Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Friday, December 29, 2023

California Christmas 2023: Day Ten

When I saw the giant leather-like bag in the front playyard I didn't know the entertainment it would give three little girls and their grandfather for an hour or so this afternoon.













We brought several Christmas ornaments that Brannon had chosen from Mother's estate. It feels good to see a few of those things that used to hang on Mother's tree here with her great-grandchildren.


We ended up finding a dozen of these little homemade ornaments that Mother  used on her tree. David, Lillian, and Brannon each chose them so I alloted four to each of them.



I chose this little stained glass angel because we bought several ornaments similar to this very early in our marriage and I suspect this is one we gave to Mother, though I am not sure of that. 


Friday, January 06, 2023

The Twelfth Day of Christmas

It's Epiphany. This is from my Facebook Epiphany post in 2017....

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Here it is Epiphany already. The Twelfth Day of Christmas. We'll turn off the Christmas lights before we go to bed tonight and tomorrow begin putting the decorations away till last week of November. We had planned to celebrate with a neighborhood Three Kings get-together tonight but Sheila's cold turned ugly earlier in the week and we decided against it. Maybe next year.
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Back to 2023 --
Sadly, the last day of Christmas* is now also a day scarred by the memory of the loathsome attack on our Republic by Trumpists.  Some in our Congress actually voted to overturn the most basic of republican values that very day even after the attack. Some of them continue to deny the simple well-documented and court-tested fact of the election results of 2020. And now our 118th House of Representatives will be controlled by apologists for the traitors of January 6, 2021. Patriots cannot rest. We must work these two years to be sure the likes of Andrew Clyde, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Paul Gosar, Matt Gaitz, and other extremists are voted out of our Congress.
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*Evidently there are several traditions for counting the days of the Christmas season. Some count the twelve days of Christmas beginning with Christmas Day Dec. 25, others count the twelve days beginning Dec. 26. Some consider Christmastide as lasting till Feb. 2! And commercial Christmas begins about Labor Day and ends when stores close on Christmas Eve. I choose to consider Epiphany/Three Kings Day/Old Christmas (Jan. 6) as the end of the Christmas season. 
😊  So Merry Christmas y'all.


Thursday, January 05, 2023

Old Christmas Eve

In Appalachia, at one time, Epiphany was celebrated as "Old Christmas". Richard Chase (the folklorist not the serial killer) in the mid twentieth-century tromped around the hills of the southeast collecting the old stories, poems, and songs passed down from Elizabethan times through these mountain people.Chase was visiting Tom Hunt's hand-hewn log house and soon a passel of relatives and friends of old Tom arrived and the singing and storytelling began.  Here's a bit from Chase's Grandfather Tales:

 

Since on the Christian calendar Advent ends at midnight on Christmas Eve and the official Christmas season begins then, it has been our family tradition for a number of years to keep our modern Christmas decorations up through Epiphany (the Twelve Days of Christmas or Three Kings Day or Old Christmas). Like most Americans we spend way too much attention on the commercial and community pre-Christmas activities and like to try to use the Twelve Days of Christmas for a calmer less frantic celebration.

Monday, January 02, 2023

Folks Who Show Up

Since 1957 our local church, Trinity United Methodist Church, has sponsored a live Nativity scene on Rome's busiest street. Actually in 1957 the Turner-McCall Boulevard bridge over the Oostanaula was under construction and would not open for another few months, so I suppose that first year the street wasn't quite so busy. I first stood in the scene as a teen in 1962. 

This is the first year that Sheila and I have been a part of the necessary work of taking apart and putting away the stable till next December. My seventy-five year old muscles, tendons, and bones are reminding me of my age this moment, and my part was relatively small compared to my older fellow tenor Lynn Popham who led the effort. I am sorry I was not available the day the stable was built in December, largely by these same folks. 

I am so thankful for "those who show up", aren't you?  Every church, every school, every storytelling festival, every civic club, every scout troop, is dependent on that usually small group of "folks that show up".  

This morning it was Tom and Cindy Brown, Thom Holt, Monty Rasure, Kay Lowe, all led by Lynn and Sandra Popham and their granddaughter Hannah. Jamie Palmer happened to drive by, stopped, and lent some younger muscle to the effort for an hour or so. This afternoon, after lunch,  a few of us will be back to move one last load. 

I love this tradition of my church, as anyone who has read my blog the last 17 years knows. Most folks are like me. We show up to stand for a shift. Maybe bring a few goodies to share with those participating. We love to watch and let the scene inspire us to consider the real meaning of the season. But that's about it. 

Over the years several generations of the Craven family have borne most of the putting up and taking down chores. Eulaine and Paul Camp spent years organizing the costumes and seeing that all the shifts were peopled. Many others have helped with that since the Camps gave it up, including Sandra Popham this year. 

Thank goodness for those, at Trinity and in all sorts of community endeavors, who work behind the scenes, usually with little recognition, to make things happen.

(If you are looking for a welcoming church community, we'd love to have you at Trinity. You don't have to be a carpenter!)





Monday, December 26, 2022

White (Second Day Of) Christmas!

 I'm seventy-five years old and I still get a little excited over a dusting of snow.

So I walked out and took a few pictures. I may just call the grandgirls -- they're on California time -- and show them some snow. They spent part of Christmas Day at the beach!










Later...

We walked around the yard as we FaceTimed with Clemmie, Ruth, Suzie, and Brannon. And Granny even made the girls a (minimalist) snowman atop a concrete bench...



A Poem toi Start the Week: A Christmas Carol

It is now known mostly by its first line "In the Bleak Midwinter" but was first published simply as "A Christmas Carol". I think it is one of the most beautiful. 


In the bleak mid-winter
Frosty wind made moan;
Earth stood hard as iron,
Water like a stone;
Snow had fallen, snow on snow,
Snow on snow,
In the bleak mid-winter
Long ago.

Our God, heaven cannot hold Him
Nor earth sustain,
Heaven and earth shall flee away
When He comes to reign:
In the bleak mid-winter
A stable-place sufficed
The Lord God Almighty —
Jesus Christ.

Enough for Him, whom cherubim
Worship night and day,
A breastful of milk
And a mangerful of hay;
Enough for Him, whom Angels
Fall down before,
The ox and ass and camel
Which adore.

Angels and Archangels
May have gathered there,
Cherubim and seraphim
Thronged the air;
But only His Mother
In her maiden bliss
Worshipped the Beloved
With a kiss.

What can I give Him,
Poor as I am? —
If I were a Shepherd
I would bring a lamb;
If I were a Wise Man
I would do my part, —
Yet what I can I give Him, —
Give my heart.

 

- Christina Rossetti

Old Leaves: The Miserable Ones

The day after Christmas exactly a decade ago we got to see a brand new film in a huge theatre in New York. I really liked it.

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12-26-2012

 


Tonight was perhaps the most captivating night at the cinema of my life. Our daughter Brannon treated us to Lex Miserables, the musical movie, at Ziegfield Cinema near Times Square in New York City. The theater was sold out so we were glad to find seats down close slightly to the right. I had the aisle, giving my aching legs stretching room, and my eyes a full view, sometimes of individual sweating pores and tears building to a drop.

I have a bone or two to pick, but let me begin by saying that it is a magnificent piece of film, creatively imagined, expertly cast, gorgeously photographed, dramatically lighted, really acted, beautifully sung.


Hugh Jackman will give Daniel Day Lewis a run for the Oscar for best actor. One of the beauties of this story, the musical, and now the movie is its reminder to those of us who live in comfort and plenty that poor, dirty, despairing folk are folk. Behind the grime, the pretense, the toothless grins, the overdone make-up, the ragged clothes, the unkempt hair, the poor English... are flesh and blood humans with the same wants and needs, hurts and hearts of all men. Jackman as Valjean is unrecognizable and totally believable in the opening scenes as the depraved, dehumanized convict.

And he becomes one of the beloved characters of all literature.
I thought Jackman's singing was sometimes a little nasal. Where Colm Wilkinson, very effectively and purposefully, used falsetto, Jackman used a full, though somewhat strained voice.



Fantine (Anne Hathaway),



not of her own volition, takes the opposite path, falling from virtuous and beautiful to compromised and pitiful. Both are outstanding.

My favorite character and the strongest acting and singing was that of Eddie Redmayne.



His portrayal of the distraught Marius singing Empty Chairs at Empty Tables was heart-rendingly perfect. Redmayne deserves a supporting actor Oscar, in my humble and correct opinion.

Siblings Eponine (Samantha Barks) and  Gavroche (Danial Huttlestone) were captivating.

The Thernardiers were well cast, though I thought (my kids disagree) that they were overdone. The disgusting food scene was more graphic than necessary and not believable to me. Like Sheila, I was glad they were made more disgusting than comic though.

Russell Crowe as Javert has received the most criticism of any actor in the film, I suspect. I actually liked his acting. His singing was a little weak, though I like its understated manner except for the suicide when I wanted him to give me more overt pain and... volume.

The 1200 sold-out seats at the Zeigfield were filled with Les Mis enthusiasts, like the Shaws, who applauded for the announcement, after interminable previews, of the main attraction. They also applauded individual songs again and again, especially I Dreamed a Dream, On My Own, Empty Chairs at Empty Tables, and nearly brought the house down for One Day More and the Finale.

Drat it! One of my dreams is to sing the Valjean part someday in a local production or concert version. Folks will now picture Jackman (20 years my junior) in the role rather than an older Colm Wilkinson type. I'm already pushing the upper limit even with the Wilkinson image of ol' Jean.

Get your tickets. You don't want to miss this on the big screen, at least once. I'll see it again soon.

Sunday, December 25, 2022

Christmas and Hanukkah 2022

 It was wonderful to get to share Christmas and Hanukkah this year with Lillian and Jordan. Unfortunately we could only share the holidays "virtually" with Brannon, John, and our Grand Girls - Clemmie, Ruthie, and Suzie. But I am thankful that we can use FaceTime to "make do". Here are a few pictures and even videos of our holiday celebrations together -- physically and spiritually. 

Brannon sent this and the next two pictures of the way Santa  presented the gifts for the GrandGirls. They have practically worn out the light green "Nugget" set of cushions during the last year. These wonderful foam cushions can be made into a couch or chairs, of course, but better yet they can be used as construction elements for "Little Pig" houses, playscapes for climbing, jumping, and sliding, puppet theaters, tents, dog and kitty houses, and more. So Santa brought a whole new set to double the possibilities, this time in a darker shade of green. And he used his fertile imagination to make a Christmas Tree  out of old and new.

Meanwhile Aunt Lil and Jordan sent a complementary group of cushions that make a castle (Jordan's business manufactures these!) Brannon & John may need to build an addition to their abode to house these Christmas gifts.

Here one of Santa's elves poses with the "Nugget Tree"

FaceTime screen shots do not make for prizewinning photography, but perhaps they can give a taste of the joy we shared electronically Christmas morning.

Mama's iPhone and empty boxes are great Christmas morning toys as well.


Clemmie mugs for the iPad in front of her new "castle".



Ruth showed off her new 60s short-skirted Barbie, but hid her face. We were soon able to turn this into a game of "Peep-eye" (or "Peek-a-Boo")


The girls sometimes get right in the iPad's face...

... Suzie has gotten into brushing her teeth and Clem is enjoying a chocolate coin.



Christmas afternoon we decided to take a walk on Jackson hill. We parked at the intersection of Ross and Dogwood Streets and walked up to the old Water Works -- with commentary from yours truly on his adolescent acquaintance with the hill. We walked across the top of the big 1890s water tank where the hilltop American flag flies. We peeped through the windows of the remodeled waterworks event space that in the late sixties held the Rome Art League coffee house where I used to sometimes sing. Then walked around the old empty and topless tank below it. Since the sixties I've thought there should ve a concert space there. I wonder what an acoustical engineer could do to take advantage of the great reverb in that tank and yet keep unwanted noises under control.

Jordan and Lillian experiment with the reverb of the tank with one of my favorite mournful songs, Stephen Foster's "Hard Times Come Again No More".  I first labeled this a "folk" song momentarily forgetting it was composed by Foster. I first learned it, I think, from a Peter Yarrow album, but Bob Dylan, Jennifer Warnes and many others have recorded it. Foster has been a favorite of mine since childhood. I remember reading a children's biography of Foster in third or fourth grade.


And Lil plays with her echo.


We sang some too, but didn't record it. :-)

Back home it was time to celebrate the eighth day of Hanukkah, which in 2022 coincides with Christmas. 

Jordan sang a Hanukkah blessing. He & Lil also sang another longer Hanukkah song.


...and lit all the candles of the Menorah.

Lil & Jordan were thrilled to raid our LP collection for some classics to take home with them. I see "Famous Blue Raincoat" Jennifer Warnes' cover of Leonard Cohen songs.; "Still Crazy..." Paul Simon, "First Take" by Roberta Flack, "9 to 5" by Dolly Parton, "Sweethearts of the Rodeo" by the Byrds, Sweeney Todd cast album.



Saturday, December 24, 2022

Christmas Eve 2022

A few notes on the Christmas card above:
  • center picture at the top - Ruth & Clem and their paper chain representing the days left till the arrival of "GrandShaw and Granny" last September. This was taken when they had to add seven links because GrandShaw had come down with Covid.
  • center pic at the bottom - the girls loved visiting with their Aunt Lil at her home in Decatur. Here they roll around the front lawn.
  • center pic at left the three sisters sit on a mossy bank of the trail at Sloppy Floyd State Park.
  • center pic at the right - Aunt Lil & Jordan sport their Chip & Dale hats.
  • bottom left - the girls loved playing on the Little Tikes playlet on our big side porch - one of the best 15 bucks I ever spent.
  • bottom right - Clem agrees to pose with the Courtin' Frog in our Backyard Football
  • center - Ruth climbing on a playground. These girls explore multiple playgrounds wherever they travel.
  • top right - the girls welcome their Dad to Georgia in our Atlanta AirBNB
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Brannon & John and the girls called us on Christmas Eve to 
let us share with them as the girls opened one present early.

Suzie is into throwing kisses and waving.



She offered us a bite of a "cookie".

The girls carefully tend to a sheet of "cookies" with dad's help.

The kit comes with cookie sheet, cookie "dough" to "slice" and "cut'

These girls have gotten much more than their parents' money's worth from their "nugget" set of construction cushions. (Stay tuned for Christmas morning's surprises for them@!)

Sisters

Excited over the new cookie toys

Ruthie offers a bite of "cookie"


Joseph (Jordan Friedman), Mary (Lillian Shaw) Angels (R-L Sheila Shaw, Holly Bettler, Stacy Harris, Caroline) Shepherds (Don Bettler, ??) Wise Men (Tom Brown, Tom Harris, ?? Harris,  Harris SIL)



"Mary & Joseph" Lillian & Jordan. ...




The live nativity scene has been a tradition at Trinity United Church since 1957. I first stood it it during the 1962 Christmas season.


After we got home we lit a menorah and Jordan, who has a very nice voice, sang a couple of Hanukkah blessings for us.


We used a smaller tree this year. The carol era are from mama Shaw's collection of forties and fifties decorations.