The First Gift of Christmas

This and other fine poems available at Amazon.com A boy watched his mother

Tie one red ribbon on the green tree

He could not think of any reason

“Why a ribbon?” he asked her softly.

She replied, “It’s my final gift of the season

The most important one from me.”

“It’s just a piece of ribbon,

Whose gift could it possibly be?”

And he hoped deep inside

His name wouldn’t be

On the lone piece of ribbon

Hanging from the Christmas tree.

His dear mother,

Smiled at her son

Happy for the lesson

Which time had come.

She cut an extra piece

And sat on the brown chair

She held her arms open wide

“I have something to share.”

He climbed onto her lap

She opened the well worn book

Its cover was black

She asked, “What was the first gift of Christmas?”

As she flipped through the pages

She knew where to look

And opened the book

To Chapter 2 in the account of St. Matthew

“In verse 10 we read

“The wise men brought

Gold, Frankincense, and Myrrh.

Most valuable gifts indeed.”

He listened intently to her.

“But those weren’t the first.”

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Forgive Me for Not Singing Silent Night

I’m not a Grinch.  Or a Scrooge.  Let me just preface this blog.  I love singing Christmas carols and I listen to them in the appropriate time period (between Thanksgiving and Christmas day).  There are a few I consider favorites.  But there is one I refuse to listen to this holiday season.

I never appreciated Silent Night.  Despite the fact it is the go-to carol for any Christmas gathering trying to focus on the true reason for the season.  The celebrity of yuletide hymns.  It gets over played a bit for my taste and I’m tired of it.

Plus, it’s my mom’s favorite Christmas carol.  She loved Silent Night.

Last year I refused to listen to it.  I am continuing my boycott this holiday.  Do you know how hard it is to avoid Silent Night for an entire Christmas season?  It’s like trying to avoid the cheese in a Mac and Cheese dinner.  Darn near impossible.

For some reason, the powers-that-be that decide the hymns during Sacrament meeting decided to switch things up a bit and use Silent Night as the kick-off to the season.  Last year and this year we sang that tender song as the very first song of the holiday.  Last season, it was the Sunday before my mom’s funeral.  It about did in a whole bench of Lees.  And this year, when I planned on bearing my testimony in honor of my mother’s anniversary of slipping through the veil, they sang that song.  I excused myself and hid out of earshot.    It took everything I had to regain my composure and continue as planned with my testimony later in the service.  Seriously?  Everyone knows Silent Night is supposed to be the last hymn of the season.

A couple of Tuesdays ago, when we took the girls caroling, they sung it.  Twice.  The first time I stood resolutely in the back waiting patiently for them to finish.  The second time, I wasn’t so fortunate.  Through no fault of my own I stood in front of the group and had to join in.  Those Young Women better appreciate the sacrifice I made for them!  Of course, I didn’t tell anyone.  I realize it’s kind of silly.

Someday, I will probably love Silent Night.  Someday, it will produce sweet, cherished memories of my mom.  Someday.   But for this season, please excuse me while I continue to forego singing it.

Christmas Salsa

I’m an odd duck.  This I know.  (sigh) This I’ve always known.  There are many facets and many levels of my peculiarity. One major factor I get a lot of grief for is my lack of a sweet tooth.  Considering I am my mother’s child, this is an even bigger oddity.  One my mother either didn’t believe or couldn’t understand.  One of her ways to express love was to share goodies.  I still have the last chocolate Easter Bunny she gave me sitting on my shelf.  If you have read this blog for any amount of time you’ll get the drift.  That bunny is a bit old.

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On-Line Christmas Shopping Made Hard

photo courtesy the web

photo courtesy the web

Okay, my effort to unplug this weekend did not go as planned.  Chalk it up to poor planning on my part.  I have never used my phone so much in one weekend as I did Friday night through Saturday.  By that time I figured, what the heck, and used it Sunday also.  At one point, I had two computers and my phone going at the same time.  Kind of the opposite of a unplugged weekend, huh?  There’s always next weekend right?

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To Gift or Gift Card – That is the Question

Another holiday season is winding down.  We are done with the big gift giving day for another year.  The bottom of the Christmas trees still standing look stark and naked with only their skirts showing.  The same skirts were completely hidden a week ago underneath all the presents.  Ah, the presents.  I love seeing a tree surrounded by carefully wrapped (or in my case, creatively wrapped) boxes.  I made a pledge this year due to my thin wallet that I was going to go easy with Christmas presents this year.  That lasted about two weeks after the tree was up.  The tree seemed to call to me, “Please, can I have some presents here to hide my nakedness?”  I gave in and went to town.   That’s small town talk  – it means I went shopping.

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It’s a Christmas Miracle!

Ah, the holiday season is upon us.  The snow (yuck), the decorations (pretty), the operative-like skills it takes to procure and hide the perfect present (stressful), and of course, the movies.  Generally, I like the movies.  Or, at least, I get sucked into watching a lot of movies (darn Hallmark channel and ABC Family with their countdowns to Christmas).  Since I’ve seen so-very-many movies of the genre, I am a self-proclaimed expert on the subject.  A miracle is a must in any self-respecting Christmas movie.  It is my thesis that there are generally three Christmas miracles.

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