Well, we had a great Xmas, and it helps to pass the
winter. People can do things like this if they want to. No use to let
everything go because of hard times.
Ina Dobson
Ina had just finished reading a
short Christmas story by Bess Streeter Aldrich. Gently she laid the magazine
down and began to reflect
on the Christmas celebration just past. The holiday season was fast slipping
away, though she would leave the tree up until New Year’s Day. Ina was not sad,
though. She felt a great sense of fulfillment in the gifts she had provided to
family and friends, all of which were ideas born of ingenuity and many of which
she had made herself.
Christmas
Day itself was filled with good fellowship and good food. Ina was happy she
could invite family and friends into her home. They had a wonderful mid-day
meal and then proceeded to munch away on desserts, candy, and nuts. Wasn’t that
just as good as any fancy holiday celebration set forth in the sophisticated magazines?
Better!
And
the day was not without its interesting moments. Mr. Boehm brought Doris and
Ruth each a one-dollar box of chocolates and Ralph a one-dollar tie. Ina almost
laughed out loud to think that dear foolish Mr. Boehm actually seemed to believe
the old age pension of $12.00 per month would really come. Yes, he talked like
it.
And
she was blessed to have received thoughtful gifts herself. Daughter Pearl, who
had said she couldn’t send much, sent a studio portrait of her family. A
picture always makes a good gift, thought Ina – and anyway, much wasn’t
necessary.
And Shirley had sent the
lovely lavender wool shoulderette she was wearing -- very nice and warm and
light and so good for evenings before the fireplace.
Well,
in the end Ina wasn’t disappointed. There were many gifts, most of them
practical things that would come in handy during the winter – gloves and socks
and hankies and such. And she had several new books. Ina loved to read and
books were always welcome to help pass the long winter evenings.
As
Ina’s reverie deepened, she began to reflect on how life was changing. Here in
this remote place, she wasn’t quite insulated from change. Dear Mrs. Boehm, who
had been with the party in 1932 was now gone, leaving Mr. Boehm a poor lonely
soul facing an uncertain future. Shirley was away this year, and though she would
be back, her absence was simply a hint of the change that would come. Shirley
would get married – and she should – and she might just move away for a better
life. A mother could hardly complain about that, but at the same time, if Ina
could take hold of the reins of time and slow it down, she would. Her brother
Ben had sold out and moved to town. And she might just worry about her own
future . . .
“But
there’s no use to think of these things,” said Ina out loud. KW