Monthly Archives: December 2024

Christmases Past

When our son and daughter were little, I assumed that when they became adults Christmases wouldn’t be the same. It would lose the magic children bring to the holiday. I’d miss the excitement they had each year when we brought out the ornaments or sat up the Lionel train that had belonged to Don’s dad. We would no longer leave cookies for Santa and carrots for the reindeers. Oh, I understood that if I someday had grandchildren, I could recapture that special excitement children bring to Christmas.

My mother passed away exactly two months before Christmas Eve of this year, which is four days from now. While I am grieving the loss of my mother, I had actually lost her about five years ago to dementia. 

Friends have offered their condolences at the loss, some acknowledging the fact it will probably be a difficult Christmas for me. But the truth of the matter, it’s not Mom I am necessarily grieving for this Christmas. As I mentioned, I lost her over the past five years…little by little.

It is something else.

You might say the loss of Mom was an epiphany. A realization that it’s not the children who have grown into adults I mourn this Christmas, it’s the elders in my life whom I’ve shared decades of Christmas memories with, who are no longer here. Mom was the last one. Well, not exactly. There is Florence, my sister’s mother-in-law, who was like a second grandmother to my children, a constant in my adult life, and now at 102 years old, on Hospice in a memory care home not far from where Lynn lives in Morro Bay.

All of the elders from my Christmases—except for Florence are gone now. I miss them. 

It’s not just the family members I miss. There is Oma Head, one of the tenants from Havasu Palms. She was like a second grandma. She and her husband built a house in Lake Havasu City, and I’d often stay with her when I couldn’t make it home from school over the lake in bad weather. Every year at Christmas she would give us a tin of her homemade divinity. It was the best divinity in the world, and I have never been able to replicate it. It was the inspiration for Marie’s divinity in Haunting Danielle. Now that I think about it, Oma was the inspiration for Marie.

I miss Oma.

I miss my Aunt Margaret and Uncle George, who could sometimes be annoying, but they were always good to me, and good to my kids. They were a constant at our Christmases, joining us for Christmas Eve at my sister’s, and our house for Christmas dinner.

I miss my Dad, who like Mom, slipped away a few Christmases before he finally moved on. With him it wasn’t a memory issue, more that he was so tired and sick that the magic he brought to Christmas each year was gone. In Dad’s healthier years, after Grandma Hilda stopped hosting Christmas dinner, Dad was in the kitchen—and loving it. 

On TikTok I’ve watch videos where women complain about never having support from their husbands during Christmas, where the responsibility of bringing any magic to Christmas falls on the wife. That wasn’t true in my family. My dad threw himself into Christmas. He’d paint Christmas murals on our windows, make fudge, and cook most of Christmas dinner.

While Mom did a majority of the Christmas shopping and gift wrapping, each year Dad would buy something special for Lynn and me, just from him, and he was notorious for waiting until the last minute (often Christmas Eve) to buy Mom’s gift, but it was always spectacular.

I miss both sets of my grandparents, who would spend Christmas with us most years.  They’d find a comfortable place to sit and always seemed to enjoy watching the festivities and visiting with whomever stopped by to chat. I remember suggesting the grandparents open their gifts first one year, and my Grandma Madeline immediately put down that idea, telling me they enjoyed watching the grandchildren open their gifts. I didn’t understand it then, but I do now.

I miss my in-laws and I miss my sister’s in-laws. Unlike other families, who drag their kids from “his” parent’s house then to “her” parent’s house over the holidays, when my parents’ grandchildren were little, we all spent Christmas and Christmas eve together—all the grandparents, all the children.

But all those elders, except for Florence, have moved on. My sister and I no longer spend Christmases together. She is down in California, spending Christmas this year with her husband, sons, daughter-in-law, and grandsons.

Last year Don and I were able to spend Christmas with both our kids and grandchildren. (when I say ‘our kids’ that includes Joe and SeAnne.) We were able to arrange a ride for Mom to be with us on Christmas Eve, and we visited her on Christmas day at the home.

This year Don and I will be spending Christmas with Scott and SeAnne at the Holmestead.

I miss the elders this Christmas. But we are the elders now.

Merry Christmas from Mom

Mediums often tell us that when our loved ones pass on, they can send us messages from beyond, letting us know they are okay. These messages might come in the form of butterflies, feathers, pennies, birds, or even songs on the radio.

During Mom’s illness we often discussed death and what we believed happened when we moved on. It was a discussion I never had with my father during his illness and final days. Back then his impending death was the elephant in the room that we never discussed. I have much regret not broaching that topic with him.

When discussing with Mom, those signs mediums mentioned, I asked her to send me crows. Her response, “But what if I don’t know how?”  I assured her that when she passed over, she would be able to figure it out.

Before I go on with my story, three things you need to know about Mom. First, she passed away on October 24, 2024. Her first name was Caroline. Her nickname amongst close family and friends, Sweet Caroline. Mom also loved Christmas, and during the last few years of her dementia, she fretted about Christmas, afraid she would not have the money to buy her grandchildren and children gifts. That was very important to her.

This afternoon Don and I drove to the post office to mail some Christmas gifts to my sister and daughter’s family. When we got home, Don walked out to the mailbox while I took the dogs outside for a minute.

Don returned from our mailbox with a small package. He said it was for me. At first, I thought it was my medication, in one of those plastic-like gray mailing bags. It wasn’t from Amazon, and I hadn’t ordered anything.

The item was shipped from some company in California. Inside was a small box with an ornament inside. No invoice. No card.  

The ornament, a crow with a Santa’s hat, personalized, “Sweet Caroline.” Of course I cried. 

I have no doubt Mom sent me that crow ornament. She probably whispered in someone’s ear to get it done. The three most likely helpers would be my husband, sister, or daughter.  While I didn’t ask them, my sister and husband say it wasn’t them.

Why am I so convinced Mom instigated my gift? Because I know she instigated the gifts her other daughter and grandchildren will be receiving this Christmas. After Mom passed, she had a little money left in the bank account we share. I could practically hear her telling me it was almost Christmas, and she needed to buy them gifts.

The other day my sister and Elizabeth received the See’s Candy I ordered for them from Mom. My sister said both she and her husband cried when they received Mom’s Christmas gift. See’s is a big thing in our family during Christmas. Mom loved ordering it for her family and buying some for herself. When I was a child, Mom’s mother, my Grandma Hilda, didn’t have a lot of money to spend at Christmas, but each year she would buy each of her grandchildren a pound of See’s Candy. For me and my sister, it was always a pound of Bordeaux’s, our favorite. 

So I am pretty sure Mom made sure I had a Christmas gift this year, since she was getting her other daughter and the grandchildren gifts.

American Oligarchs aren’t Reading the Room

I learned something after the assassination of the United Health Care CEO.  For years I had been hearing about the “elites.” You know those elites, the ones in Hollywood, media, corporations, and in our government. Because of my long ago study of journalism during college, some eleven years before the abolishment of the Fairness Doctrine by the Reagan administration, I viewed journalists in high regard and saw them as a vital cog in democracy’s engine, sanctioned in the First Amendment.

While I recognized the danger of corporations gobbling up news networks and once respected publications, I didn’t necessarily view all journalists working for those organizations as elites. That all changed after witnessing the pearl clutching and moral lecturing by those in the legacy media and talk show/podcast circles.

I’m not saying I condone or advocate violence, but a journalist’s job is to report the news, and an investigative journalist should be finding out why it happened. But when the overwhelming comments left on social media regarding the murder showed no sympathy for the CEO, those journalists clutched their pearls, showed shock at the public’s response, and some went on to lecture the public to do better.

Their responses showed such a blatant disconnect with what the 99 percenters are dealing with on a daily basis. They are either clueless, willfully ignorant, or intentually gaslighting the public. This is not to advocate violence or condone murder, but I understand how people are feeling and why someone might be pushed to violence. And those at the top 1% are doing the pushing.

Imagine you have a pit bull puppy. When you go to feed the puppy you set the bowl of food down, and after a few minutes snatch it away. He eats just enough to keep growing, but he is always hungry. When you sit down to eat a hamburger or steak he smells the food and begs for some. After all it smells so good, and he is always hungry. But instead of sharing, you give him a good kick. 

The puppy matures into an adult dog. He grows tired and frustrated with you always taking his food away, of taunting him with your good smelling food, and those painful kicks. So he attacks. He kills you. While the dog will undoubtably be put down, who is truly to blame for this situation?

Meanwhile, rightwing provocateur Ben Shapiro went on a rant about the evil lefties who showed no sympathy over the CEO, yet he was met with his own followers telling him this was not a left or right situation—it was about up and down.

And then we have our newly almost appointed American Oligarch team of Elon and Vivek gleefully pushing the idea of major cuts to social security, Medicare, Medicaid, and Veteran’s benefits.

Like I said in the title, those boys aren’t reading the room.