Culture

Merry Federally Recognized Holiday of December 25th That Shall Remain Nameless!

I remember when I was a kid living on the outskirts of Detroit, in Taylor in the early 1970s, in early December, aching for snow so badly that it hurt. My dad was fixing up the basement—the first of a lifetime of projects—and there was a dispute about which album to play on the phonograph.

My sister and I wanted Alvin and the Chipmunks, my ma and dad wanted Bing Crosby. I wanted to hear David Seville yell at Alvin in the 12 Days of Christmas. My ma wanted Mele Kalikimaka. I’m now grateful that they won the debate, but I wasn’t then.

But, it did start to snow. I was out before the first flakes hit the ground, ready to build a snowman. We only got a dusting, and so the snowman was half grass. I can still see the streaks of bare patches in the lawn where I rolled out the body.

A week before the Big Day, my grandma brought me to the Eagles, where I wasn’t supposed to know grandpa was dressed as Santa Claus. Even though I could see his familiar glasses, I was left with doubt: it could have been the real old man. After all, he did give me a glorious plastic mesh stocking full of suck candies, the kind that used to hang in the aisles of drug stores.

Some hokey movie was playing on TV, and I laid under the tree, watching the lights sparkle off the ornaments; it was endlessly fascinating. The next day my Aunt Ona came over for Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and we had pepperoni pizza, a tradition I still keep. Later that night I could see searchlights out my bedroom window. It was probably for some car dealership, but I was convinced it was to guide Santa. It was oddly spooky.

My dad got me a giant, six-foot Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton made of styrofoam that you had to put together. My sister got some sort of pink thing. We went to my both sets of grandparents afterwards, saw everybody is our enormous family. But it was at my grandma Johnston’s—she had glass doorknobs!—that I got to sneak some beer.

Greatest Christmas Ever.

Merry day everybody.

Categories: Culture, Fun

9 replies »

  1. Until they pass a law I will continue to wish people a Merry Christmas.

    merry christmas

    Merry Christmas

    MERRY CHRISTMAS!

  2. Hey! I thought I was the only child that used to lay under the tree and stare up into the branches! All those colours. The needles get everywhere though.
    Don’t you still like the seat nearest the tree whenever there’s one around?

  3. Harold,

    I had forgotten that song!

    q-ma,

    19 F? (I looked). Could be worse…but hard to see how.

    Joy,

    I do.

    Braud,

    Merry Christmas!

  4. Merry Christmas, all. I don’t do much for the day, but it’s a nice day for everyone involved anyway. Besides, I get to watch A Christmas Story, which is always fun.

    For those of you so inclined, chag urim sameach!

  5. Merry Christmas all from the land where it happens in summertime 🙂

    Right now it’s boxing day and we have friends coming for a day of fun. Everyone except my dear suffering wife is an Aspie.

    Since I have a broken leg and my old friend Paul is suffering from advanced Parkinson’s, we are going to have a race; Creeping Jesus versus Creeping Moses.

    A pox on Political Correctness.

  6. Ahh, the mesh stockings! Every year the entire extended family would gather at Grandma’s house, where the whole mantel (which stretched the entire width of the room) was lined with those mesh stockings, one for each of the numerous (great)grandchildren. The stocking nor its contents were any wonderment, but it’s what anchors the memory, one of the little things that made my childhood rock.

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