Read For the Love of Christmas Online
Authors: Jeanne Bice
Tags: #true, #stories, #amazing stories, #magical, #holiday, #moments, #love, #respect
Health Communications, Inc.
HCI Books, the Life Issues Publisher
Deerfield Beach, Florida
Contents
Introduction
Making Spirits Bright: Spreading Good Will and Good Cheer
The Lineup
Nancy Bechtolt
It's a Wrap
Peggy Frezon
Finding Santa Claus
Elisa Korentayer
A Song for Santa
Linda O'Connell
Christmas in July
Todd Outcalt
Up Front
Terri Elders
Owed to Joy
Ted Thompson
Of Evergreens and Fake Firs: The Trees We've Known and Loved
All in a Row
Anne Culbreath Watkins
Tinsel Time
Joanne Hirase-Stacey
Visions of Tree Trimming Dance in Our Heads
Marybeth Hicks
Silent Night
Carla Zwahlen
The Too-Tall Tree
Peggy Frezon
Out on a Limb
Andrea Langworthy
Christmas Outside the Box: Offbeat and Untraditional Celebrations
Oy, Come All Ye Faithful
Dorri Olds
Goodwill to Men
Sonja Herbert
Christmas in Germany: The Naked Truth
Lori Hein
Christmas Blues
Kathe Campbell
The Tree That Ryma Built
Ryma Shohami
Glad Tidings of Great Joy: Heartfelt and Holy Moments
Drawing Names
Nancy Edwards Johnson
Unto You a Child Is Born
Helen Colella
The Red Bike
J. Vincent Dugas
Drawn to the Warmth
Carol McAdoo Rehme
Yuletide in the Tropics
Connie Alexander Huddleston
Bah, Humbug! When Christmas Seems More Blue Than White
The Butterfly Tree
Jeanne Hill
The Ghosts of Christmas Past
Joseph Hesch
Radio Flyer
Todd Outcalt
Christmas on the Street
Pat Mendoza
Holidaze
Diane Perrone
Wonderful Life
Caroline Grant
Talking Turkey: Holiday Food and Other Fiascos
Eating at Two
Robert W. Howe
The Right Ingredients
Robyn Kurth
Golumpki (Pigs in a Blanket) Recipe
Meatball Madness
Candace Simar
The Proof Is in the Pudding
Donna Rushneck
Mom's Chocolate Bread Pudding Recipe
The Pied Pepper
Jaye Lewis
Yuletide Traditions: Cherished Customs and Memories
Log Cabin Christmas
John Winsor
Tea for You
Jean Richert as told to Carol McAdoo Rehme
Holiday Blockbuster
Debbi Wise
What a Card
Andrea Langworthy
Cumbered Christmas
Wanda Quist
The Best Time of the Year
Christopher Garry
Recipes
Gingered Brussels Sprouts Hash with Golden Raisins
Spicy Blackened Shrimp with Cranberry-Orange Salsa
Mixed Greens Salad
Goat Cheese and Pistachio Nut Crostini
Tabbouleh with Mint and Cranberries
Christmas Cran-Apple Martini
Roast Turkey with Cranberry Orange Glaze
Santa's Spicy Molasses Cookies
Pumpkin Cupcakes with Cream Cheese Frosting and Caramel Drizzle
The Writers
About the Author
Copyright Credits
Introduction
I
've seen Christmas from all angles:
As a child growing up in Wisconsin, I counted the days until we could wake up on a likely snow-filled Christmas morning and enjoy our special family breakfast before bursting into the living room to look at the beautifully decorated tree and the presents beneath it. As a wife and mom of two, I wonâand lostâmy share of “too-tall-tree debates” with my husband. Then as a widowed mom, with no money for rent, let alone presents, I had to find creative ways to make the holidays memorable.
Over the years, I've learned that if you mix a little practicality with some creativity and a little Yuletide spirit, you can create a magical holiday seasonâand the joyful memories and traditions that go with it.
Throughout this book, you'll read true stories from others about sweet and tender holiday moments, holiday menus gone awry or the turkey that got away, stories of the Christmas blues made brighter by an act of kindness, or the moment someone was reminded of the
true
meaning of the season.
It is my hope that you and your family have a magical holidayâand carry the Christmas spirit with you all the year through.
Making Spirits Bright:
Spreading Good Will and Good Cheer
The Lineup
By Nancy Bechtolt
C
hristmas Eve day.
One-half shopping day left and this was it. Husband Dick and I, son Rick, and his family descended on the city mall with a mixture of excitement and panic, precipitated by the knowledge that visions of sugarplums were due to start dancing in a matter of hours.
Expeditiously finishing my shopping first, I found an empty chair bordering the main walkway through the mall and settled down for an innocent orgy of people watching. One familiar motto caught my eye on a passing sweatshirt:
Practice senseless beauty and random acts of kindness.
I wondered if the wearer or in fact anyone in the mall that day had time for such luxuries. Sounded unlikely.
My attention soon drifted across the procession of shoppers straight into the living room of a Nordic cottage where Santa Claus and an Âitinerant Âlapful of radiant believers sat enthroned in an ample maple rocking chair. Behind him a painted fire roared silently in its huge fireplace. Beside him stood a real Christmas tree trimmed with ropes of fake cranberries and popcorn and genuine candy canes.
I was close enough to notice a sheen of perspiration form along the line of Santa's white beard and to hear all of his Christmas questions and most of their answers. A long queue of eager lap replacements and resigned parents wound down the mallway. The line was at least an hour long. That was going to challenge a few Christmas spirits.
Two adjacent families about halfway through the line caught my eye. The first was a mother and a group of little boys about two, four, and five years old. The smallest was corralled in a stroller. That was the good news. The other two were free agents, poking, scuffling, and pushing in the red-blooded way little boys have that amuses onlookers and drives mothers to consider substance abuse.
The children were neatly but modestly dressed in matching red sweatshirts that seemed to have suffered a few indignities from prior owners. But their faces were shiny, their eyes as blue as they were mischievous, and their hair fine, blond, and unruly. Directly behind them stood another familyâmother, father, and little girls about five and seven. The girls wore blue velvet dresses, trimmed in lace at the hem and featuring a line of white organdy rosebud buttons. Their long white stockings and black patent Mary Janes had never seen Christmas before. Their long black hair, caught in flowing ponytails, reached almost to their waists. When they squirmed, their parents took turns walking with them to relieve the tedium of the wait.
The line inched forward until the little boys were next. But something was wrong. The boys didn't dash for Santa's lap. Instead, the mother and Santa's linebacker, who guarded access to Santa and a cash register with equal fervor, were in animated conversation.
The mother couldn't believe she had to pay for a set of pictures just so her children could talk to Santa. Wasn't Santa for all children at Christmas? Wasn't every child equal in his sightâeven those who didn't have $11.94 for the smallest set of photos? Couldn't they just sit in his lap for a minute, even if she promised not to take a picture with the camera she had brought along?
No, no, no, the linebacker snarled. This was a photo shop in the express business of selling photos. They were not about to overwork Santa for freeloaders. It was too bad she had waited an hour, but the linebacker could take no responsibility for that.
As their voices rose, I realized I was not the only eavesdropper. The father of the blue velvet daughters returned from one of his mini-strolls and, realizing the nature of the controversy, reached into his pocket. He deposited twelve dollars on the cash register.
“This is from one of Santa's plainclothesmen,” he grinned. “Now let's get those boys on Santa's lap where they belong.”
The mother relaxed. The little boys leaped. Across the aisle, I smiled as tears of pride collected in my eyes.
Santa's plainclothesman was my son.