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There is nothing
sadder in this world than to awake Christmas morning and not be a
child. Not to feel the cold on your bare feet as you rush to the
Christmas tree in the living room. Not to have your eyes sparkle at
the wonderment of discovery. Not to rip the ribbons off the shiny
boxes with such abandon.
What happened? When did the cold, bare feet
give way to reason and a pair of sensible bedroom slippers? When did
the sparkle and the wonderment give way to depression of a long day?
When did a box with a shiny ribbon mean an item on the "charge?" A
child of Christmas doesn't have to be a toddler or a teen. A child of
Christmas is anyone who believes that Kings have birthdays. The
Christmases you loved so well are gone.
What happened? Maybe they diminished the year you
decided to have your Christmas cards printed to send to 1,500 of your
"closest friends and dearest obligations." You got too busy to sign
your own name.
Maybe it was the year you discovered the traditional Christmas tree
was a fire hazard and the needles had to be vacuumed every three hours
and you traded its holiday aroma for a silver one that revolved,
changed colors, played "Silent Night" and snowed on itself.
Or the year it got to be too much trouble to sit
around the table and put popcorn and cranberries on a string. Possibly
you lost your childhood the year you solved your gift problems neatly
and coldly with a checkbook. Think about it. It might have been the
year you were too rushed to bake and resorted to slice-and-bake with
no nonsense. Who needs a bowl to clean -- or lick? Most likely it was
the year you were so efficient in paying back all your party
obligations. A wonderful little caterer did it for you for $3 per
person.
Children of Christmas are givers. That's what the
day is for. They give thanks, love, gratitude, joy and themselves to
one another. It doesn't necessarily mean you have to have children
around a tree. It's rather like lighting a candle you've been saving,
caroling when your feet are cold, building a fire in a clean grate,
grinding tinsel deep into the rug, licking frosting off a beater,
giving something you made yourself. It's laughter, being with people
you like, and at some time falling to your knees and saying, "Thank
You for coming to my birthday party." How sad indeed to awake on
Christmas and not be a child. Time, self-pity, apathy, bitterness and
exhaustion can take the Christmas out of the child, but you cannot
take the child out of Christmas. |