by Janis Patterson
This Sunday is Christmas. It’s a wonderful day – a day for
thankfulness, a day for prayer, a day for family, a day for reflection, a day
for gifts, a day for… Well, there are as many ways to spend Christmas as there
are people.
I remember enormous family Christmases at my grandparents’
when I was a child, with great-aunts and uncles and cousins and lots of people
whom I really didn’t quite know how were connected but they were kin, and that
was all that counted. My mother and her sisters would each bring enormous
amounts of food and we would feast continually all day long. No dishes were
ever assigned or discussed, but somehow we always ended up with a fair balance
of meats and vegetables and salads and desserts. My grandmother was not allowed
to cook – not because her children wanted to spare her, or because they wanted
to show off their own culinary expertise – it was because while she was a
lovely woman she was a rotten cook! About all you could say was that she never
poisoned anyone.
I take part of that back. She made the best divinity candy
in the entire world, and she made it every year. She couldn’t do a roast and
her mashed potatoes were … interesting, but her divinity, which I’ve heard is
one of the hardest candies to make well, was simply and literally divine. Even
now, many decades later, her divinity is to me the real taste of Christmas.
After the feasting and the exchange of gifts around the tree
and the shadows were growing long across the ground it was time to go home. The
sisters would divide up the food – and I swear each year everyone took home
more than they brought, though to a logical mind that seems impossible – and at
my house we would eat Christmas leftovers for at least two or three days.
Through the haze of memory those Christmases were perfect,
though I do have clear memories of someone always a-feudin’ and a-fightin’ with
someone else and painful memories of one of my younger cousin’s repeated attempts
to significantly damage all us other cousins, but this is too magical a time to
remember old hurts, be they mental or physical.
I know this is a mystery blog, but crave your
indulgence just this once. Sunday is Christmas, and too wonderful a time to talk
about murder and mayhem, no matter how many books are set around the holiday.
This is a time to enjoy friends and family and faith and tradition and bask in
the glow of the season.
Merry Christmas, everyone!
10 comments:
Great post Janis....you are so right about no murder and mayhem this Sunday...heck this whole week would be nice LOL!
Good luck and God's blessings
PamT
Okay, Susan,you've convinced me. I will not murder, main, or mangle anyone on Sunday. Instead, I will enjoy family, friends, food, and fun and have a wonderful and happy Christmas.
And I wish the same for you.
We all need a break from murder and mayhem!
Wishing you, Janis, and all, a Christmas of peace and love.
Janis, so right you are. I'm also tired of the mess the world has got itself into right now. Christmas is a time for family and warmth. Wishing you and yours everything good over this festive season. Best, Anni xx
I agree. This is a holiday for families to come together and enjoy living.
Peace for Christmas--aren't many of us, after all, celebrating the birth of the Prince of Peace? Blessed holidays to all. Radine
The only thing I plan on killing is that tin of fudge that's been clamoring for my attention all week. And when I say killing, I mean eating.
Great post. We had a most peaceful Christmas.
We watched Christmas shows on TV and had a turkey dinner. Just the two of us. I don't watch TV much any more (no time), so I really enjoyed it.
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