A lovely sentiment |
Jan. 1, 1938
Before the fireplace in the
evening
Dearest Son,
I’ve dismantled the tree and
feel like I can settle down to just living again and enjoying my gifts and memories
of a very happy Christmas to which you added a great deal.
Friday I took the fir boughs
from over the windows and doors, then I used sprays of holly across the
curtains and it is so much prettier, so next Christmas I’ll open your box early
and decorate with holly instead of fir. Already planning for Christmas, you
see. ~ Ina Dobson to her son Vance
We see poems about “bringing
home the Christmas tree,” but nobody much sings about taking it out. While
setting it up and decorating evokes images of fun, taking it out smacks of
work.
Since this was our first year
to have a tree at the town house, I decided I needed better ornament storage than
several tin cans, so I bought a smallish plastic ornament storage container at
JoAnn’s. Still, I repacked these vintage ornaments several times before I
determined the best way to go about it. In the end, I placed all of them into
the new container and put it on a shelf in the house, which is the most
environmentally friendly place I have. I figure something less precious can go
out to the shed.
Once our tree was bare of ornaments, we unceremoniously plopped it into its original box, which is now somehow
inadequate. We can never get it back in that box. A storage bin for the tree is
now on my shopping list.
I so love Ina’s philosophy of
Christmas: “It helps to pass the winter.” As December became January, she was “ready
to settle down to just living again and enjoying her gifts and memories.” It's good advice. I plan to read, sew, and crochet – and of course, take
the dogs for their afternoon walk. But – we still have to endure the dark, cold
months when nothing much happens, so I have planned a blog project based on our
advent story -- a discussion of gingerbread. You might enjoy beginning by listening
to this podcast from “Stuff You Missed in History Class,” which incorporates a
history of gingerbread about halfway through (here). KW
2 comments:
I hate taking down the Christmas tree! It's a whale of a lot of work, but more than that, it takes the soft glow of Christmas away. Ours is still up, and will be for a while longer.
Yes, that's it. It takes away the soft glow. That's why I burn candles.
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