Celebrating the Holidays?

BlueDragonfly

Senior
Location
Florida
My husband & I live in Florida. All of our children and grandchildren live approximately 1,100 miles away. They (understandably) stay home for the holidays, so it's just hubs and I here. We don't put up a tree or decorate since it's just the 2 of us (and 7 furkids who don't acknowledge holidays of any sort). :D

Just wondering what others do? Our kids and relatives think it's 'sad' and odd that we usually pass the day by relaxing and maybe going out to eat.
 

I'm not sure yet about all our Holiday Plans. I only know that Christmas Eve we will be eating at my daughters house. We do that every year since she hates to see me do all the cooking, so we do it together and my little granddaughter helps too. Hopefully my son will join us with my 2 grandsons.Then it will be my entire family together. As far as Christmas Day I would love to go see my sister and her family. They don't live too far away.
 
We'll enjoy a nice, quiet day at home, eat some good food, probably watch a DVD of a favorite Christmas movie. Other then putting up a creche during the month of December, we decorate for the winter season rather than a specific holiday so we can enjoy the decoration through February/March. It's just the two of us also, but that's enough.
 

Wow, 7 furkids! What kind? That must be costly.

My wife absolutely loves, huge emphasis on "loves", to decorate for Christmas. It's just the two of us, but we definitely know how to celebrate (party) on Christmas. Most of her family live in So California and neither us or them want to spend out the money to fly to the others for Christmas. She has a brother who lives in south Florida, but he just likes being alone for Christmas. IOW, very non-family nowadays.

We now have our 8' artificial tree up and decorated. Put some tinsel on and that it's it. Red garland, with white lights, on our fireplace. Our dining room table is completely covered with a Christmas Village of light-up buildings and other things. Have silver garland around bedroom door and living room window. A nice wreath on front door and one on front storage door. Front door one lights up. Green garland around both of those doors. Both garlands light up. Checked that all of the large candy canes light up and will put them into the ground on both sides of the sidewalk that comes up to our front door. Stockings and Holiday "nic-nacs" on a shelf.

BTW, did I say "my wife LOVES to decorate for Christmas?" Of course I help her.

Have all of the gifts for each other bought. This years gifts are mainly décor for our apartment, when we move to Colorado. Coffee mugs and beer glasses with wildlife prints on them, large area rug with a White-Tail Deer in the middle and other things.

So, YES, by all means, we do/celebrate Christmas. Will also go to a Christmas Concert at local church next month and Christmas Eve Service as well.
 
My daughter lives overseas...so it will be just hubs and me for Christmas day..although we'll be out with friends before and after the day, but every Christmas Day the local rural village pub, with the big open log fire opens for 2 hours in the middle of the day and it's a ritual every year for lots of the locals to go and have a drink and wish everyone a happy Christmas , so we will be doing that again as usual
 
We have no kids and usually celebrate Christmas Day all on our own and LOVE it.
We will be seeing my family Boxing Day and my husband’s family ( big family reunion ) the day after but that’s it for us.

We’re actually pretty lucky that we get off easy compared to most.
 
I'm the only member of my family that still lives here in Buffalo.My older sister lives in England,younger brother lives in Rye,NY{burb of NYC}
Christmas is my least favorite holiday,I listen to our classical station,they play lovely music which helps me get thru this holiday I'm a big fan of British composer,John Rutter who has written beautiful choral music over the years have 4 of his CD's
Who ever came up with the stupid idea of'Black Friday' has wrecked the Christmas spirit for me,its all about greed in my opinion
I do spend Christmas afternoon dinner with my close friends,Marcia,hubby Dave,sons Alexei{my movie buddy} his brother,Dave,Jr&girlfriend.
They are my 'buffalo family' spend lots of time with them during the year. Sue
 
My daughter lives overseas...so it will be just hubs and me for Christmas day..although we'll be out with friends before and after the day, but every Christmas Day the local rural village pub, with the big open log fire opens for 2 hours in the middle of the day and it's a ritual every year for lots of the locals to go and have a drink and wish everyone a happy Christmas , so we will be doing that again as usual

Now, this (in red) sounds really, really cool. We can only hope, a big/big "hope", that we meet/make some friends after we move. We don't mind making friends with folks that don't have the same interests we do, as in target shooting, boating or rodeo...……..BUT, we sure can hope for that.
 
We'll enjoy a nice, quiet day at home, eat some good food, probably watch a DVD of a favorite Christmas movie. Other then putting up a creche during the month of December, we decorate for the winter season rather than a specific holiday so we can enjoy the decoration through February/March. It's just the two of us also, but that's enough.

Our favorite Christmas movie is...…….National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation w/Chevy Chase. Absolutely hilarious!!
 
I'm the only member of my family that still lives here in Buffalo.My older sister lives in England,younger brother lives in Rye,NY{burb of NYC}
Christmas is my least favorite holiday,I listen to our classical station,they play lovely music which helps me get thru this holiday I'm a big fan of British composer,John Rutter who has written beautiful choral music over the years have 4 of his CD's
Who ever came up with the stupid idea of'Black Friday' has wrecked the Christmas spirit for me,its all about greed in my opinion
I do spend Christmas afternoon dinner with my close friends,Marcia,hubby Dave,sons Alexei{my movie buddy} his brother,Dave,Jr&girlfriend.
They are my 'buffalo family' spend lots of time with them during the year. Sue

Oh we LOVE 'Black Friday'. A few years back, we spent almost the entire night standing in line and shopping on Thanksgiving night and 'Black Friday' morning. I think we got maybe three hours of sleep that night. Went to bed at 9PM, set the alarm for 11:15PM to go to Walmart, got back home at 1AM and reset the alarm for 2AM to be at Target at 2:30AM. Got some great deals that year.

This year, only went to Penny's on Thanksgiving afternoon. Stood in line for about an hour until the store opened at 2PM, got the one item my wife really, really wanted (Indoor Electric Grill) for 1/2 off the cost plus a $20 rebate. On 'Black Friday' morning, after breakfast, went back to Penny's and got bath towels and a nice pillow for each of us.
 
I loved hearing the different ways you all celebrate Christmas. It's nice that many of you are able to spend time with family. And the traditions can be such a blessing. :)

Yes, 7 furkids is a bit expensive, but it seems to be my calling to rescue strays. LOL
 
Wow, 7 furkids! What kind? That must be costly.

My wife absolutely loves, huge emphasis on "loves", to decorate for Christmas. It's just the two of us, but we definitely know how to celebrate (party) on Christmas. Most of her family live in So California and neither us or them want to spend out the money to fly to the others for Christmas. She has a brother who lives in south Florida, but he just likes being alone for Christmas. IOW, very non-family nowadays.

We now have our 8' artificial tree up and decorated. Put some tinsel on and that it's it. Red garland, with white lights, on our fireplace. Our dining room table is completely covered with a Christmas Village of light-up buildings and other things. Have silver garland around bedroom door and living room window. A nice wreath on front door and one on front storage door. Front door one lights up. Green garland around both of those doors. Both garlands light up. Checked that all of the large candy canes light up and will put them into the ground on both sides of the sidewalk that comes up to our front door. Stockings and Holiday "nic-nacs" on a shelf.

BTW, did I say "my wife LOVES to decorate for Christmas?" Of course I help her.

Have all of the gifts for each other bought. This years gifts are mainly décor for our apartment, when we move to Colorado. Coffee mugs and beer glasses with wildlife prints on them, large area rug with a White-Tail Deer in the middle and other things.

So, YES, by all means, we do/celebrate Christmas. Will also go to a Christmas Concert at local church next month and Christmas Eve Service as well.

It sounds like your wife, and self, create a Winter Wonderland. I do enjoy seeing all of the festive decorations around~!
 
Now, this (in red) sounds really, really cool. We can only hope, a big/big "hope", that we meet/make some friends after we move. We don't mind making friends with folks that don't have the same interests we do, as in target shooting, boating or rodeo...……..BUT, we sure can hope for that.


I hope that for you too Cody....
 
I’m always sorry to be the one that puts a damper on the season, but I suffer with seasonal depression and have done so since Mom died in 2004. It’s absolutely horrible, but I keep reminding myself of the people that have some of the real physical diseases and try to keep things on the upside as best I can. I used to love to fly at nights when the skies were clear and the stars shined brightly. It was almost as if I was able to have a conversation with my parents.

So, I will spend the next two days a week for the next 5 weeks until we get through the season on my Therapist’s couch. She doesn’t really have a couch, but there is one in the room if needed.

Oh, the Christmases that we used to have.
 
Love the holidays
No matter where

But the cabin gives them an extra kick


Especially Christmas
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gets me working in my shop

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Then, sometime during that last week
we plug in A Christmas Story

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sumpm 'bout that era

it's affected me since very early on

(I know, I know, I posted this before...)

I’m sharing some of my thoughts on Christmas, past and present…who knows about future ones.

Christmas 1954
I knew what was coming….really, for once I knew.
The tree, the lights, the bubbling ones, the tinsel, the snow outside, the oil stove warming everyone (that stood smack dab on the stove), the windows adorned with Christmas icing, and….the presents.
I just took it all in, quietly, unassuming, sizing things up.
(‘Hmm, so this happens, say, every year…huh’)

I never said much for, oh, about twenty some years, and at four didn’t say anything, ever.

I cast a rather small shadow, and more than a few times got left at places. Not on purpose, but I just wasn’t much of a bother to anyone…to the point of, to some extent, non-existence.
Mom forgot me at the Montgomery Wards store once.
Huge multi-storied store…fascinating.
She eventually came back and got me even though I wasn’t quite done window shopping.
I wonder how far out of the store she got, or did she get halfway home, or even home and realize, sitting the table, that, hey, the tiny person that normally occupies the booster seat is not here.

I really enjoyed the anonymity.
It gave me time to take in all I could, and remain in my own thoughts.
Kids were pretty much trained to be out of sight when folks came over.
Ever once in a while someone would ask,

‘And what’s your name young man?’

‘Dad, it’s me, Gary.’

My sis would take my hand and guide me over to the tree, pointing out each and every glittery thing.
It was a no shit moment, but knew it made her feel good, so let it happen.

The day came.

I should say the day before came, as we traditionally opened gifts on Christmas eve.

Gramma and Grampa came down the hill to participate.
I’d say it was around 6pm, as it was dark out and everybody had already eaten.
My sis played santy, handing gifts to Gramma and Grampa.
I was busy watching while trying to crack the walnuts and Brazil nuts from my stocking.
I couldn’t help but observe the fake happiness and surprise from everyone as they opened their gifts…everyone but Grampa. He was rather gruff, and had a habit of saying exactly what he thought.

‘I already have a tie.’

I loved him.
Didn’t even give much thought to that emotion back then, but now I know I loved him.

It came to be my turn to open my gifts.
Not a big trick, as my stuff was in a large sack.
It was a sack full of toys…..cars, trucks, a harmonica, and some little bags of hard candy.
The thing is, the toys were all kinda beat up, trucks with missing wheels, and everything was a bit scuffed, dented and rusty in places.
It didn’t bother me a whit. I loved it all.
But I remember the look on my Dad’s face as he watched me haul them outta the bag.
He was ashamed.
I felt like saying something comforting…but didn’t.
My feelings of making the situation even harder on him by saying ‘it’s OK’ won out.
Every Christmas after that was huge.

Funny, not haha funny, but oddly strange, my thoughts on his mental processes.
For years I rather pitied him for toiling to get us what he thought was what we wanted.
Him, the bread winner, the toy winner, the house, food and warmth provider.
How he fell head first into the American dream…the freaking nightmare.
But in my early years of fatherhood I came to understand.
He was from an era that dictated those things….’things’.

Christmas 1972
We were a tad impoverished.
Poverty stricken was a status I was striving for.
We managed a few meager toys from the five and dime, and wrapped them in newspaper, placing them under the tree limb from the neighbor’s backyard that had miraculously blown down from one of their giant firs.
We watched the boys unwrap their tinsel strength early China bobbles.
They lasted almost long enough to get ‘em outta the newspaper, disintegrating in their little ink stained hands.
However, as my lady wiped last Wednesday’s headlines from their fingers so they could drink their mug of hot cinnamon tea and suck one their tiny candy canes, I whipped out to the truck to bring in the toy of toys…the one that would give back.

My eldest named the little puppy from the pound, Felix.
Felix the dog…hey, it was original.
Only he was too young to pronounce the name Felix, so it came out ‘juwix’.
The thing is, a few moments after cleaning up the vomit and diarrhea from the truck seat, floorboard and doors, and myself, it dawned on me that Felix may not have been the best of finds.
The next morning my eldest seemed to have lost track of him, so we both went looking.

‘Juwix….Juuuuwix…heeeere Juwix’

I got a kick out of his determination in locating his new little buddy, trudging around the yard, big cheeks housed upon his tiny neck earnestly calling out with his baby Elmer Fudd like voice…‘Juwix….Juuuuwix…heeeere Juwix’.

Unfortunately we found Juwix.
He was under a gap in the wood pile…rather stiff.
So, as my Dad, twenty some years before, I vowed to provide a better Christmas for the years to come.
Not lavish ones, but ones that bore a couple substantial gifts for each of my little beings.

Christmas now?

Keep yer tie money.

However, gonna spoil the crap outa them grandkids

Yes, oh yes I am

Ho Ho Ho-o-o-o

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We do not have children, so Christmas is just the two of us. Our anniversary is also in December, so we usually just go out for a nice dinner and call it good. We do not exchange gifts in the traditional way, but usually at this time of year will buy something for the house, or that one of us wants or needs. I got my computer, and we also ordered some new frying pans from Amazon. DH likes his fountain pens, and will usually buy himself a nice pen, or new colors if ink.
We do Thanksgiving with a couple of my cousins who have no family up here.
 
Our children live a few hours away in the Austin area, so we will drive up there one weekend before Christmas and have a nice dinner with them all. On Christmas Day we will go over to my MIL's house for the extended family extravaganza and Christmas dinner. We will get to see all the children and grandkids except our oldest son who lives in Oregon.

We don't decorate much anymore; slam a wreath on the front door and call it a day. If by chance any of the children come here for Christmas we do put up a tree.
 
Christmas is a quiet day at home for me.

I put out a few decorations add a poinsettia and a few treats that remind me of Christmas past.

I putter around fixing dinner, listen to the Queen's Christmas message and watch a sappy old Christmas movie or two.

The real challenge for me at Christmas and other holidays is to limit the variety and quantity of treats that come into the house.

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We don't have family nearby anymore or kids, so we don't make a big fuss for the holidays. In mid-December I take my little ceramic Christmas tree out of the garage and plug it in, we exchange cards with family and friends, so I'll put them up around the tree, that's about it. When New Year's Day arrives, everything gets put away. We always make something nice and special for dinner and spend a quiet day at home, we love it that way, not sad at all. :christmas2:
 
Every year, we kids would get together and buy my Grandfather a giant bottle of Old Spice aftershave. He'd go into a great display of delight, exclaiming that it was EXACTLY what he wanted and how did we know???? Then he'd take it upstairs to the bathroom, take last year's dusty bottle off the shelf and replace it with this year's shiny bottle with great ceremony, all of us standing there admiring how good it looked on the shelf.

It wasn't until many years after his death that my grandmother admitted that he could not stand the smell of Old Spice. But, my Grandpa, who was the sweetest man who ever walked this planet, would have died before admitting he didn't like it.

One of the best Christmas presents I ever received was from a total stranger. I was a young wife, first Christmas away from my family, living in a small town in Turkey and feeling distinctly un-Christmassy. We had a tiny 2-foot tall "serviceman's tree" that I bought at the AFEX. I was homesick. Christmas Eve afternoon.....did I hear Christmas songs coming through the window? Yes, it distinctly was a Christmas song. A schoolteacher from the local elementary school, who had lived in the US for a few years, had taught his students three non-religious Christmas songs and had taken them caroling in "Little America", which was the street in the village where most of the American service families lived who were living "on the economy" as it was known. There was "Frosty the Snowman" and "Santa Claus is Coming to Town" and "We Wish You a Merry Christmas", if my memory serves me well. It was just what I needed.
 
My daughter and her partner book an overnight stay at a hotel in town (where I live), they pick me up and we have champagne and gifts in their room before our Christmas lunch, a fabulous meal with the choice of everything you could possibly want

Later we return to the room for more gifts and relax together before they walk me home for a liqueur to end the day
 
I'm not sure what we will do. We have been invited to southern California for a tea out at a nice hotel with 2 of our children and their families. After cooking and cleaning up afterwards at Thanksgiving they like to relax at Christmas. If the weather is great and no fog or mudslides we might go down. We'll probably stay home and enjoy a relaxing day of easy to fix food and movies. And a nice walk around our property because we are starting to appreciate it more now that we realize we are getting older and may have to sell out and move into town.
 
I’m always sorry to be the one that puts a damper on the season, but I suffer with seasonal depression and have done so since Mom died in 2004. It’s absolutely horrible, but I keep reminding myself of the people that have some of the real physical diseases and try to keep things on the upside as best I can. I used to love to fly at nights when the skies were clear and the stars shined brightly. It was almost as if I was able to have a conversation with my parents.

So, I will spend the next two days a week for the next 5 weeks until we get through the season on my Therapist’s couch. She doesn’t really have a couch, but there is one in the room if needed.

Oh, the Christmases that we used to have.

I'm sorry you have a tough time during the holidays. So many do, and I wish it was easier on them.
 

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