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Take a deep breath. Smell that? It's the smell of Christmas. If I took my
favorite memories and put them in a gallon jug, over half would have something
to do with Christmas. The tickle of pine needles on my arm, the smell of
musty old ornaments made from bottle caps and glitter, the crisp softness
of construction paper, and a thousand other memories remind me of where I've
been and what's important.
Memories are surprising critters, especially the Christmas variety. I should
know. I've made it my passion to create and capture truckloads of Christmas
memories for my kids. And they do have truckloads of memories, just not from
the truck I delivered.
That's the weird thing about memories. We plan, make arrangements, and set
a trap to capture them, and some other memory is caught instead.
Right now I'm looking at one of those memories. My oldest son collected
it. It's a 10-ounce Sprite bottle. Yep, that's what I said, a Sprite bottle.
A few years ago, I thought I'd be a good husband and father and cart away
some of our children for a little educational field trip. So, bright and
early I loaded up the van, and we drove the 40 minutes to tour the largest
Amish museum in the country.
Unfortunately, the brochure failed to mention their winter hours, which
meant we had to kill two hours. Considering it was an Amish community, this
wasn't good.
Luckily, we found an antique mall that was open, and I spent the next 40
minutes walking down aisles of priceless treasures with four fidgety kids
and me repeating, "Don't touch that," about every 20 seconds.
By the time we made it back to the van, we only had an hour left. Lucky
for us, Amish people don't grow all of their own food. So we found a grocery
store where we bought a box of Little Debbie snack cakes and several 10-ounce
bottles of Sprite.
The rest of our waiting time took place in the museum's parking lot eating
snack cakes and guzzling Sprite. Once inside, we spent two hours listening
to multimedia presentations on the history of the Anabaptist movement and
the differences between the Mennonites, Amish, and Hutterites ... yeah, that's
what the kids thought too.
Later that night, I was shocked when Ben displayed his empty Sprite bottle
on his dresser as a reminder of the day.
It's funny. Over the years, they'll forget the tour, but they'll never forget
the time Dad got them each a bottle of Sprite and they ate snack cakes in
the parking lot of some museum.
That's memories for you. Christmas ones are even worse.
Last year, I was under the impression that to inject the true meaning of
Christmas I needed to read a portion of the birth narrative before we decorated
the tree. I chose for my text the announcement of John's birth.
We trudged through and then I proclaimed,"This year we're going to hang
one ornament at a time, remembering out loud each one." A few minutes later,
we were batting the kids away from the ornament box like flies from a cake.
They'd reach in, snatch a priceless ornament; we'd gasp and threaten to throw
away our Christmas tree if they didn't settle down.
We hung, they giggled, we hollered, and little by little they hung the ornaments
in a two-foot square section of the tree, leaving the rest empty.
Up till that point, I did my darndest to take all the fun out of decorating
the family tree. Fortunately, kids are resilient.
Next, as all Wilsons have done since the beginning of time, we watched a
Christmas TV special. I was prepared, so before Thanksgiving I picked up
the animated version of The Grinch Who Stole Christmas from our
town library.
In the glow of the Christmas tree, we ate Christmas cookies, sipped sparkling
grape juice, and watched the Grinch steal all the wazzbanglers and grimdinglers
from those hard-sleeping Whos.
And somehow, in the midst of the soft-colored lights and fizzing grape juice,
the fuss and tension vanished, and Christmas crept into our house.
To top it off, my son Sam looked up at me with green icing smeared around
his mouth and said, "This is a good Christmas night, Dad." He was right.
It wasn't the one I had planned, but it was a good one nonetheless.
My kids won't remember my hollering and barking. They may not even remember
every detail of my thrilling Bible stories, but they'll always remember that
cozy feeling of family, the truth that their parents love them, and even
more importantly that God loves them.
There are websites, books, and magazine articles that promise a step-by-step
guide to instill memories galore in your children. They get us pumped up
and leave us frustrated.
Just remember ... memories happen.
Having a memorable Christmas is that easy. Honest.
You still have to take the lead and make sacrifices of yourself and your
time, but if you do ... they'll happen.
Your children depend on those memories, and each one you hand them is tucked
away and brought back out when it's needed. They'll remind them of what's
important and eternal.
So relax. Go ahead and check out the magazines and websites, but don't worry
about the results. Memories happen, and the funniest things will remind them
of the best ones: a special ornament, the smell of pine needles, the taste
of an iced Christmas cookie, or a 10-ounce bottle of Sprite.
Along with being a regular writer for The Old Schoolhouse's The Homeschool
Minute, Todd Wilson is the author of Lies Homeschooling Moms
Believe, Help! I'm Married to a Homeschooling Mom, The Official Book of
Homeschooling Cartoons , and several other books. Todd is
also a dad, conference speaker, and former pastor. Todd's humor and gut-honest
realness have made him a favorite speaker at homeschool conventions across
the country and a guest on Focus on the Family. Todd and his wife, Debbie,
along with their seven children (almost eight) spend several months of
the year traveling the country in their RV encouraging moms and dads. His
humor, realness, and straight talk to men (and women) have become his trademark.
You can visit him on the web at www.familymanweb.com where you can sign
up for his weekly e-letter to dads and check out all of their unique homeschool
encouragement products.
Copyright 2007. Originally appeared in Fall 2007. Used with permission.
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