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Sunday
Dec192010

7 days: Holiday Nights at Greenfield Village

For three years now Jon and I have have enjoyed this event with our friends Dave and Sarah; they leave their daughter with her grandparents, as we leave Calvin with his, then we enjoy a dinner of adult-only company before we bundle up and spend several hours wandering the streets of Christmas past, enjoying caroling, mumming, roasted chestnuts, and wassail, ending in a fireworks display over the old time village. We love it, even the cold, and it wouldn't be Christmas any more without this night.

Mummers on the main street

Carolers in the gazeebo

Dave, Sarah, and Jon listening about Christmas in this 1920s parlor

Friday
Dec172010

8 days (again): The cards are finally done

I guess I started the countdown a day early, so we're reliving day eight. Oops. Having an extra day is a good thing, though, since there is still so much left to do. On our second day eight we finally finished the Christmas cards that we started just after Thanksgiving. At about 50 handmade Christmas cards, 4 year old style, I think you can understand why they took so long, but each one is unique and he is very proud of them all.

Thursday
Dec162010

8 days: a new ornament for Christmas

Every December when I was growing up my brother and I received a box in the mail from our aunt and uncle in Seattle, and every year it contained a beautiful new ornament for each of us as well as some other fun things. I still remember the excitement of that package's arrival. I would continually watch for the UPS truck until finally it arrived and we could all open the box and the smaller packages inside. It was part of my family's countdown to Christmas each year, but the significance of those packages wasn't in their timely arrival, but rather in their timeless quality, because the point of all those ornaments wasn't the annual package but the years of Christmases yet to come. When Jon and I put up our first Christmas tree on our first Christmas together I brought my box of ornaments to our new home and we opened them together, well over twenty in all, while I recited the story of each one. It may have been our first Christmas, but thanks to my aunt and uncle, and the UPS guy, it was already filled with traditions, memories, and love.

Tradition is important to me, especially at this time of year, and those ornaments and the tradition behind them means a great deal to us as a family. I don't have exactly the words to describe how wonderful it was to have a tree full of meaningful ornaments, instead of newly purchased ones or a sparsley decorated tree, on our very first Christmas, but I am sure that for me it was, and continues to be, a worthy culmination of my aunt's and uncle's shopping, wrapping, and shipping year after year. Now, because it was such a wonderful tradition in the making, my mother has continued it with Calvin, choosing an ornament each year based on their travels or on his interests. And, thanks to indecision and a general love of the holiday, at four he already has about seven ornaments on our tree. If things don't slow down a bit our tree will be entirely covered in a Calvin Christmas, and our other ornaments will have to live in their boxes until the day when he takes his ornaments to his own new home, and then we will have the joy of discovering them all over again.

Of the ornaments pictured here, only the first is one of mine, and the train is Calin's new one this year.

 

Wednesday
Dec152010

9 days: batteries for the animatronics

It's not a collection we kept up, but a number of years ago we got our first Christmas animatronic when Hallmark came out with a snowman and dog pair that sang and barked Jingle Bells. With a house full of dogs it was too tempting to leave behind, and the loved it as much as we'd hoped. Diamond used to howl along with the "singing dog" every year. A friend gave me the signing, dancing Eeyore, and we picked up the penguins a few years back as well. Thankfully the collection stops there, but now that there is another child in the house they get an awful lot of love every year.

Tuesday
Dec142010

10 days: Zingerman's for lunch

It's on everyone's Christmas to-do list, isn't it?