‘Twas the night before Christmas
Ben and I grew up with very different holiday traditions. His
family made Christmas Eve the big event. My family saved everything
for Christmas Day. His family had homemade everything. My family knew
where to buy it.
After we got married it was like the clash of the Titans trying to
keep everyone happy. So in a bold move, we chucked everything and
started fresh with our growing clan. I like to think that we kept the
best of both worlds and made it our world.
When we made our break with tradition, we had the chance to look
around and see what worked (or didn’t) for other families. We morphed
as the kids grew and tried to blaze new trails for them to keep when
they grow up ... or not. We’ve been realistic in our expectations.
Everyone used to love getting in their jammies on Christmas Eve
and cruising for lights. The younger ones still like the show, the
older kids phase in and out between being cool and admitting they
still enjoy seeing the fruits of the neighbor’s labor. I suspect that
they do their own cruising and just don’t tell me.
We make cookies and set them out for Santa. Mary Rose heads this
activity. We’ve made it all the way through to her fourth grade. I am
grateful for the lengthy duration. We no longer make magic reindeer
food, but friends with younger children do and share the enchantment
with us.
Santa still remembers to stop by our house, although he has gotten
a little sassy as the kids have grown older. Last year he sent them
on a scavenger hunt around the neighborhood. The clues included
significant events in each child’s life. As they ran up and down the
street, they had to depend on a sharp memory and one another to get
to the next clue. The bonus was that they found out a little
something special about their siblings they might not have known
before.
Christmas Eve allows only one present opened. Presents from
friends can be opened as given and family gifts are all exchanged in
birth order, one by one.
Christmas dinner comes from a great-grandparent’s recipe.
Christmas breakfast is one of the grandmother’s specialties.
The tree is all mine. Both sets of grandparents did a lackluster
job (in my opinion) with the tree. On energetic years, we set up two
trees. One in the family room with all of the elementary school
ornaments and homemade lovies; one in the living room that gets the
fancy treatment with my sterling ornament collection, drippy
crystals, and gold and silver beads. The kids say they don’t like
“my” tree. I don’t believe them because they complain in the years I
don’t go to the trouble to set it up.
Photo Christmas cards are probably my favorite part of the season.
I remember when I was growing up that I thought it was weird when we
got a card from someone I didn’t know. Now my Christmas card list is
filled with people that my kids “don’t know” but are very important
to me: college friends, older relatives in faraway states and
hometown relationships.
I started to include a Christmas letter as the kids got older and
more complicated. I try not to make it a “brag rag” but a glimpse of
our year, good and bad. And by the way, I keep every photo card I
receive and put it in an album. I have some family pictures that span
20-plus years. Some families are just starting. Some families are
sending their youngest out to the wide world. The pictures are
indeed, a precious gift.
This year my family celebrates its last Christmas with exclusively
“full-time” kids. Next year I will be anxiously awaiting the oldest’s
return to celebrate “our” traditions.
Our traditions that evolve as the years pass by.
Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and Peace on Earth from the Wight
House to yours.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs
Sundays.
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