(A note from Mama: I’m reblogging this post I wrote in December 2013, so for my long-time readers, if it sounds familiar, it is. I find that I’m still longing for that old fashioned Christmas. Maybe you are too.)
Maybe it’s just my middle age. Maybe it’s the empty nest thing. Or maybe it’s just that I have more time on my hands to spend reflecting on the past. Whatever it is, I find myself singing the words to an old Frank Sinatra Christmas song.
“Give me an old fashioned Christmas, an old fashioned Christmas,
Family faces, wide open spaces, covered with snow.”
This Christmas here at Mama’s Empty Nest there will be family faces. And wide open spaces at our country home for certain. Right now those spaces are covered with snow and hopefully we won’t just be dreaming of a white Christmas.
In my heart, I’m longing for an old fashioned Christmas – one with less hurry and scurry. One with deeper meaning. One with a simpler celebration. And I’m determined to accomplish it. Oh, my Christmas to-do list bounces around my brain but I’m simplifying it. I’m not scouring Pinterest for decorating ideas or cookie recipes or fancy Christmas dinner menus.
I’m sticking to the basics but even abbreviating those. Christmas cards are signed, sealed, and delivered but this year I opted for fewer cards and a shorter Christmas note. Decorating our home is completed but not all of the décor, just some favorites, made it out of the storage boxes. The oven will fire up for some cookie baking but not the usual marathon, just two or three kinds instead of a huge assortment. Simple meal preparation will follow suit.
Downsizing for a simple Christmas almost doesn’t make sense though. This year is different than Christmases past when I squeezed in all of the preparations and scarcely had enough time to do it all. I have more free time on my hands than usual and you would think that would entice me to really do Christmas up big. Fancy. Over the top. One to remember.
But then I recall Christmas as a child. Do I remember anything fancy? Do exquisitely wrapped packages with expensive gifts inside come to my mind? Fine cuisine? A beautiful and elaborately decorated home? Do I recollect an over the top celebration?
What I remember from childhood Christmases are simple aspects. My father would usually bring the Christmas tree home with him one day after work. Sometimes that wouldn’t be until shortly before Christmas and one year I remember actually decorating the tree on Christmas Eve.
After my older sisters married, they spent Christmas Eve with their in-law families so that meant my parents and I usually attended candle-light service at church to welcome the Christ child. Before the service, my father would drive us around our area to see neighbors’ homes Christmas light displays and we would ooh and aah over those that glowed the brightest.
No fireplace existed at my childhood home, but I still hung up my stocking over the knob of the front door. I would be so excited for Christmas morning that I could barely sleep. When Christmas Day arrived, my stocking bulged full of goodies although not with toys, gadgets, and gizmos.
Dumping it out, I would discover a huge juicy orange, a shiny red apple, mixed nuts in their shells, candy canes, and other Christmas candy. And I would be delighted with the yummy treats even though they were practically the same every year. Nestled beneath the Christmas tree, I’d find one or two specially requested simple toys – a doll, a game, or one exciting year, a beautiful blue bicycle – just for me.
That afternoon brought our entire family gathered together and crowded into the living room around a simple Scotch pine real tree covered in old-fashioned strings of lights with colored bulbs, metallic icicles, and the same ornaments year after year. It wasn’t a fancy themed tree; instead a hodge-podge collection adorned that prickly-needled fir which filled the air with the pungent scent of pine.
We exchanged gifts – real honest to goodness gifts that were purchased with thoughtfulness and consideration instead of gift cards or envelopes of money. And we laughed, and we exclaimed over our wonderful presents, and we thanked one another with smiles and hearty hugs.
My mother prepared a simple but abundant and appetizing meal displayed on the dining room table – no fancy recipes, no exquisite table centerpieces/decorations to make it look like a photo spread from a magazine. And we bowed our heads thanking God for the most precious gift of all – His Son Jesus Christ – and for our provision of food and family.
After dinner, one of us occupied the bench at our upright piano to plunk out Christmas carols while the rest of us sang the well-known tunes over and over again. We’d eat dessert and commence a few rousing rounds of cards or games or sometimes just putting a new jigsaw puzzle together.
A simple Christmas. Not photo worthy because of the food, the glitz, the gifts, or the amount of money spent. A Christmas worth remembering because of love, gratitude, and joy felt and appreciated when a family assembles to celebrate.
That’s my idea of an old-fashioned Christmas and that’s what I’m hoping for this Christmas.
“When we recall Christmas past, we usually find that the simplest things – not the great occasions – give off the greatest glow of happiness.” ~ Bob Hope
©2013 mamasemptynest.wordpress.com
Very much like the Christmases I remember. We didn’t have a chimney, either, so I always wondered how Santa got into our house.
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Yep, I don’t even really remember how my folks explained that one (no chimney for Santa) except to say he was magic. 😉
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Merry Christmas to you and yours Cindy, and may it be filled with all the simple joy you so cherish! 🙂
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Thank you, sweet friend! Wishing you the most blessed Christmas too and prayers for that foot to be on the mend.
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That sounds like a perfect Christmas, Cindy.
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Thanks, Dianna. I wrote this a couple of years ago and it still holds true to me. I just want those old-fashioned Christmases again.
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Excellent! Well deserving of a re-post!
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Thank you so much, Montucky. The outlandish celebrations that occur now at Christmas time just do not appeal to me at all. Wishing you a simple and lovely Christmas, my blogging friend.
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Your post brought back so many memories that I got a little teary eyed. These are the kinds of Christmas celebrations I, too, would love to recreate. As a society, we’ve gotten too wrapped up (pun intended) in buying and giving expensive gifts, decking the halls with outrageous and gaudy decorations, and outdoing one another that we’ve forgotten the real meaning of Christmas (family, faith, generosity, gratitude). In the last few years, I’ve experienced a real sense of ‘let down’ after the holidays and I’ve come to realize its because its all so rushed and demanding that you don’t have time to enjoy it. My sister reminded me just the other day of how our mother would insist we open gifts one person and one gift at a time (there weren’t more than 2 or 3 each under the tree) so everyone could admire what each of us had spent time and effort to buy. I’m going to try that this year (although the baby might rip through hers pretty quickly!) I want that sense of peace and well being back in my Christmas celebrations, and I want my family to experience it! I hope you can capture it too!
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Margo, I just knew you’d be in my corner with this one. I just wonder how did Christmas evolve into such an over-the-top holiday?? Everything seems outrageous and social media just promotes it even more. Not how I want to spend this special season. I loved to hear that your family opened their gifts one at a time back then — believe it or not, hubby and I taught our children to do that from the time they were little and we still observe this custom. That way we all enjoy watching each other’s faces as we open the gifts taking turns. It also makes the fun last longer. Like you, I don’t know what it will be like with grandbaby but I hope we can eventually teach her the same. I sincerely hope you have a wonderful family old-fashioned Christmas too!
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