for church, he was busy playing with my
trains. (At least it wasn’t my sister’s dolls. I hope)
And here is another
Blogue I love
Thursday, December 24, 2009
THAT ONE TIME OF THE YEAR
It is only one time, and I wait for it 364 days a year. It is Christmas Eve, the special day that defines who I am and where I come from. It is the day that I spend laughing, eating and enjoying. I enjoy not only the food, but: the people that gather that evening before Christmas and celebrate life.
Mom is now 91, and started the whole tradition when my grandmother could no longer carry it on. Dad loved the holiday, and was always there in his plaid shirt, making it feel good to be home again.
Sometimes we’d have guests. Maybe a future in-law, maybe a friend from school or work, maybe it was a stranger. Anyone was welcomed, and we were always happy to make him or her join in the laughter and good times.
I know that someday, this tradition may die away. We may no longer for whatever reason, be able to celebrate Christmas Eve as we do, but the memories will linger.
I hope your Christmas Eve is filled with only good memories, Merry Christmas from: TLW (The Little Woman), my daughter Ellen, #1 Son Anthony and #2 Son Michael, and me.
And so Dear Reader, I wish you a joyous evening, and only
good memories of this eve, and may peace be with you!
Joe, Ellen (TLW), Ellen Mary, Courtney, (my granddaughter ?) Anthony and Mike!
1 comment:
Wonderful memories of a special time with family. Merry Christmas, Joe.
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