Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Thanksgiving’

Dear Lyla,

Thanksgiving has come and gone and as we indulge in  leftovers, card games and the Christmas music that we are finally allowed to play in the house (Daddy is a stickler on this particular point), it seems fitting to reflect upon those things for which we are thankful. In the past few letters I have alluded to the things I am most grateful for, family, friends, good health; just to name a few. However, this Thanksgiving I am thankful for the gift of love given by a woman whom I have never met and whose name I do not know.  You are too young to understand the full impact of the injury that I sustained right before your birthday last June; all you know is that Mommy’s knee was hurt and two surgeries were needed to make it better. You were a trooper this summer as I was laid up on the couch, not able to take you to the pool, park or the zoo; the reassurance that I would be off my “crunches” and walking by Thanksgiving was all the reassurance you required. We are all thankful for the skills of the two surgeons that operated on my leg; they were truly two of the most patient, kind and skilled women I have ever met. But I am also thankful for the woman who made it possible for me to live a normal life again through the gift of tissue donation. You see little one, this Thanksgiving there is a family who is grieving the loss of their loved one; a forty-two year old woman who will not be seated at her family’s table this year. She, along with her family, decided to give the ultimate gift in the face of unspeakable sadness and pain; to donate organs and tissues people like me who are in need. I do not know any characteristics about the woman whose ACL now lives inside of me other than her age. I do not know if she was a wife or mother, what her profession was or any of her dreams. I do know, however, that she must have been deeply loved by many people. Who else but someone that is desperately loved would have the courage to consider the gift of life and ambulation to others in the off-chance that she would leave this earth far too young. So tonight little one, when we say our prayers let us also say a prayer for her and her family.  Let us pray that they find peace and comfort in the knowledge that in death she helped so many. Through the gift of renewed health our family has been given a precious treasure and it is our intention to honor that sacrifice daily; in every step Mommy takes, in each set of stairs that are climbed and in routine tasks that have been previously taken for granted. To the woman who gave the gift of life to so many strangers we humbly and sincerely say “Thank You.”

Read Full Post »

Dear Lyla,

Thanksgiving Day is almost here and tonight your three “boy” cousins will arrive from Minnesota to spend the holiday weekend with you. I hope very much that this will be a memorable holiday for you, one that you look upon fondly and remember often.  In honor of the three musketeers that will join us this November for feast and festivity, today’s story is about their mother. I must say that my sister and I have many holiday tales that we could share with you and your cousins and they usually involve mischief and mayhem; most often at Grandma Jo’s expense. But today your Aunt Patti is the offering on the altar of humility in this holiday musing and it all begins with a tantrum and a turkey. As you know your Grandma Jo is an excellent cook and, for her, holiday dinners were serious business. There would be a fine lace tablecloth, cloth napkins, crystal wine glasses and great-grandma’s silver to adorn our humble table. There was a ritual to these feasts; we would begin the day sneaking olives off the relish tray (one for each finger of course) and end by sneaking extra helpings of whipped cream for the homemade pumpkin pie. These meals were full of laughter, mirth and the occasional under the table goodie for the dog; if you were to describe the scene at our table it would closely resemble a scene drawn by Norman Rockwell. For us holidays were a time of relative peace and harmony; we ate, we played games and we teased each other good naturedly. It is likely due to the nostalgia that my sister felt for the holidays that the “great turkey debacle” came to be. I was in graduate school and was coming home for Thanksgiving and just assumed that Grandma Jo would be hosting as per usual; I learned in an animated phone call to my mom that plans had changed. Patti was bound and determined that she was going to cook the Thanksgiving meal and like it or not we were all ordered to come and have a good time. As soon as we stepped in the door I should have recognized the stench of impending doom. Patti was in a tizzy rushing to put the final touches on the noon meal. Grandma Jo, an excellent judge of cooking times and multi-tasker extraordinaire, recognized a disaster when she saw it. She graciously offered to help with the final prep work; determined that she could handle the task herself, Patti declined the offer. In a final flurry of activity, and a few glasses of wine later, it was announced that we were about to eat. As we sat down to eat we began with a simple table blessing (historically the youngest at the table says the blessing and my niece Kaila was not old enough to say it yet so the job fell to me) and then proceeded to survey the spread before us. We were treated to burnt rolls, lumpy gravy, partially mashed potatoes and a runny substance that I am led to believe was pureed yams. However, the turkey looked amazing! It was beautiful, brown and smelled amazing; we were in for a treat. Our hopes for an edible morsel from Patti’s table were quickly dashed when Bumpa cut into the turkey. In her quest to replicate the Rockwellian perfection from her childhood, she had neglected to clean the bird prior to cooking it. You can imagine the gory site once the turkey had been sliced open; all of the innards had liquefied making the turkey quite unpalatable.  One glance at Patti told me she was ready to come unhinged should anyone make a derogatory comment about her culinary talents. Grandma Jo, ever the peacemaker, declared that we could simply eat around the innards since that part looked fabulous. Bumpa, on the other hand, was not about to let Patti off the hook. Bumpa laughed; he laughed long at hard until his face was purple and it was questionable whether oxygen was flowing to his brain. Little one there is something you need to know about Bumpa’s laughter, it was contagious! I started laughing, Grandma Jo starting laughing and, yes, Patti began to chuckle. It would have seemed to any outsider that we had lost our ever loving minds, and maybe we had. Maybe we were so focused on achieving a sense of idyllic perfection that we had lost perspective; Bumpa brought us back to reality. You see little one, Bumpa didn’t laugh to make Patti feel bad; quite the opposite. Bumpa was letting Patti know that it is ok to make mistakes; if you can laugh and learn at the same time, things will probably turn out just fine. This Thanksgiving I hope that there is plenty of laughter at our table, that we live in the moment and enjoy one another for who we are and not some version of what we think we should be.

Read Full Post »

Good Grief

Dear Lyla,

The holiday season is in full bloom! There are many ways to tell that we are in the midst of the hustle and bustle of this festive time of year. Animated talk of victories to be won come from our friends who are fans of the pigskin games: they are eagerly awaiting Turkey Day and the promise of gridiron action following a ritual gorging of turkey, mashed potatoes and green bean casserole. Light poles on the main street of our hometown have been festooned with garland, bows and merrily twinkling lights. Shopkeepers have frosted and bejeweled their windows to entice a look at the wares they offer to those in the throes of holiday shopping. Mommy’s and Daddy’s students start to get a bit more antsy in anticipation of the coming break and we ponder the efficacy of the lecture plans we have prepared in light of the looming hiatus from academe. Even at such a young age your schedule has become filled with pageant rehearsals and notices sent home by your teacher requesting parents to sign up to bring treats for the party you will have on the last day of class before break. While all of these things are hallmarks of the holiday season there is one tradition, for me, that signals its official beginning: the Charlie Brown specials! Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Lucy, Linus and the gang have been my holiday companions for more years than I care to memorialize in print. My old friends return at the end of October starting with Linus’ ill fated night in the pumpkin patch waiting for the appearance of The Great Pumpkin. Linus teaches a lesson in friendship, patience and faith that still resonates with me today. Peppermint Patty and Marcie are favorite sidekicks in the Thanksgiving special where we learn to be thankful for what we have and understand that despite differences we are all creatures deserving of love and dignity. It is Charlie Brown’s Christmas, however, that gives me greatest pause; I have never watched this special without crying just a little. The most bedraggled and unlikely tree becomes the most powerful of symbols in this holiday classic. In a season where sparkles and glitter reign supreme, Charlie Brown sees the potential and beauty in a tree that is overlooked and unwanted. It is because Charlie Brown can appreciate the majesty that lies within the stunted conifer that he is the hero of the Peanuts gang. Charlie Brown’s greatness lies not in his ability to kick a football, play the piano or to be the popular kid in the crowd, but in his capacity for love and caring. I like to hope that there is a little bit of Charlie Brown in all of us; we have our “good grief” days and the days where the most ordinary of folks have the capacity to care for each other in extraordinary ways. So this holiday season little one, I look forward to sharing some of my dearest childhood friends with you, in the hopes that they will become yours as well.

Read Full Post »

Dear Lyla,

It is now the beginning of November and the air is starting to get crisper as we make our way toward winter. On some mornings as I step on the back porch to let Gigi out I am treated to Jack Frost’s artwork on our arborvitae and the walnut trees. It can be breathtaking, this raw display of nature that the seasons provide for us with indomitable regularity.  It is neither the temperature of the air nor the dance of frost on the foliage that has caught my fancy as we begin to embrace the holiday season; it is the music. I love music of any kind, but I especially love holiday music. Your daddy loves music as well little one; I could not have said “I do” if he didn’t. It is this love of melody and rhythm that is responsible for your eclectic tastes; often daddy and I debate the merits of you being able to sing the lyrics to the song “Sheep Go to Heaven; Goats Go to Hell.” I want to remind you at this point the mantra that we have for songs that may be questionable to your teachers and the parents of your peers; “that song is for home or the car only!” Part of me is secretly pleased as punch that the Red Hot Chili Peppers has been a favorite of yours since you were three; part of me is terrified that we have somehow exposed you to such adult music that you are beyond the point of amendment. Daddy and I both agree on one thing; music will be an important and integral part of your life. We disagree on a few things too. For example, I wanted to get you a keyboard and so he got you a drum set. I think that the xylophone is an acceptable instrument for a young child; he bought you an electric guitar. While these are things that I can overlook, there is one contentious point on which daddy and I will never come to terms; the role of Christmas music in everyday life. If I had my druthers we would listen to Christmas music twelve months out of the year and if daddy had his way it would be twelve hours (preferably during the time when we dream of sugar plums). Every year at the beginning of November I ache to begin the festivities of the Christmas season, but I am reminded by daddy and my students that Thanksgiving must be given its due. To dismiss the holiday entirely because I yearn for the familiar melodies of my youth is to miss out on the unique offerings that this traditional day of thanks has to offer. So little one, I made it my mission to seek out a unique and utterly festive Thanksgiving playlist! It has taken me a little over three years to amass a library of songs that can play for four hours with nary a song repeated. The play list is composed largely of classical music with heavy tones and solid rhythms.  These melodies are in stark contrast to the light and airy selections that are the hallmark of the Christmas season. The rich sounds of thanks provide context, I think, to the hustle and bustle of December. The anthems of Thanksgiving are reflective, they are stable, they are comforting; and like your daddy’s arms they are designed to make you feel safe and secure. Our lives are very busy little one and sometimes we need to slow down a bit and remember to count our blessings.  How marvelous that the gift of music will always be there like an old friend; ready to soothe and calm us when we need it the most.

Read Full Post »

The Wartburg Trumpet

Student Newspaper of Wartburg College

The Distracted Flower

Entries about whatever comes to my mind.

Coors Icon Blog

Dedicated to discovering the brand of Coors Brewing Co.

Retro Recipes Remade

Cooking up delicious, classic & occasionally odd vintage recipes

my life as liz...

Don't Worry. Be Yoncé.

Marriott International, Inc.

Vacation Resorts and Convention Centers

Melissa Ann

Thoughts, Life, Projects

Dan Nadeau LEGO

Persuasive Communication Icon Blog

Logo Blog

In depth analysis of the Beats logo

Harley Davidson

discussing the history of Harley Davidson motorcycles and how they have progressed and expanded throughout the years