DEBORAH CROMBIE: My suggestion (which I don't see being adopted anytime soon) is that Americans should celebrate Thanksgiving in the middle of October, like our dear Canadian neighbors. The fourth Thursday in November is pretty arbitrary, after all, as President Lincoln originally designated a holiday of thanksgiving (hoping to calm the strife of the Civil War) on the last Thursday of November. But there was a big stink in 1939 when there were five Thursdays in November, and in 1941 Congress decreed that Thanksgiving would fall on the fourth Thursday of the month. This was condemned as a blatant power grab by retailers to extend the Christmas shopping season (gosh, imagine that!) but there Thanksgiving has stayed.
But when Thanksgiving falls late, as it did this year, it leaves us with a mere four weeks to recover from one holiday and get everything organized for the next, and I am one of those folks who is never ready! Here I am a week into the month and I have bought a total of four gifts: a bottle of the amazing garlic-removing hand scrub for my daughter, and two books and a fountain pen for my granddaughter. I don't even have a list!
Nor have I bought a tree, and my one little gesture towards decorating has been to change the sofa cushions to the Christmas version. I have a good friend, an interior designer, who has all her shopping done and wrapped at least two weeks before Thanksgiving! I gaze at her and marvel!
How are you doing, my darling Reds? Is your shopping finished or barely started? Are you do-ahead-ers, or last-minute-ers? Do you welcome the Christmas season with cries of joy, or with moans of "Already? Please can I have another week or two?"
RHYS BOWEN: I’m almost done. Everything ordered online which means packages arriving in a steady stream. Most of my cards are mailed. On Sunday my neighbors who are dear friends come to decorate the tree. Since they are Jewish this is a lovely moment for all of us. Then it’s wrapping presents before I juggle the logistics of where to put 7 people in which bedroom and how much food will 15 people eat.
JENN McKINLAY: I hosted
Thanksgiving and then had three days to write 12K words to finish a book due on
the first. Then I caught the crud and have mostly recovered. I have a 5K to run
this Sunday and then I might start to think about decorating for Xmas.
Thankfully, I’m not hosting — just bringing dessert— none of my people are gift
oriented so it’s mostly cash, gift cards, a sweater, a book or two and boom
we’re done!
HALLIE EPHRON: Hanukah will be
early this year, too, and I’ve just bought chocolate coins for the kiddoes and
a fresh bunch of candles.
But the best thing is that my kids and grands will be here for a week, celebrating Christmas. so I’m heading out soon for a mini tree and the Xmas presents from the kids are ordered. Otherwise I try to keep gifts for grownups limited to homemade candy (chocolate turtles and chocolate-coverred orange rind) and money. And of course lots of good food (potato latkes and brisket for Hanukah-after-Hanukah).
HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Ha ha ha ha
ha. I have holiday cards. In their boxes. I have a mailing list. Will the
two ever meet? We shall see.
All of the Christmas decorations
are up all over our neighborhood, so we will bask in the reflected light of our
more organized neighbors.
As for gifts. Ha ha ha, see
above.
Every year I say – – let’s get a
tree! And Jonathan says we’re Jewish. And I don’t see how that matters.
And we’re not sure if anyone is
coming, so hey, if they can’t decide, I don’t need to decide either. Right?
It’ll all be fine. No matter what.
LUCY BURDETTE: We are pretty much done because we had to be. We head to California next week to see the grands and needed to send things ahead so we can open while we’re there. (Otherwise our gifts get lost in the mayhem of the actual day…) We don’t have a live tree anymore as by the time they arrive in Key West, they are already losing needles. So we pulled out our little fake tree last night, put lights on the balcony, and decorated a small extra Norfolk pine. The pillows are in varied states of disarray as Lottie tore into them over the years–they are all out anyway except for my favorite Santa, which she still believes is hers! (PS cards are done too because we had a good photo to use! Plus Shutterfly makes it pretty darn easy.)
DEBS: How about it, dear readers? Is Christmas sneaking up on you?
I hope you are all so organized that you will spend the next couple of weeks sitting in front of the fire, sipping hot chocolate and reading good books!

There's never enough time, and I always each a point [like today] when I realize time is slipping by and I've got to get stuff shipped, but the shopping is done and the cards have been addressed . . . .
ReplyDeleteOoh, I still have things to ship. Must do today!
DeleteI’ve already been seeing ads in my social media feeds for “last-minute” gifts and stocking stuffers since Thanksgiving which have raised my anxiety level about the time slipping away. Indoor and outdoor decorating are finished because we are a host house for the neighborhood cookie walk this Thursday. My husband is the baker so that is off my plate. Just need to do some cleaning.
ReplyDeleteYesterday I bought and wrapped all the books I am gifting this year. Trying to think of a secondary item so I can get them all mailed off. Having to allow for mailing everything takes a big bite out of the time allotted! Ordering online is pretty much out at this point unless it is just delivered to the recipient.
Cards are prepped. Need to sit down and write a witty letter.
Maybe that's why I never get mine done, Brenda! Total fail at the witty letter!
DeleteI cranked my letter out today. Not witty or clever this year but I guess it will do.
DeleteBack in the day, we were houseparents to 10 children who did not leave until Dec. 15th, then there were 30-40 school reports to write, and only then could I think about Christmas and shopping... when all physical stores were an hour away. And on top of this it was expected until our son was six that we would travel to have the holiday with my mother or with my in-laws, each five hours away in different directions. So as I have always been the Christmas commander in chief, I know pressure. Being retired the struggle is far less but somehow I'm still late. Debs, my preparations so far are on par with yours.
ReplyDeleteIn some years I cut our tree and haul it up to the house in a sled, but it's 2°F this morning, we have six fresh inches of snow, and I am tired, so we'll buy ours this year, probably today if the snow plow guy comes. I am very organized with lists -- I have lists of lists -- and I just have got to focus, be methodical, and cross things off. It helps me to have old familiar recordings of Christmas carols playing. (Selden)
Selden, you are amazing. Your first sentence was enough to make me decide to decamp to a tropical island! (Assuming I had one to decamp to...) And, yes, it is list making day for me.
DeleteI'm way behind, but I do have a pile of gifts, mostly books, on the futon here in my office hoping they will get wrapped. I got the electric candles in the windows last week, which I love. They are so beautiful in our antique house, especially when I come home after being out in the evening. I also got out a few of the quilted decorations my mom made years ago, so the sitting room is starting to feel Christmasy.
ReplyDeleteThe tree we'll probably get next weekend. And I'll put up my irreverent creche. And start stockpiling cookie dough. But first I have to finish the baby quilt!
On the wrapping issue, Edith, two words: gift bags. A lifesaver.
DeleteMy daughter and I both save them, and we give them back and forth all the time.
Karen, two excellent words! Gift bags have been sanity savers!
DeleteYes, we save gift bags, and some of them have been passed back and forth for years!
DeleteYes, gift bags are a good solution for wrapping things, but I want to know what an “irreverent” crèche is, Edith! — Pat S
DeleteSuzette, you described gift bags perfectly as sanity savers. I started using them some years ago, and although at first I felt a bit guilty, I have long gotten over that. I buy beautiful gift bags and don't stress.
DeleteSince we've been given gifts list, I'm done. Now I get to relax and enjoy Christmas music.
ReplyDeleteMy daughter has promised me a list today!
DeleteI have long been a last-minute shopper, so I'm no worse this year than any other. I did get the tree and nativity set up earlier than usual, since we had a big snow event last Tuesday that gave me an unexpectedly open day. But an unusually cold December has made us decide we really don't need any outdoor decorating this year. I will be taking my sister out each afternoon this week to do her small amount of Christmas shopping as it will give her joy to do so and then it will give her joy to look at the wrapped presents for a week or so before Christmas, and I will certainly mingle a little of my own shopping in there, too.
ReplyDeleteThat's a lovely thought, Susan. I know if I would just get my stuff done sooner, then it would give me so much pleasure to look at fininshed decorations and wrapped presents.
DeleteChristmas, dear Reds, will always come…too late, too early, ready or not. My father’s family business was a small town department store and after all these years (roughly 75), Thanksgiving meant his disappearance from every day life, the time between Thanksgiving and Christmas is just sad. Even though the store open hours were 9 to 5, Monday thru Saturday, with Friday night to 8, they were exhausting days after those hours of book work to be done, merchandise to straighten, and exhausted sleep on Sunday. This memory still clouds Thanksgiving and makes me wish there wasn’t such a holiday. Thank you all for tolerating my grumpy rant this morning. Elisabeth
ReplyDeleteElisabeth, I remember those days! When I worked in retail as a buyer I worked every day between Thanksgiving and Christmas, sometimes many extra hours, making sure all the stores had enough merchandise. It took a lot of the fun out of the holidays!
DeleteOh, yes, Karen. Thank you. As a little girl I was usually asleep when Daddy went to and came home from work. Later, I resent my friends whose Daddys were home every Saturday. The sadness of Thanksgiving to Christmas is often still with me. Elisabeth
DeleteThat must have been hard, Elizabeth. I never thought about how lucky I was that my dad was self employed and could take time to do Christmas things with me.
DeleteEEK Not ready! I have two presents ready to mail today--one to St. Louis and one to Pennsylvania. Wednesday I'm going to the beach with my twin and her family for a few days and hope to get my holiday cards written and addressed. Maybe a tree will happen somewhere along the way. I have concepts of a plan for a few gifts. Lots to do.
ReplyDeleteHave fun at the beach, Gillian! That sounds delightful!
DeleteIt's not sneaking up on me. I have one regular gift card and one e-gift card to buy and then I'm done.
ReplyDeleteChristmas isn't a huge deal for me anymore. I don't hate it or anything but the sparkle of the season has passed for me. I have dinner with my sister (plus her husband and Wilson the Wonder Dog) and that's about it.
That’s a good way to put it Jay. The holidays have sort-of lost their sparkle for me recently as well. At first it really bothered me that I didn’t feel as happy about them, but I am now trying to find other ways to enjoy this time of year (in wintery Maine), and not get too caught up in the frenzy (which truthfully was as stressful as it was “fun” back in the day).
DeleteRead more books, I say!
DeleteMorning All ~ Paula B here ~ Something surprising happened this year. I’ve been thinking about the gifts I’ve gathered and wrapping them. ALL the gifts fit into the theme of books but not books, exactly. all of my friends are readers or reader/writers. I’ve been crocheting shawls for some to use when it’s chilly and the book is waiting to be read. For others, I’ve found the cutest/sweetest/perfect journals on Amazon. Started when I bought one for myself weeks ago. A couple books for friends, too. Witches and Mrs. Endicott. Perfect for two of my friends. See ~ a theme. Who knew? So, I’m looking for some words to call the shawl. Reading Wraps is all I can come up with this morning. What do you think?
ReplyDeleteBookish blankets! Storytime shawls. Your friends are very lucky!
DeleteCozy covers or coverlets?
DeleteI like Reading Wraps! What are the cute journals, Paula? I'm thinking that since I'm giving my granddaughter a fountain pen, a journal might be a good addition.
DeleteThere are many kinds. I used “refillable A5 6 hole Journals”. There are also some that aren’t refillable but have beautiful deckled bound pages inside. The ones I got had a cord that wrapped around it with a butterfly charm and another was a leaf.
DeleteOh, fun. I ordered her a locking diary!
DeleteThat one was me, Paula B, and thank you everyone for the ideas. I like all of them. One more to finish.
DeleteThis week:
ReplyDeleteToday and tomorrow – continue work on basement carpet. Two more days needed to clean it -going in ‘squares’ which means clean up stuff around. Am putting away forever Fisher Price toys (weeping a bit – since 1979) and sending other stuff to superfluity.
Move cleaning to main floor and then upstairs. Apparently, Lea is allergic to cats – and they have been sleeping in that bedroom unchecked for 3 years – soon. May have to napalm…
Jack may finish putting in the new floor by then. Stuff needs to be put back in place…
Wednesday – I’ve been everywhere in the morning – getting a haircut – since September, so really desperate. Trying to do most of the last-minute shopping except milk, etc. Last call to $-store. Probably nothing left… Book Club in afternoon – have not read the book yet.
Thursday – get chairs for tables for too many people. (Center closes for Christmas season on Friday, so mandatory).
Friday – stove arrives. Hurray!!!!! Don’t let me be disappointed, please…
Saturday - And now for the call from the GBBO – Baake!!!!!!!!
Next week includes shopping for Chicken food, and who knows what other surprises will pop up.
Maybe decorate. Need to go to the woods for a tree. It is snowing.
Margo! You are astounding! I'm going to go take a nap just reading your list. We are all crossing fingers for your stove!!
DeleteTotally agree with Debs! Good luck with everything. (Loved the napalm comment!) — Pat S
DeleteWe are shaking things up this year and beginning our pre-retirement plan to travel each year during the holidays. We are going to England this year for 2 weeks and begin our time in London to see the holiday lights. I decided a couple of years ago to get off the holiday hamster wheel and instead just enjoy the season without the stress. It felt a little weird at first as I had always hosted the family gatherings but when I took stock of things, I realized I was not enjoying it as much as I used to. We shall see how this new plan works out. I still enjoy sending cards and a few gifts to people on the nice list!
ReplyDeleteStacia, have you read either THE HUNDRED DOLLAR HOLIDAY or UNPLUG THE CHRISTMAS MACHINE? They're both excellent books on focusing on what's actually rare and valuable in our lives - time together, nature, quietness - and centering the holiday around them. I read them years ago and even though I still "make Christmas happen," it released me from so many things I was doing that didn't bring me joy. And I never felt guilty about dropping them!
DeleteStacia, I am so envious of your Christmas in London. And where else are you going?
DeleteJulia, thanks for the book suggestions!
We just had family, family, family for almost three weeks, on top of a month total of travel, so no, I am not ready. There's a half-hearted wreath on the door, and a poinsettia in the family room, but I am trying to conquer ennui around decorating this year. Another complication is all the loss in our family this past year. Three cousins lost their spouses, as did my best friend, and another cousin left a widow. It's hard to get into the spirit of spending wildly on gifts no one needs.
ReplyDeletePresents mostly done, I think? Again, ennui. All these years of being the gift decider have finally caught up with me. Steve gets to show up, dressed, and I do the rest, and I am thinking back to 2022 with longing. We were in Kenya on Christmas, with a promise to exchange no presents to one another. The safari lodge made our every meal on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, including a bush breakfast alongside the Mara River while elephants wandered around on the other side. Both the most difficult (logistically) and easiest Christmas of my life.
Zak is in his first apartment this year, and his parents bought him a small artificial tree. I have already given him his big gift: a curated collection of glass ornaments, all food related, since he is in a culinary program. He will also get a bottle of really good olive oil and some other small things. However, I found some really cool gifts for his mom and dad, and for my mom, at the annual art/craft showcase at the Women's Art Club of Cincinnati. They are always good for interesting and unique gifts, and I hit the jackpot this year.
Which doesn't solve the Christmas tree issue. We went to the local plant market's first holiday event ever, and sort of glanced at fresh tree prices--in shock. Some were over $300! I guess we will haul up the fake one out of the basement again.
Margo, good luck on your crazy ambitious to-do list!
Karen, it might be cheaper for you and Steve to come to Maine for a weekend to get a tree - mine cost $55!
DeleteFor the emotionally-fraught gift exchange, we've been through that a couple times, both in the immediate and extended family. One thing we did that felt really good was to make a donation to a cause/organization the loved one would have supported. After my dad died, instead of exchanging family presents, we donated to an organization that helps pet owners fund veterinary treatment that might otherwise be out of reach. (The Shamrock Fund, and I can highly recommend their work.)
Dad LOVED his cat, and this felt absolutely right and much more satisfying than stuff.
Avoid sticker shock, decorate a step ladder. you even have places for presents.
DeleteGreat idea, Coralee!
DeleteKaren, last year here in Texas our 7 foot tree was nearly $200, so I am afraid to even go and look at them this year!
Just purchased a 12 foot tree in the Bay Area for $170.
DeleteNice suggestions, thanks! Including Coralee's!
DeleteI have a suspicion that the $300+ tree prices are because of the source. They are consistently higher on almost everything than anyone else, but they also still have plant guarantees, and a lot of nurseries/plant farms no longer do. Tradeoff, I guess.
Julia, don't they grow most of the Christmas trees in Maine? That could be one reason: proximity.
DeleteI always get caught up in a state of panic this time of the year. No matter how organized the planning unfolds in my head the actual result never matches the target. I once was that woman who addressed all her Christmas cards during the 4th of July Boston Pops concert on the Esplanade and had all the gift selections bought and wrapped by the end of October but not anymore. Years of pressure have given way to procrastination along with passing the Christmas card list to my husband Rudi who enjoys creating personalized cards every year using his photography skills. I blame my la-di-da approach on aging along with too many holiday traditions going sideways but my cousin reminded me the other day to get up off my keister and appreciate every second of the present season and stop wallowing in the sentiments of the Christmas past. When you live with someone whose love of the Christmas/holiday season has never waned despite what may be unraveling around him, who starts listening to Christmas music long before Thanksgiving, who puts up enough outdoor lighting to land a 747 safely and who still sets up his boyhood Lionel trains around the Christmas tree every year there is nowhere for me to hide and complaints fall on deaf ears.This scrooge is grateful that Christmas is still celebrated in this household despite my fits of anxiety preparing for it. :-)
ReplyDeleteAw, Evelyn, your husband sounds lovely! My dad was like that. And I think your cousin's advice was just what I needed to hear.
DeleteX0X0
DeleteThe entire holiday success depends on whether the Pink Palm Puff pjs arrive for the 12 year old granddaughter. These skimpy little jammies are not cheap, but apparently they are right up there with the old Cabbage Patch doll rage. At least there were no long cold lines, but there was a countdown on the website which I sat through for fifteen minutes--not sure that was early enough to log on because I'm not sure the limited addition (I kid you not) pj's made it to my cart. I have a few gifts, but my mantles sparkle and my tree, though not yet decorated, smells really nice. Never enough time and I wish we could skip the gifts--although seeing those big smiles on my grandkids is always fun.
ReplyDeletePS: My husband and I put our stockings out and then we fill our own!! It's fun to see the things he buys for himself that I never thought of.
Anon, I'm laughing at the Pink Palm Puff PJs. I remember the days of the "must-have" present for my kids. I thought that was all behind me, but I guess in another 8-10 years I'll be standing in line again to get the grandson's dearest desire. At least now you can do the shopping online - for Christmas '99 I remember going to something like four different stores before I found the Millennial Barbie that was all my daughter wanted.
DeleteOh, Cabbage Patch! What a memory. And I hadn't heard about the PJs so will have to ask my daughter. I think I heard something about my granddaughter wanting an electric toothbrush. What nine-year-old wants a toothbrush???
DeleteMy daughter and I do the stockings and that's one of my favorite family traditions. The guys are difficult, though!
Years ago a friend did some shopping for me while doing her own. She picked up the Ninja Turtles that were all the rage.
DeleteTree has been up since the day before Thanksgiving--I like to see the lights in the window when I come home in the evenings. No decorations, though--youngest cat is still too crazy! That's the extent of my holiday decorating. Gifts wrapped, but not yet under the tree (not willing to risk their condition between now and Christmas Eve, re: youngest cat). Will be baking three kinds of cookies--all easy recipes, so no hours of icing, decorating them. I may have older nephew and his family over on Christmas Eve for a casual supper--I'm thinking jambalaya, salad, good bread. All very low-key and the way I prefer it.
ReplyDeleteFlora, I saw an article that said decorating the tree with lots of dried orange slices, cinnamon sticks, and other orange and cinnamon scenting things will help keep cats away. Apparently they don't like those scents? Not guaranteed for a youngster who might get halfway up the tree before realizing it doesn't smell good... :-)
DeleteFlora, we used to tie our tree to the ceiling! And still no breakable ornaments on the bottom half of the tree.
DeleteJambalaya sounds fabulous. Do you have a good recipe? My daughter said yesterday that we should do some kind of a themed Christmas dinner and New Orleans might just be the ticket!
Julia--yes, he'd definitely be halfway up the tree, so I'll just stick to lights this year! And Deborah, the jambalaya recipe I use is from Southern Living magazine--a sausage and shrimp version. Youngest nephew is learning to cook and tackled it for his GF's birthday. Everyone loved it.
DeleteI love jambalaya and have made it, but not for a few years. I think we have decided on short ribs, although I have no idea what the "theme" is.
DeleteDebs-if you write a petition to move Thanksgiving to October I would happily sign and circulate.. And I checked and next year Thanksgiving is AGAIN the last Thursday in October!
ReplyDeleteI am one who prefers to start Christmas AFTER Thanksgiving -so old-fashioned. I’ve done a little decorating and, like Hank, Ihave my Christmas card, and list but have yet to write a single one. Maybe this afternoon? 😆 I have gifts but need tissue paper and more gift bags. We only travel a mile and a half to friends who are family for Christmas dinner so I can still be wrapping and baking Christmas Day. This year is a little more complies my husband (Jenn, I tried calling him “hubs” but that was met with a cold stare) is recovering from hip replacement surgery so I can’t leave him alone for more than a couple of hours. We ALWAYS have alive tree so perhaps I’ll get it and decorate this week. A smaller one since I’ll be putting in in the car and the holder. I will feel more like the Christmas season once it’s up.
Good luck to us all with the cards, the holidays (Hallie -yum latkes!), the stress, and the weather.
Suzette, your remark about the timing next year got me to check, and yes, there will only be 28 days between the day after Thanksgiving and Christmas Day. That's not a lot!
DeleteSuzette, good luck! I hope your husband will be recovered enough to enjoy the holiday.
DeleteAnd, argh, only 28 days next year, too? Maybe a miracle will occur and I will have things finished BEFORE Thanksgiving.
I just checked: not until ‘28 will it be the fourth/not last Thursday of November. — Pat S
DeleteSo now that we all know we’ll only have 4 weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas next year we’ll all be more organized! 😆 We can imagine. Debs, my husband’s progress is great and, even tho’ he plays as if he’s a Grinch, we’ll have a great Christmas with our friends (this being New England I’ll say “weather permitting” 🎄🥂
DeleteI also should add, I still have my fall/Thanksgiving decor on the table, and the golden-rose mum plant (that came from our Celia celebration at Crime Bake!) is still going strong. I'm trying to figure out a cache pot that will make it look like winter instead of fall.
ReplyDeletePS, Judy, wherever you got those mums, they're a GREAT nursery!
Julia, if you deadhead your mum (I pinch the little dead blooms off with my fingernails) it will last practically forever!
DeleteHow about addiing some gold Christmas ornaments?
DeleteWith my SIL, oldest grandchild, and BIL all having birthdays the week of Thanksgiving, I can put off
ReplyDeletesending holiday things until January 5th. For us the Big Buddhist Day for December is today. Bodhi Day = supposedly the day Shakimundi-ya became enlightened. (Actually just another excuse for cultures to use candles during the dark season). In theory it is spent staying up all night in meditation, chanting or reciting sutras and decorating a miniature Ficus religiosa (Bodhi) tree or a similar houseplant with colored lights. In practice on Nome St. we feast - for 12 days. one heighten course each day.
That all sounds lovely, Coralee. And so interesting how every culture not near the equator finds a way to bring light to the dark days.
DeleteFascinating, Coralee!
DeleteA blessed Bodhi Day to you and yours, Coralee!
DeleteFrom Celia: love reading all the plans made and those under action. Well mine have changer as I got myself back into hospital by having another fall with internal bleeding etc and ignoring it. My BP told the world and I am busted, off I go but will hopefully be back to Orchard Hill Before weeks end.
ReplyDeleteBut last weekend Olivia and Ken brought me a tiny live tree with lights etc plus a lovely garland made of small ties of brightly colored fabric which is up over the curtains awaiting its share of lights plus a twig wreath for my front door. I think cards. May be a post holiday activity but I am sending, as we used to say in England
- COMPLIMENTS OF THE SEASON TO YOU -
Oh? Sorry but I shopped early so that is done!
Good grief, Celia! Take care of yourself!
DeleteI agree with the other Pat. You are much too important to many of us to be in the hospital! Please take care of yourself! — Pat S
DeleteHope you are feeling better soon, Celia!
DeleteCelia, so sorry to hear you are back in the hospital!! You must get better quickly! As Pat said, you are much to important to us to be unwell. We are all sending love and hugs! XX
DeleteFeeling sure that Santa will fill your stocking with good health, Celia. Sending healing thoughts. Elisabeth
DeleteWell, rats, Celia! Speedy healing, my dear!
DeleteOh, dear Celia! I hope you heal up soon and easily. Compliments of the season right back atcha, my friend.
DeleteCelia, I’m so sorry you fell. Please avoid that! I was asked today if I was a fall risk and I told the nurse that everyone was a fall risk at 85. He said”but you do use a walker”. Yes because I AM A FALL RISK!!!
DeleteStay on your feet my dear. Santa will know and you’ll end up with a lump of coal if you. Fall again
I have not taken out a single Christmas decoration. I've thought about it, just haven't done it. Honestly I just not in the mood. I've spent the past ten days dealing with a nasty bug, which would explain the lack of motivation. Maybe I'll pick up a plant today. I traveling on Christmas Day to see my sister's family. I need to get the gifts ordered so they are waiting at her house for my arrival. Luckily it's fairly simple since my sister and her husband like things like smoked salmon.
ReplyDeleteLast night I made my first pot roast of the season. Pot roast for one takes as much time as pot roast for five, but the taste was fabulous. Plus I have enough left to make a little stew for tonight. I wonder if my niece tossed the baking powder when she cleaned out my pantry last summer? Can't have stew without biscuits.
Oh gosh, Deana, there is nothing like a bad bug to dampen your Christmas cheer. Put some sparkly lights on a plant and call the decorating done!
DeleteI love reading everyone's plans. Like Hank's Jonathan, my Jerry always insisted NO TREE since we were after all Jewish. I grew up with never-mind-we're-Jewish trees... a Santa Claus Christmas with lights and baubles and tinsel and over-the-top presents. So I hope Jerry's not watching disapprovingly but when the kids come I'm hoping to have my first tree in... mumble number number of years.
ReplyDeleteSeveral of my Jewish friends have "Winter Solstice" trees -- alleviates the conflict :)
DeleteI think everyone should have a Christmas tree. They are a way to "banish the dark" so definitely a Solstice celebration.
DeleteEvergreens at this time of year are totally pagan, Hallie - no religious conflict at all!
DeleteI'm in fairly good shape if no one wants anything to eat the rest of the month. Gifts are mailed or shipped out. Yay. I send cards to those people who send cards to me; no one so far. Outside decorations are up. Tree is up but not decorated. I'm waiting until husband and dog show up from Texas to help with that. I'm going to brave (ha!) the beautiful gently falling snow now to go to the grocery and pick up everything I ran out of while procrastinating going to the store. Then maybe I'll make a few Christmas cards to send out.
ReplyDeleteRemember: right now we are in Advent. Christmas starts on the 25th (duh) and goes for 12 days into January.
ReplyDeleteSo, sending cards later rather than early means you are closer to actually being on time!
Thank you, Libby! Now I can take worrying about those cards off my list until the week between Christmas and New Year's!
DeleteLibby, perfectly, perfect idea. Elisabeth
DeleteGood point, Libby!
ReplyDeleteWe have our outdoor decorations up. We live in a neighborhood known as Christmas Card Lane (three parallel streets plus the two streets that connect them all) so, while not a requirement to decorate, there is a sense of obligation to do so. It becomes a tricky thing to get into your driveway in December because of all of the people ambling down the sidewalk or driving by at a crawl.
We have the tree, but it’s not up yet. Last year it never got up so we are ahead of the game. (I hate that all of the decorating responsibilities fell to me so my husband and I had “a talk” this year and he’s on board to help.) We are going to be just two this year and I am actually looking forward to it. No trying to cook what others want or running around to see/do a lot of stuff. As for cards, well, I haven’t sent any in years but kind of want to this year. I used to write a letter to catch people up on our lives and I think it’s time to do that again. They may be in the 12 days after Christmas timeframe that Libby mentioned, but maybe then people have time to read them. — Pat S
I live in the desert, so it's always a fake tree here. I can't justify chopping down trees and hauling them into this arid climate. It just feels wrong. I've been trying to talk the Hub into a pink tinsel tree for years so far he's resistant but some day...
ReplyDeleteOh what fun, Jenn! You should definitely twist his arm!
DeleteIt's no secret that Christmas and other holidays are less for me now. I used to be the queen when it came to having my house decorated for Christmas by Thanksgiving. That was largely due to me taking over Thanksgiving for quite a few years after my MIL got up in years. Since we do Christmas at my daughter's, I wanted everyone to see my Christmas decorations at the Thanksgiving gathering. Big tree laden with oh so many ornaments, another small tree in the dining room, my snowmen and snowwomen collection out, the manger set, and so much more. Now, I have a tabletop tree in the living room packed away last year with the ornaments, a little tree I had given my son, a few other Christmas frills, and my Funko Pop collection of the Muppet Christmas Carol characters. I'm nothing if not eclectic. Oh, and I have my wonderful string of lights that have the warmest glow across the long mantle in the living room. I got them from the Michie Tavern's gift shop on the way to Thomas Jefferson's home, Monticello. I've kept them up permanently since I brought them home around ten or eleven years ago. I use them mainly during Christmas though. And, I'm fine with my scaled-back version of Christmas decorations. I sadly don't do Christmas cards anymore. It just stresses me out too much. I do think I'll make my Christmas fudge this year, the treat the kids always put out for Santa. It's just a quirky thing I want to do. We will be going to my daughter's house for Christmas dinner, and I will make a few dishes to take. My granddaughter, who is now unbelievably sixteen with her driver's license, wants money, as do other family members, so gift giving is easy. My husband and I already agreed to pick out our own gifts. I'll send my brother a big box of bourbon balls, a Kentucky special candy, and my sister-in-law a large charcuterie board with cheese and meat and cracker and jelly and olives. I do have one friend I have to shop for, but I don't think that will be hard.
ReplyDeleteOoh, Kathy, the charcuterie board sounds fabulous!
DeleteWe all know the holidays are hard for you and we are thinking of you. Hugs from all of us. XX
Thank you, Debs. I know most of us have people we are missing during holidays. I think of Gigi often.
DeleteSince I wrote this post the end of last week, I have actually knocked out a good bit of my shopping. I hit the farmer's market on Saturday, where I bought pretty handmade bracelets for my friend overseas (must get mailed ASAP) and for daughter and granddaughter's stocking stuffers. A tote bag from the coffee stall for the friend who was so taken with mine. I was going to buy some wonderful lemon-flavored Texas olive oil from another friend, but the olive oil stall won't be there until next weekend. Stocking stuffer handmade soaps for the girls.
ReplyDeleteI've ordered Wren a locked journal (thanks for the idea above, Paula B) to go with her new fountain pen, and a cashmere pullover for my daughter. Still waiting on her book choice, and I still have to choose something for the guys. But making progress!
Debs, Costco is selling (or was) heated vests for men. I bought one for my husband, and think I need to get one for my son-in-law, too, since they live in Northern Michigan. Could be "just enough" for Texas winters, although they are good for layering here.
DeleteLaughing all the way! Since the woodstove upstairs, we don't put up a tree. This is a small house and it's furniture, tree, or bonfire. We vote for the furniture and no bonfire. Christmas gifts are ordered, wrapping not required since they'll be delivered from the retailers (Yea!) and Christmas cards - oh, my - I have a box from not sure how many years ago and some adorable envelope seal stickers that feature a moose with Christmas lights tangled in his antlers. Someday they will meet each other!
ReplyDeleteCards went out before we left SoCal, and I brought with me a book that I bought for my husband. $ to most extended family. For the 7 people visiting us for Christmas? Two of whom also have birthdays? Nada. We are headed to Strasbourg tomorrow, so I’m counting on the Christmas market there to save me. Flying EasyJet, so I may be stuffing the coat pockets so I don’t have to pay for a carryon.
ReplyDeleteLike Hank, I have so many Christmas cards! Planning to send them out this week after I buy more stamps. It doesn’t matter if you are Jewish or religious. Christmas is still my favorite holiday for many reasons. I love the baking tradition and decorating the Christmas tree.
ReplyDeleteOne year I sent Christmas cards to Princess Catherine and Prince William, duchess Meghan and Prince Harry, Princess Anne and several other members of the Royal family. I received lovely Christmas cards from them.