I might be getting old, but I'm really starting to enjoy Christmas. No, I don't enjoy it the way I did as a kid. Then I wanted nothing more than to open the presents and play with the toys or go sailing down a snowy hill on a new sled. Before Christmas, I would spend hours looking at the Sears "Wish Book" as the Christmas catalog was called. After Christmas, I would spend hours looking at my ViewMaster or playing with my Spirograph, Etch-a-Sketch or some other toy from a different generation.
My brother Randy and I spent many a snowy day inside playing "football" on an electric vibrator board. If my kids saw how clunky that game was, they wouldn't believe it. They are used to playing "Madden" football on the TV with realistic plays, sound effects and players being tossed in the air from some very hard tackles. Electric football on a vibrator board was nothing like that. If there were noises, you were responsible for making them.
Now, Christmas seems to touch my heart because of other things besides toys and football. One is the spiritual nature of Christmas. I like hearing the stories told of Jesus birth, both in Scripture and from the pulpit. I especially like hearing Christmas music. I'm amazed at how many great Christmas songs have been written in my lifetime. It seems that the birth of our Savior is something that continues to inspire artists to this day. We are all blessed by the inspiration of Christ's birth in a manger more than 2000 years ago.
I'm also blessed by family. I had a great family when I was a child. I loved my older brothers and sisters when we all lived under the same roof. When they moved away, I remember talking to them on the telephone when they called on Christmas Eve and we thanked each other for the presents and found out about their holiday activities.
Now as a 50-something adult, I have adult children. I also have a father who lives with us. I see Christmas differently...sort of through their eyes. This year we spent Christmas at Derek and Camila's in Minot. This was a new experience for us. Their home in Minot was beautiful and decked out in holiday finery. There were also what seemed like hundreds of presents under the tree. And a feast of ham to eat after opening the gifts. It was wonderful, and the drive to and from Minot was beautiful with snowy landscapes. The roads were in good condition and the car was warm and snug with five adults. Sometimes we listened to Christmas music on the radio and at other times we just visited in the car.
The games we played in Minot involved standing in front of a TV set and slicing fruit that appeared on the TV screen with our bare hands, or surfing down some river in a jungle setting while jumping up and down in front of the TV to keep from hitting rocks, boulders and other obstacles. Believe me, spirograph doesn't hold a candle to these new video games.
Fifteen years ago, our Christmas tradition included spending Christmas Eve in Glendive with Belinda's side of the family and then driving to Roundup for Christmas day with my parents in Roundup. Often my brothers and their families were also in Roundup. Then for the past seven years, we've spent our Christmas holidays in Mandan with our sons. We opened presents, watched movies and ate Belinda's delicious meals, such as prime rib and twice baked potatoes.
Interestingly, even Belinda's parents were not in Glendive this year. They traveled to Casper, Wyoming, to spend Christmas with their youngest daughter and her family, which includes three grandchildren under the age of six. How special was that Christmas? I would have loved to have been with them to see the Christmas lights sparkle in a two-year-old nephew's eyes. But if Grandma and Grandpa Doll can drive to Wyoming, it just goes to show that we are never too old to start new traditions.
With Christmas out of the way, we have another big event coming up, a two-week trip to Sao Paulo, Brazil. We will have a chance to meet and visit with Camila's parents and her sister and brother. In Brazil, Santa Claus is known as "Papa Noel" and Christmas is "Felix Natal." Maybe some time in the future, we will be celebrating Christmas in Brazil. It will be a far cry from spending Christmas in either Roundup or Glendive, but the world seems to be shrinking or perhaps our family is expanding. Anyway, stay tuned for future Christmas adventures.
Recipe - Aunt May's Famous Wheatcakes
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Now Playing - Forever Young by Alphaville RECIPE: MAY PARKER'S FAMOUS
WHEATCAKES Originally made by my pal Pete's Aunt May, these wheatcakes are
a great...
10 years ago
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