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A Thread To Share Holiday Cheer


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While the anticipation from when I was a child is gone and instead of too many days between Thanksgiving and Christmas, there never seem to be enough of them anymore, I still love the holiday season: the decorations, the traditions, the tree, the food, the time spent with family and friends.

But as much as it’s a season of joy, it can be a challenging time for others. During those weeks when the long nights in the Northern hemisphere might make us feel the most lonely, when the getting together of families and friends might make the empty chairs that were previously occupied the most obvious, when the bare trees and naked bushes might make things look bleak and devoid of color, what I love most then are the holiday lights.
To me, they bring light into darkness, warmth to those gathered inside, to those who might be hurrying by, color to where it may be missing, a moment of calm when we pause to enjoy their beauty. And when it snows, the fallen crystals sparkle in the light to sprinkle a little more magic into this most magical of seasons.

So, let’s be each other’s light this holiday season and bring warmth, color and a sprinkle of magic to anyone who might be in need of it this year.

Whether it’s your favorite tradition or recipe, a fun memory or what you love most about the holidays, a New Year’s resolution or something else entirely like a quote that you think may inspire or make one smile, share it below to help spread the beauty and cheer of the season.

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I also love this season. I love putting up a tree, lights (I still struggle with finding battery operated lights to put on my balcony when I see so many of my neighbors with uber kewl ones and try not to be jealous!) and my plush snowmen outside my door, along with wreaths.

But I find I'm having to push myself to do those things this year. So I'll be late-I'll have everything up by the weekend. I have so many Hallmark collectibles, ranging from Loony Tunes ,Batman, Beauty & the Beast, Mickey and Friends, Tom & Jerry, and yes, even I Love Lucy, where she's calling Ricky to tell him she volunteered him to emcee, and you can hear Ricky going off in Spanish. I LOVE that ornament. It's lasted over 20 years.

I decorated my office cube this morning, with the Happy Holidays mini green and red garland, my fake table top tree with the fake snow and pine cones and holly. The cheap lights that only work for an hour need to be replaced. So I threw some silver tinsel over them.

I have my wee snowmen who light up and jiggle and my plush penguin with a wreath. I won't lie, it's making me smile.

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(edited)

This has been a rough year in my family and world events certainly haven't helped but I am determined to enjoy Christmas even if it's not quite the same as it used to be!

I still remember my childhood Christmases (the year I got the whole Anne of Green Gables boxed set - wow) and of course nothing will ever compare to that.  But next week or maybe the week after we're putting up the tree and I've got the advent calendar going - the one I bought on a holiday trip to the UK with my late sister (which is another reason the holidays will never ever be the same again).

I'm interested in when most people do their holiday decorating.  In our family growing up we always waited until Dec 1 for the outdoor lights, wreath etc and the tree never went up until, at the earliest two weeks before Christmas.  I know though some people start in as soon as the Halloween decorations are down.

Edited by Dimity
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2 minutes ago, Dimity said:

I'm interested in when most people do their holiday decorating.  I

From what I understand and have seen, they usually go up after the Thanksgiving holiday/weekend. I'm behind this year!

But I ordered some new battery operated garland wreaths and lights for my balcony.

I remember one Christmas when my dad went all out. We lived in a garden apartment, with a small space for gardening and he had planted roses that bloomed every spring and summer. But, I digress.

He bought that fake snow foam and sprayed our front window with Merry X-Mas, got a tree, and we decorated it and Santa put the presents there (We were 7 and 4, okay?) I got a doctor's kit and played doctor checking in on my patient, who was my Dad. And that was the year of the 3-4 foot snow!!!

I was thinking about getting a real tree this year, but I just don't know that the branches would hold my collectibles-some are very heavy.  So it's back to pulling out my prelit fake tree.

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This was a great idea for a thread!

I too am trying to enjoy the holidays. The Christmas tree farm opened a week before Thanksgiving, so we got it earlier this year. We also put up our "Snoopy" tree, which used to be the "kids tree," but over the years, I've gotten so many Peanuts ornaments from Hallmark that the kiddie ornaments were all phased lol.

Looking forward to starting our traditional driving around to look at Christmas lights. Unfortunately, last year some of the nicer houses that usually have their lights professionally done didn't participate last year, but there are still some big houses in Okemos (I live in Lansing, MI) that got all out.

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2 hours ago, Dimity said:

I'm interested in when most people do their holiday decorating.  

I generally decorate around Thanksgiving (a holiday we celebrate with Mr. Turquoise's family out of state), but this year our tree and most of the decorations went up the weekend after the election. I needed something cheery to focus on. Then the following weekend the grands did their tree at our house, and the weekend before Thanksgiving I put up my parents'. Mom still loves the decorations but is not up to doing them herself. I enjoy the decorations and pretty lights, and like to have them up more than a few weeks. They will come down sometime after New Year's.

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2 hours ago, Dimity said:

I'm interested in when most people do their holiday decorating.  In our family growing up we always waited until Dec 1 for the outdoor lights, wreath etc and the tree never went up until, at the earliest two weeks before Christmas.  I know though some people start in as soon as the Halloween decorations are down.

I don't decorate until after Thanksgiving mostly because I live with my mom and she does Thanksgiving for the entire family. Our living room is not large enough to accommodate 7 adults and 2 kids (at a minimum) plus a Christmas tree. This year the decorations came down on Black Friday and the tree was up by Saturday. We are an artificial tree family due to living in an area where our only options for a live tree are to buy one that was cut in September or October at a lot or drive 10-12 hours round trip to cut down our own. Also, my dad grew up in an Ukrainian Catholic family where Christmas was celebrated on January 6th and we have always kept our tree up that whole time. Aint no way a live tree is going to last that long.

I do not do outdoor decorations. Did them once for the one Christmas when my niece and nephew were here, and will not do them again. I don't trust myself on a ladder for that long. We've had some inflatables for a few years until they died and now cost too much to replace.

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The first night of Chanukkah falls on Christmas night this year.  Can't wait to have spring rolls to celebrate the oil (we do takeout Chinese every Christmas and have Christmas dinner on the weekend before 12/25).  Yes, we will still have latkes.  Just not on the first night.  Unfortunately, we're not sure where we're going to get our latkes from this year.  The neighbourhood store that has what my husband and I think are one of the best latkes in the city closed that location back in March.

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4 hours ago, PRgal said:

The first night of Chanukkah falls on Christmas night this year.  Can't wait to have spring rolls to celebrate the oil (we do takeout Chinese every Christmas and have Christmas dinner on the weekend before 12/25).  Yes, we will still have latkes.  Just not on the first night.  Unfortunately, we're not sure where we're going to get our latkes from this year.  The neighbourhood store that has what my husband and I think are one of the best latkes in the city closed that location back in March.

Fear not, you can easily make your own latkes!  I encourage this. It's such an easy dish.  This has been discussed in the food thread.  Need a recipe, I will provide. 

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(edited)

 

14 minutes ago, PRgal said:

Not a bad idea! :) I lack the patience to grate all those potatoes though.  LOL.....  Maybe I'll get my son to help. 

We use the food processor!  Have been doing so for 40 years.  Stay tuned recipe coming up. 

So it really takes only minutes to get the batter ready.

Latke recipe:

3 regular potatoes (Idaho?  Russet).  One large onion or two small.    Essentially a three-to-one ratio.  Some matzoh meal.  One or two eggs. 

Oil for frying.

Peel potatoes.  Peel onions.  Cut into sizes that will fit through the feed tube.  Some people do not like latkes with onions.  If you are among them, I suppose you could just follow this recipe without the onions. 

Put potatoes and onions through the food processor on the shredding disk.  Some people like the latkes with shreds and stop there.  I like more of a ground mixture, so I then change to the regular blade and grind the mixture to a coarse grind.

Squeeze this mixture through cheesecloth and remove all liquid as best you can.  Let drain and spoon up any potato starch you see back into the mix.  Add salt and pepper to taste.

Add the eggs and add the matzoh meal in an amount that sort of makes sense to you.  Mix up.  Cover and chill for a while.

Then form into patties and fry in say a half inch of oil in your frying pan.  I like cast iron, but you don't have to.  Fry on one side till brown and turn over and fry the other side.  That's it!

Serve with your choice of apple sauce or sour cream. 

The delicious flavor is created by the frying/browning and the onions.  This is really a peasant recipe.  No refinement whatsoever. 

Edited by EtheltoTillie
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6 minutes ago, EtheltoTillie said:

 

We use the food processor!  Have been doing so for 40 years.  Stay tuned recipe coming up. 

So it really takes only minutes to get the batter ready.

Latke recipe:

3 regular potatoes (Idaho?  Russet).  One large onion or two small.    Essentially a three-to-one ratio.  Some matzoh meal.  One or two eggs. 

Oil for frying.

Peel potatoes.  Peel onions.  Cut into sizes that will fit through the feed tube.  Some people do not like latkes with onions.  If you are among them, I suppose you could just follow this recipe without the onions. 

Put potatoes and onions through the food processor on the shredding disk.  Some people like the latkes with shreds and stop there.  I like more of a ground mixture, so I then change to the regular blade and grind the mixture to a coarse grind.

Squeeze this mixture through cheesecloth and remove all liquid as best you can.  Let drain and spoon up any potato starch you see back into the mix.  Add salt and pepper to taste.

Add the eggs and add the matzoh meal in an amount that sort of makes sense to you.  Mix up.  Cover and chill for a while.

Then form into patties and fry in say a half inch of oil in your frying pan.  I like cast iron, but you don't have to.  Fry on one side till brown and turn over and fry the other side.  That's it!

Serve with your choice of apple sauce or sour cream. 

The delicious flavor is created by the frying/browning and the onions.  This is really a peasant recipe.  No refinement whatsoever. 

Thank you!  I've never used my food processor with anything other than the chopper blade.  LOL.  I'm not even sure where I put the other parts! :D 

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If he can get his mama or his mama-in-law to do them, he'll gladly go outside and do the meat.   We do get after him if he isn't doing something.  One year he was stuck with all the shopping.  I think he makes sure he needs to fire up a grill or smoker now.

Since it will be Christmas evening this year, I expect daughter's MIL will do the shredding. 

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Speaking of food, one tradition Mama has always insisted upon (from at least my earliest childhood) is that we must eat breakfast before we open a single present on Christmas Day.

Does anyone have that in their families? I'm not sure where she got that from but then she also insists on not telling or being told of any dreams until after breakfast to prevent bad ones from coming true!

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6 minutes ago, Blergh said:

Speaking of food, one tradition Mama has always insisted upon (from at least my earliest childhood) is that we must eat breakfast before we open a single present on Christmas Day.

 

Our tradition with my own kids was that they could get up anytime after 6, ideally 7 or 8 (dare to dream) and they opened their stockings first, then we'd have cinnamon rolls and coffee for the grown ups and then they opened their presents. 

My husband's father was French Canadian so his family had   réveillon so he got his presents after Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve.  Luckily for me he was more than happy to embrace my family's tradition of sleep at night and presents in the morning!

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We kind of had that tradition. My dad and Grandpa were (are) church organists and my grandparents lived an hour away. We would always pack up the car with Christmas presents in the morning and drive to them or have to wait for them to get to us before we could open anything. If Christmas was on a Sunday, well, that was even worse. We were only allowed our stocking until we got together, then we’d sit on the couch with breakfast and go one present at a time. And there were always plenty! It was a whole day thing which I kind of miss with my own kids but I took the opposite approach with my kids. No church, I make breakfast but I don’t expect them to eat it. They start with stockings and then have to wait for me and Dad to be coffee-d and bathroom-ed before they can start. They get to open a few gifts at a time but not a free for all. 
 

Late morning my in-laws come over for breakfast and my parents come over for dinner. 
We do a big Christmas Eve with my in-laws and family (14) of us where my mother in law makes her soup and we have a sandwich platter, decorate cookies, the kids open gifts and the adults play White Elephant. We lost my mother in law back in April so this is a season of firsts for all of us and we are trying to keep her traditions alive. 

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When I was a kid, our tradition was that we'd always go over to my grandma's house on Christmas Eve and spend time with her and our relatives, and we'd open all our presents we got from them and vice versa there. 

Then my family would go home, and my parents would let my sister and me each open one gift. And then we'd save he rest for Christmas morning - my sister and I would sit in our room and wait until our parents told us we could come out and then we'd all open presents and have breakfast. 

That is easily my most cherished Christmas memory. I was always so excited for Christmas/winter break to roll around when I was in school, both 'cause it meant I had a week and a half or so off from school :p, and also because it meant I'd get to go to my grandma's house. I very vividly remember standing in my kitchen with my little bag of stuff I would always take with me to my grandma's house (sure, I'd only be there for a few hours, but I still brought notebooks and pens and my favorite doll and a book or two to read, and stuff that my grandma and I could play with together). I also remember my school bus driver always giving us kids candy canes as we got off the bus for the holiday. 

(I also remember our teachers taking the afternoon of the last day before break and turning that into a fun movie afternoon, where all the kids would gather in someone's classroom or the gym or something and just watch a movie and have some snacks :p.)

Regarding decorations, my mom's been spending this past Thanksgiving putting up most of our Christmas decorations. We try to get that stuff set out over Thanksgiving break/the first week of December if we're able. I wish we still had our "Merry Christmas" banner from when I was a kid - the letters alternated red and green, and when my parents put that up and the movie Christmas Vacation was on TV, that was always the unofficial start of the holidays for me. 

We don't have a tree, 'cause our apartment is super tiny and we just don't really have the room for it. But my mom has a few mini tree decorative statues and such that she puts out that are kind of our makeshift "tree". 

12 hours ago, Turquoise said:

I enjoy the decorations and pretty lights, and like to have them up more than a few weeks. They will come down sometime after New Year's.

This reminds me of an episode of the original Roseanne where Dan's getting out the Christmas lights so he can hang them up, and they're all tangled up and he and Fred are trying to untangle them. Fred asks Dan why he doesn't take the time to just neatly organize the lights when putting them away so that they don't get all messed up, and Dan looks at him and goes, "Yeah, like that's how I want to spend my Easter Sunday!" :p. 

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We did the open one gift up on Christmas Eve as well.  Usually it was a movie to watch that night or a new pair of pajamas but I loved the sneak preview gift.

We only decorate the inside and oh my lord Mr. Kat and I had an ordeal getting lights up on the inside.  We don't really decorate the outside but we have a lot of homemade arts and crafts from myself and the 7yo we hang up.

Our tree is pretty much the centerpiece of the living room.  I just ordered a new rug for the front of the fireplace and now it's on to the Christmas cookie baking list.  I just stockpile eggs and butter from Costco so I'm good to go.

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Growing up the tree went up mid-December and came down on January 2nd.  When we were small gifts were on Christmas morning (before breakfast!) but as we got older we started opening everything on Christmas Eve. My mother even put up a cardboard fireplace for a few years, I love those old photographs.

I have always put up decorations Thanksgiving weekend (only because my husband loves them, I wouldn’t bother for myself) and they come down January 1 so it gives him over a month. I hated doing the tree this year (and it’s only a 4’ one), I’m hoping to leave all the stuff on it so next year I can pull it out of the bag, plug it in, and be done.  I don’t mind all the smaller decorations around the house, they are quick and easy, and I don’t do anything outdoors. Husband’s typical plan is to leave the house for a round of golf and expect everything done on his return.

The memories are the best thing about the holidays for me, I enjoy reading about everyone’s customs and routines!

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We opened non-Santa gifts Christmas Eve -- gifts from family and friends -- and then Santa came overnight and left Santa gifts and stockings for Christmas morning.  That was a free-for-all.  We didn't have to wait for parents to be awake or to have breakfast or anything.  We just went for it when we got up.

16 hours ago, Blergh said:

she also insists on not telling or being told of any dreams until after breakfast to prevent bad ones from coming true!

We had that, too.

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On 12/3/2024 at 1:45 PM, PRgal said:

The first night of Chanukkah falls on Christmas night this year.  Can't wait to have spring rolls to celebrate the oil (we do takeout Chinese every Christmas and have Christmas dinner on the weekend before 12/25).  Yes, we will still have latkes.  Just not on the first night.  Unfortunately, we're not sure where we're going to get our latkes from this year.  The neighbourhood store that has what my husband and I think are one of the best latkes in the city closed that location back in March.

Latkes are not that hard to make. You should try! Yum. 

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13 hours ago, Annber03 said:

(I also remember our teachers taking the afternoon of the last day before break and turning that into a fun movie afternoon, where all the kids would gather in someone's classroom or the gym or something and just watch a movie and have some snacks :p.)

I went to Catholic school where the school celebrated the Feast of St. Nicholas every December 6th or thereabouts. We would place our shoes outside of the classroom, watch a movie, and then take a break to see what St. Nick left us in our shoes. Every year it was the same thing--a seasonal themed pencil and eraser, a candy cane, and a popcorn ball. 

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(edited)

Does anyone have that one present from their childhood that really stands out for them?  The year I got figure skates I will never forget.  It was the year I'd moved out of the toy stage but my younger siblings were still there and I was thinking how I'd have to be a good sport and be happy about getting a robe and slippers or some such.  Instead I got skates!

Edited by Dimity
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1 hour ago, Dimity said:

Does anyone have that one present from their childhood that really stands out for them?  The year I got figure skates I will never forget.  It was the year I'd moved out of the toy stage but my younger siblings were still there and I was thinking how I'd have to be a good sport and be happy about getting a robe and slippers or some such.  Instead I got skates!

A Crayola art set (that came in a case with a handle) I got from Santa when I was 6 or so.  It had crayons, types of paint, markers, chalk and I don’t know what else.  I think it was paper.  It was a limited edition I think because that was the only time I got it!  Oh, and a Barbie swimming pool. 

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1 hour ago, Dimity said:

Does anyone have that one present from their childhood that really stands out for them?  The year I got figure skates I will never forget.  It was the year I'd moved out of the toy stage but my younger siblings were still there and I was thinking how I'd have to be a good sport and be happy about getting a robe and slippers or some such.  Instead I got skates!

When I was either 5 or 6 my aunt gave me a purple purse specifically a lavender patent leather or vinyl if I'm being honest. That purse was my mainstay for years until the strap broke. That purse left a hole in my heart for the last 35ish years until last month when I found the adult version. 

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13 hours ago, Caoimhe said:

I enjoy reading about everyone’s customs and routines!

Same here!

I'm a little jealous about posters having fond memories spent at grandma's house. Both my paternal grandparents died before I was born. Sadly, my dad's mom died in childbirth with him. He was the youngest of 6.

My maternal grandfather died the year before I was born, and my grandma was a young widow at 55. She was the only grandma I ever knew, but she was very, very poor. We lived in Brooklyn until I was 5 and for a few years before I came along, my mom's parents and her youngest sibling (5 years younger) lived in my parent's home. That's how poor they were. For about a decade, from the time I was 10 until around age 20, my grandmother lived with us. She had 13 grandchildren, and so, her Christmas gift to us was very, very modest. But she was the best grandma ever! We watched the NY Yankees games together and she'd yell at the TV when the players were screwing up. She'd take me to Bingo with her, and she had a knack for making each grandchild feel like he or she was her favorite.

Anyway, back to Christmas. Sis and I would get matching PJs in advance and wear them Christmas Eve night. One year even my mom joined in, and we all had leopard pajamas. Mom had a Christmas Club account at the bank and she'd kind of go crazy with Christmas gifts for my sister and me. Lots of clothes, sure, but lots of toys, too.

I think probably my fondest memories of Christmas were not the gifts received, but the time spent with extended family.

My mom was the 4th youngest of 5 siblings and there was a gap of 15 years from the oldest to the youngest. 4/5 siblings had 2 children each, but my mom's oldest sibling had 5 kids. She eloped at age 17 and had her first kid at 18. She was 10 years older than my mom, so her family really never was with us for the holidays, but we did see them often.

The Christmas and New Year tradition was such: mom's only brother and middle sister lived in Brooklyn, only blocks apart. Mom's baby sister lived around the corner from us, in the suburbs. That in itself was fantastic, as my 2 cousins lived around the corner.

If Christmas was spent in Brooklyn, the Long Island bunch would spend Christmas Eve at one house and Christmas Day in the other relative's house. There were no guest bedrooms, and the moms and dads would sleep on couches or recliners while the kids would sleep on the floor in a sleeping bag.

A week later, the Brooklyn crew would come to Long Island to spend New Year's Eve at one house and New Year's Day at the other. Again, they'd sack out all over between the 2 houses. What fun we had!

The following year, the families would switch. If we hosted New Year's, then the next year we'd host Christmas.

Also, my birthday is New Year's Eve, so my mom always got a sheet cake that said Happy Birthday and Happy New Year's. 

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1 hour ago, ECM1231 said:

I think probably my fondest memories of Christmas were not the gifts received, but the time spent with extended family.

This is one aspect of the holidays that I never got to experience.  My parents moved around a lot in the first years of their marriage due to my Dad's job and we eventually settled in Quebec which is a long way from their respective home towns.  You don't  miss what you never had I guess but I love that my own children had the chance to grow up with aunts and uncles and cousins and grandparents nearby!

 

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1 hour ago, ECM1231 said:

I'm a little jealous about posters having fond memories spent at grandma's house. Both my paternal grandparents died before I was born. Sadly, my dad's mom died in childbirth with him. He was the youngest of 6.

My maternal grandfather died the year before I was born, and my grandma was a young widow at 55. She was the only grandma I ever knew

My grandma that I went to see on Christmas Eve (maternal grandma) was the only one I really had any memories with, too. My paternal grandfather died when my dad was eight years old, and my paternal grandma and maternal grandpa both died before I was even four years old, so my memories of them are very, very vague at best (and my paternal grandma lived in Arizona and I only ever saw her once, when my family took a trip out there when I was three). 

Regarding favorite toys, I remember the year I got a Playskool dollhouse :D. Came into the living room and it was all set up on a table. I lost count of how often I played with that thing as a kid. 

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We used to have some aunts and uncles and cousins over for New Year’s Eve.  We would make sour cream and onion soup dip. When I was eight I was finally going to be allowed to stay up and watch the ball drop on TV. My same age cousin and I made a big batch of confetti, and I can hardly believe it but my mother let us throw it all over the house at midnight while we shrieked happy new year like a couple of lunatics. I think my mom waited till the next day to get out the vacuum. 

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(edited)

I’m an old soul at heart but remember my favorite gift being my canopy day bed complete with a trundle bed underneath for sleepovers and retro record player/roller skate sheets. That was ‘95 or so when I was 10. My grandpa was always big into gadgets and technology so would gift us all of the newest video game systems just so he would have an excuse to play them. 

Our decorations go up the day after Thanksgiving but we didn’t host this year and our normal tree farm was hit hard by Helene (we are in Western NC), so we went artificial this year and we’re all set up by Thanksgiving. My kids school (and where I work) is on winter break from Thanksgiving to New Years so I usually take Christmas down a day or so after Christmas so we can get back in the swing of things after being off so long. 
 

New Years is either quiet at home or snacks and a sleepover with my sister in law and her three kids who are the same ages as my three kids. 
 

Said grandparents mentioned above still plan on coming every Christmas and usually they will make it for one day before they abruptly leave due to my Grandmas health and we usually never get a chance to see them before they leave. They do always make a point to see my mom. This year they sent me money to buy gifts for the kids in their name. They live 4 hours away and I know my time with them is slipping by and I’m glad my kids have had great grandparents as long as they have- my oldest is 15. 

Edited by Mountainair
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I got a Christmas tree photo from my cousin. Last year I gave them (she lives with my aunt) a 7.5’ artificial tree I was getting too old to deal with (my husband doesn’t help) and a big bag of handmade ornaments I hadn’t used since I last put that tree up five years ago. Looking at her photo brought back so many memories of when I made those ornaments! There were some my mother had made in there too. It made me feel a bit unsettled, but I’m happy they are being used and enjoyed. For my small 4’ tree I have lovely ornaments that my husband’s family gave us over the years and I hadn’t used the ones I gave away in quite a while so it’s not like I actually wanted them back!! I’m laughing about it today but the power of nostalgia can be surprisingly strong!

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Holiday meal catering placed!!!  We're having our "Christmas" dinner before Christmas so we can do Chinese takeout on 12/25 (and our baked French toast brunch....I think I may do something different this year....to cut the carbs, I'll do crustless quiche and a sweet French toast instead)...now we need to decide what and where to order our New Year's Eve dinner from.  Our tradition is to order Indian food. 

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