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Christmas 2024

The_Chief

Accept no imitations!
I hope you all are ready for a reasonably pleasant (but politically nondescript) Winter Solsti-Christma-Kwanz-Ukkah!

I think that covers everything... :)

Two things:
(1) I always start my Christmas shopping on December 26th and, as I see things throughout the year, I buy and stash them. By the time November rolls around, I'm 90% done with Christmas shopping. I keep a document file tracking what I'm giving, to whom, for the various occasions through the year. Try it: I think you'll find that most of the holiday pressure will disappear!

(2)
You may never know what one small act of kindness or generosity will result in... such is the story of Bob May.

As the holiday season of 1938 came to Chicago, Bob May wasn’t feeling much comfort or joy. A 34-year-old ad writer for Montgomery Ward, May was exhausted and nearly broke. His wife, Evelyn, was bedridden, on the losing end of a two-year battle with cancer. This left Bob to look after their four-year old-daughter, Barbara.

One night, Barbara asked her father, “Why isn’t my mommy like everybody else’s mommy?” As he struggled to answer his daughter’s question, Bob remembered the pain of his own childhood. A small, sickly boy, he was constantly picked on and called names. But he wanted to give his daughter hope, and show her that being different was nothing to be ashamed of. More than that, he wanted her to know that he loved her and would always take care of her.

So he began to spin a tale about a reindeer with a bright red nose who found a special place on Santa’s team. Barbara loved the story so much that she made her father tell it every night before bedtime. As he did, it grew more elaborate. Because he couldn’t afford to buy his daughter a gift for Christmas, Bob decided to turn the story into a homemade picture book.

In early December, Bob’s wife died. Though he was heartbroken, he kept working on the book for his daughter. A few days before Christmas, he reluctantly attended a company party at Montgomery Ward. His co-workers encouraged him to share the story he’d written. After he read it, there was a standing ovation. Everyone wanted copies of their own. Montgomery Ward bought the rights to the book from their debt-ridden employee. Over the next six years, at Christmas, they gave away six million copies of Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer to shoppers. Every major publishing house in the country was making offers to obtain the book. In an incredible display of goodwill, the head of the department store returned all rights to Bob May. Four years later, Rudolph had made him into a millionaire.

Now remarried with a growing family, May felt blessed by his good fortune. But there was more to come. His brother-in-law, a successful songwriter named Johnny Marks, set the uplifting story to music. The song was pitched to artists from Bing Crosby on down. They all passed. Finally, Marks approached Gene Autry. The cowboy star had scored a holiday hit with “Here Comes Santa Claus” a few years before. Like the others, Autry wasn’t impressed with the song about the misfit reindeer. Marks begged him to give it a second listen. Autry played it for his wife, Ina. She was so touched by the line “They wouldn’t let poor Rudolph play in any reindeer games” that she insisted her husband record the tune.

Within a few years, it had become the second best-selling Christmas song ever, right behind “White Christmas.” Since then, Rudolph has come to life in TV specials, cartoons, movies, toys, games, coloring books, greeting cards and even a Ringling Bros. circus act. The little red-nosed reindeer, dreamed up by Bob May and immortalized in song by Johnny Marks, has come to symbolize Christmas as much as Santa Claus, evergreen trees and presents. As the last line of the song says, “He’ll go down in history.”
 
My own special tale for this year…

Several members of our church have for many years donned Victorian garb and visited some senior citizen facilities in the area, singing more traditional Christmas songs (no Santa, Frosty or Rudolph, though).

Not all of the residents attend, of course, but those who do are always appreciative and most sing along with us (we give them handouts with the lyrics). I’ve gained a special appreciation, both musically and lyrically, for many of the songs we sing.

One of the facilities we visit asked us a while back about coming once a month to sing hymns and have a short devotional time, so most of the carolers do that as well.

It was at this facility last Sunday when, after we finished singing, we were walking about and visiting with the attendees (which we always do), while also passing out Christmas candy. One resident whom I’ve gotten to know a little bit, asked to see my hat , and when I took it off to show it to him, he tossed in a folded-up envelope and said, “Put that in Jesus’ stocking.” I thanked him and said I would and we concluded our visit thereafter.

(Understand that we never mention nor solicit donations, and this has never happened before.)

After we got home I unfolded the envelope and was so touched by what he had written. I’ve cropped his name and erased the facility name but wanted to share it with my friends here. (There was also a check for our church.)

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It really doesn’t take much to have a positive impact on peoples’ lives. <3

Have a blessed Christmas, and if you celebrate something else, I hope it is special and meaningful to you, too.
 
That's awesome, @rootabaga - members our VFW perform a USO-style music & comedy show each month for residents of several assisted living centers in the area. The theme changes every year, but we go with familiar songs and terrible jokes*. Residents look forward to our appearance and, for many, it's the highlight of their month. It's such a blessing for US to be a blessing to them.

* - How does Santa go to every house in the world and not get sick? He uses hand Santa-tizer
 
I am making my Aunt a photo book that my sister lend me to use, putting my old photos (non digital before it was "trendy to put everything online") in a winter leaf pattern of leaves and painted blue and white.
Sort of out of my human side of making a present for her though, such a pain in my mind..
 
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