Thursday, December 24, 2009

Box of Chocolates

My annual Christmastime post....recalling a story that stays fresh in my memories.

He lived across the street from us, sometimes peering out from behind the curtain of his window, sometimes observing the neighbourhood activity from the front porch. Stan kept to himself – not unfriendly, but nevertheless aloof. He was elderly and He lived alone. No cars ever seemed to enter his driveway.

As Christmas was nearing, my husband and I took some Christmas goodies to Stan’s next-door neighbour – an elderly lady whom we hadn’t seen since the weather turned cold. She was overjoyed at our visit. We learned she was nursing her brother who was sick, “dying of cancer”, she whispered, as if to not let him hear from the next room where he lay in a bed. She spoke of deep faith in God and how He gives strength to the weary.

She also spoke of Stan and how she prayed for him. I felt uplifted and thankful she knew the Christ whose birth we celebrated. We could not know as we left her home that in a few short years I would stand by her hospital bed as she would die of the same disease as her brother.

The week grew busier as Christmas approached, but I could not glance at Stan’s house without feeling we must visit him as well. Christmas Eve arrived, and as this was a year b.k. (before kids), we did not have the same bustling activity that we have known since then. Though the fire was cozy, and home was comfortable, we bundled up and made the trek across the street.

There was a dim light in the window and the sound of the television from behind the door. The shuffle of slippered feet followed the doorbell. Stan opened the door and his face lit up as he looked at his young neighbours standing with goodies in hand, wanting to visit him on Christmas Eve. He welcomed us almost with disbelief.

I do not remember if his home had any Christmas decorations or gifts, but I do recall how sad I felt that Stan wore a shirt and tie, dressed up as if expecting company but no one had come. He told us he had a grown son, but the two of them had not spoken in years. The bitterness was evident in Stan’s voice as he abruptly stated his son 'does not come home for Christmas'. He talked and we listened as time slipped by. He thanked us with tears in his eyes as we left, and how thankful we were that we had crossed the street to see him, and perhaps given him the only gift he would receive for Christmas. A short time out of our life had meant the world to him. Stan did not live to see another Christmas.......

Years later, I still think of Stan especially on Christmas Eve. Travelling with our children to Grandma and Grandpa's house that’s always filled with laughter, food, and gifts, Stan has become my reminder. As we drive down city streets, my eyes wander to windows which are darkened, lit only by the flickering light of a television. I wonder what heartaches lie in that household, and if someone sits alone at Christmas and throughout the year, wishing someone would bring some light, some hope, into their world.
Stan reminds me that I’m as busy as the town of Bethlehem was, when a Saviour quietly arrived on the scene… too busy doing nothing of importance to notice the only thing that matters. Christ was so willing to step into our world in spite of an unfathomable sacrifice on his part. Yet shamefully, I am often too busy to step outside my world into someone else’s, even though the sacrifice is miniscule and the reward so rich.

.........We heard a faint knock on our door the Christmas morning after we visited Stan. There stood Stan shivering in the cold, almost breathless, cheeks red, and eyes glistening. He stretched out his withered, trembling hands to offer us a box of chocolates which he had obviously bought that morning at the variety store down the block. “Merry Christmas”, he said, clasping our hands. “God bless you. Thank you so much!”.

A simple box of chocolates….but Stan could not know that years later his gift to us has been of more infinite worth than any others we have received!


Broken gifts

Do you remember looking for the gifts under the tree that had your name on them...wondering what lay beneath the wrapping paper? What an awful Christmas that was when I opened all my gifts beforehand and carefully retaped them shut. Christmas morning held no excitement or anticipation - total letdown. I never did it again.



I have a vivid memory of a gift I received for Christmas as a child. This one gift, even as I describe it, sounds archaic compared to the electronic gadgets kids get these days. You have to understand.....I grew up in the dark ages.

I guess you would call it a calculator or an adding device - not electronic, but not an abacus either. It was red, with white knobs along the top representing the 'ones, tens, hundreds, etc. You would push down on the knobs to make the numbers change up or down. Really exciting stuff. Actually.....I have no idea why you would want to do that?! Well...I thought it was cool at the time. I've googled it and found nothing so it must be extinct now....buried with the dinosaurs.

One of my dear brothers picked up my precious gift on that Christmas day to inspect it. Then he decided that playing with it wasn't good enough. He had to KNOW how it worked. I don't recall whether he asked me if he could, but before I knew it, he had my wonderful calculator pried open, inspecting the guts of it and trying to figure out the mechanics of it. Problem is......he couldn't get it back together properly. I remember being very sad that the gift I had received was now hopelessly broken - on purpose!  My brother went on at a later age to design airplane wings (real ones), so I guess he got better at understanding the mechanics of stuff. (Explains why he's somewhat anxious on planes, especially when he sits by the window with a clear view of  the wing).

There'll be lots of broken gifts on Christmas day....and disappointed kids and adults whose toys have shattered or quit either the day they are opened or shortly thereafter. Obviously, the giver of the gift doesn't plan for it to be broken.......

Well....except for one gift that was given once.

As far as I'm aware, it was the only invaluable gift carefully planned and thought out ridiculously far in advance and knowingly given in order to be broken....shattered to pieces.....wrecked beyond recognition.

Strange, that while lovingly giving and receiving temporary stuff....so many of us pay little attention to that priceless Gift.....even though the Gift has our name on it......and the holiday we are celebrating has His name in it.

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Night blindness

While I was doing some Christmas shopping I noticed something little I had wanted for a long time. So I bought it for my husband to put in my Christmas stocking - just in case he was at a loss of what to put in there.

But then, as a woman is entitled to do, I changed my mind and decided to use this thing right away.

It's an eye mask to wear while sleeping, (contrary to appliances, such as hairblowers that come with the caution - "do not use while sleeping").

Apparently, you get a much more restful sleep if you are in complete darkness. Well, I need to see my alarm clock at times so I can't do away with that....and we have an old dog whose eyes are getting cloudy who has to have some light in order to move about at night or else she whimpers and whines in fear of taking a step. And the bedroom door needs to stay open for her....but we have a night-hawk of a son so there is always some light shining up the stairs. Yah, I've been in search of a good night's sleep.

This mask is quite amazing. It is soft, and providing you don't tighten the strap to the point of a migraine, it's very comfortable. It doesn't let even the slightest ray of light in. I'd like to know why these things weren't around back in the day when we'd play pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey as kids. We would always have to use a winter scarf, tied tight enough to pull your hair. The adult would ask, "Can you see anything?", and you would fib (gasp!) and say you couldn't see a thing. Meanwhile, you could clearly see your feet below, and if you were sly you could point your chin to the ceiling and find that donkey's behind, even after having been spun around until you were dizzy.

This has been a great purchase - and I'm sure I'm quite the sight on the nights I remember to wear my bucktooth nightguard (which is seldom), and my face all shined up with coconut oil.

My only fear is that I am going to be deeply dreaming and suddenly awakened by the alarm or other noise, and I am going to forget I am wearing a mask. I may go through a few moments of terror of being in complete darkness, unable to find the clock or the light switch and believe I've gone completely blind. I'm fully expecting to have a dream about that soon.

Nonetheless, I love my eye mask. It's a keeper. Only wish I could wear it at work as a shield from the florescent lights.....but that would never work. I'd need earplugs there too if I was going to catch any sleep at all.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

I didn't mean to - honest!

I killed the ugly fish - the one in my last post. And I really didn't mean to.

I mean I would never have gotten the aquarium going again and added 5 new little fish to keep him company and pond plants to make him feel at home if I hadn't cared. He stayed to himself and didn't seem to like the fish food so I bought some gucky frozen larvae stuff and plants for him to try. Hunger must have kicked in and in a day or two he was eating at the top with the rest of the fish and getting along swimmingly with them all.

I knew that you musn't overfeed goldfish. But they are deceptive little creatures. When you sprinkle that food in, they act like they are practically dying of hunger and they keep ravenously eating. Unfortunately, they eat themselves to death.

The smallest fish died first. Then another pretty orange and black one went belly up. By then it was too late. Ugly fish wasn't looking too well.

So I killed the three of them with kindness.....flushed away.  And now there are three who are fed precious little. But I will ignore their pleas of starvation.

I figure ugly fish survived the pond for just one purpose. To remind me during the approaching holiday season when tempting food will abound everywhere.....that I mustn't over indulge and eat everything around me....or I too will be flush with regret.

RIP ugly Fish