Category: Celebrations

  • Personal History

    While I was contemplating the jumbled mess that has overtaken my virtual desktop, I rediscovered this photo that I took on Christmas day of the table setting for Christmas dinner.

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    The post I had intended to write wasn't really about Christmas, per se, but about family and history, and, as it has been mulling about in my brain it seemed about time to clear off the mental cobwebs and get it out of the virtual attic.

     

    The table setting is really a mishmash of things, rough and informal, precious and formal, dainty and delicate mixed with modern.  Stylistically probably not a success. But it was the mix that drew me in, the way we gather our families and our friends to our hearts, and how the bits and pieces of our histories portray bits and pieces of who we are.

     

    The centerpiece had been on the table for weeks and I was too lazy to move it and put down a cloth.  Somehow, to my mind, it all worked in a way that was perhaps more charming, if not more elegant, than if I had stripped the table down and started fresh. For a dinner filled with family we had a table filled with history.

     

    Unfortunately the history was mostly mine as there is very little of G's family artifacts that have survived other than photographs.  When his family came to the US, fleeing Austria prior to WWII, the ship containing their possessions was sunk by the Germans and they arrived with only their personal items, a few family photographs, and other small items. We have a few things, our hold on the previous generations is more tenuous with fewer tangible artificats to anchor our memories.

     

    The centerpiece I didn't want to move was my maternal grandmother's creche set.  She purchased it in Columbia, where they lived a few years when my mother was a girl.  I love the rough simplicity of the set, and the wonderful figures, carved in clay with their interesting faces and dress, a fascinating blend of European and indiginous Columbian features.  They remind me of my grandmother but gazing upon them also makes me think about how broad are the bonds that bind humanity, and how small those bonds make the world.  I know I've shared them with you before, but this was the first year I put these figures on my dining table, and I think they are well suited to its own rustic origins, built as it is from old heart-pine boards and beams that had once been someone's home.  A table with its own history to bring to our story.

     

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    But what is the rest of the story here?

    The china and silver were my great grandmother's and as she died when I was young I know little of her history.  I know she purchased these herself, after they had made enough money to indulge in a few nice things.  Although she came from a family of means, a family who played a role in the history in this country, she abandoned it all when she eloped and ran off to Texas. Although some part of me would like to know something about those distant relatives, the fact that she chose these things herself now makes them all the more precious to me. Her choice of patterns, Varenne by Haviland, and Buttercup by Gorham, suit each other perfectly.  Their delicate rose patterns remind me of her as I remember her, my Mamie, as we called her, Rose Belle Reed Wentz.

     

    Truthfully, when I first received this china, when I was in my 20's, I didn't like it much, insisting it was not too my taste, it was too fusty and feminine.  But I have mellowed with time and become more comfortable with this part of myself and my history.  Perhaps I have even admitted that I like pink and gold china (don't tell anyone), but mostly I like how it connects me to those Roses who have come before me.

     

    The crystal water goblets and the vaseline glass wine glasses were my paternal grandmother's, my grandmother Mardel, after whom I was named, Rose Belle's daughter.  The smaller glasses are contemporary glasses I purchased after I was married, hand made by an artist in New Orleans.  My mother was with me on that trip, a trip made all the more memorable because I shared it with her.  Six generations at our Christmas table:  the three Roses (Rose Belle, and two Rose Mardels) represented by the china, silver and glass, my mother's mother, Marie, in the creche figures, four generations in spirit even though my mother was not able to join us, I felt her presence there through the gathering of the family artifacts, joining the three generations at the table: G and myself; his daughter and her husband; their son, our grandson.

    And no, G's family was not left out.  The hand-embroidered placemats, inherited from G's grandmother, formed the foundation upon which all this history and sharing of family connections was gathered together. Six generations, two continents, one family.    

     

    We may claim that is our choices that define us but this is only partially true.  We are shaped by what came before whether we chose to acknowledge it or not.  Let us hold it close, joy and sorrow, lest we forget our true selves.

     

     

  • Lighting up the Darkness

    Yesterday evening, when I went outside to turn on the holiday lights**, I looked up and saw the remnants of this beautiful sunset.  I paused and turned the lights on first, then ran inside to get my camera.  

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    I barely made it in time.

     

    Then I snapped another picture as I came back inside.  

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    This is the first year I have put decorations outside the house, as our previous home was not visible from the road.  I would only decorate if we were having a party, and we had not had a party during the holiday season for many many years.

     

    In early November I got really excited about Christmas and holiday decorating.  The last few years had been difficult and I struggled with capturing that hopefullness that Advent and preparing for the winter holidays entails.  Not this year.  I started planning the outside lights early, knowing full well that the covenants of my new neighborhood do not allow lights on the house or large displays.  I wanted something pretty but discreet, and it is possible I erred on the side of over-discretion, but I do like the result. 

     

    IMG_7814I knew I couldn't put anything up more than a month in advance, and I have never been among the tribe who decorate for Christmas over Thanksgiving.  In my mind, Advent and holiday lights are combined, and in the past I always aimed for the first Sunday in Advent as "tree day".  Despite my early exuberance, the week after Thanksgiving and the first week of Advent were a little rocky and my hopeful mood slipped behind some clouds.   We pulled ourselves together this week though, and the tree is up and the decorations have been hauled out of the attic and unpacked.  

     

    The sunset the other night, combined with the rituals of decorating and lighting, have reminded me, once again, of the importance of slowing down and taking time.  It reminded me of the importance of ritual, and how sometimes ritual can help ease our path to joy.

     

    There is no doubt that G is somewhere along the path of his own personal sunset, his own journey through darkness, and I was reminded, as I looked at this sunset, and turned and saw our lights how important it is to take time and celebrate the small joys in each day.

     

    What I love about the entire Advent, Christmas, Hannukah, Winter Solstice, or Whatever-you-call-it Season is the emphasis on hope and joy.  In the darkest days of the year we focus on hope and promise and the sharing of gifts; we focus on coming out of darkness and into rebirth.  It isn't always easy.  In fact the culture we live in can make it harder to focus on these small joys as we fight the frenetic pace of holiday traffic and the cult of more.  But the lights still come on.  And joy is waiting if we pause long enough to take a breath.

     

    **my lights do have timers, but the timers only run for 8 hours.  If I turn the lights on at night, the house is dark when I leave for the gym at 5:45 AM.  It brings me great joy to see the sparkle of tiny lights in the early morning and is well worth the effort of a twice daily walk with my trusty remote.

     

  • Happy 4th of July

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    I love the 4th of July.  I love the parades and the fireworks, the campfires, fired up grills, and the happy spirit of people gathered in town squares and lawns.  Fourth of July always makes me think of what brought this country together and what makes us great.  

     

    On the Fourth of July it seems that all our bickering should be put aside and we should just celebrate how lucky we are, or at least have a piece of pie, some icecream, or a snow cone.

     

    I'm off to see the bicycle parade.

     

    Hope you have a lovely 4th!

     

    illustration courtesy of the City of Knoxville

  • Texas Weekend

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    I'm in Dallas this morning.  Well, if we are going to be picky, I am actually in Garland, which is outside of Dallas.  The important thing is that I am not at home and that I have gone off, by myself, which is a big treat.  By the time you are reading this, my vocal chords will have somehow subtly picked up some inaudible hum in the air and my own soft Texas twang will have somehow errupted out of the deeper recesses of memory.  And I too, with the subtle shift in my voice, will also probably display a slight shift in my perceptions, a sublte alteration of being, as some basic familial patterning plays itself out and comes to the fore.

    I flew in yesterday, a surprise gift to my mom, whose birthday is Monday. It has been far too long since I have been able to fly in and spend some time with her.  This weekend is all about family and mother-daughter time, and I didn't bring my computer with me, although I may finally steal a few minutes here and there and catch up with blogs and email on my handy iPad.  Otherwise, I'll be home on Wednesday.

     

    How are you spending your weekend? 

     

     

    photo of Dallas Skyline from here.

     

     

  • Anniversary

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    Today is our 25th Wedding Anniversary.  There are no big celebrations planned and yet it is a special day  and like a good marriage will be celebrated with a combination of the necessary, the mundane, the joyful and the decadent:

     

    Go to vet to pick up prescription for insulin for Sam the cat.

    Meet with investment advisor for retirement accounts

    Lunch at the American Bounty Room with Champagne

    Nap

    Light Dinner

    Sit on sofa and watch TV (Ringer tonight!)

     

    Have a lovely day and I will be back later in the week.