Christmas Memories
Christmas Day will be here in less than a week. The street
decorations have been lit for the past month. Black Friday and Cyber Monday
have come and gone. The retail stores are counting their footfall and profits,
and wondering whether there will be a last minute rush. Children are writing
their Santa letters, and parents are ignoring their ever increasing credit card
spending.
Am I the only one who wonders, in the midst of this spending
frenzy, where the magic has gone, the simple pleasures, and the enjoyment of
what was once a religious festival.
Memory Lane is sometimes a place it’s better not to visit.
Everything in the past wasn’t perfect, and life for many has improved
substantially, but in the process maybe we have become more disillusioned and
less satisfied with the simple pleasures of the past.
However, the temptation to wander through Christmases past
is beckoning. There were no expensive presents left in the stocking I pinned up
every year when I was a young child. But then, in those days we didn’t know
what the most popular gift of the year was, because we had no television to
tell us. The savvy children of today would be horrified to be presented with
those bygone stockings. There was an apple and an orange in the toe of the
stocking, a few nuts, a half-a-crown (12½ pence in today’s money), and your
special present. In my case it was a book, often one of the Chalet Girls series
or something similar. The book usually cost two shillings (10 pence in today’s
money). And that was it. Did we miss out? Not really, because we didn’t know
anything different.
I’m not sure when it all changed. I remember getting a bike
one Christmas, when I was a bit older. And the book increased to include an
annual, usually The Broons or Oor Wullie, favourites in Scotland. So there was
a gradual change.
Then, after I was married, we tried to give each other a
‘good’ present at Christmas, and as the years went by and we became a bit more
affluent, we could afford to spend a bit more. But it was still the simple
things that thrilled the most. The pillowcase (notice how the size has
increased from the stocking) my husband filled for me every Christmas and left
at the side of my bed on Christmas Eve after I’d fallen asleep, so that I could
imagine Santa had visited during the night. It always contained my favourite
perfume, a box of chocolates and various nick-nacks he’d gathered in secret
over the preceding month. And of course, the books, four of them. I never did
find out how he found out what I wanted to read, but his choice was always spot
on. I think I loved that Santa sack more than the special present he always
bought me as well. It was worth more than diamonds to me.
Alas, I lost my husband ten years ago, so no more Santa
sacks. I still get Christmas presents from all of the family, and I appreciate
what they give me because they put thought behind the gifts. But I do miss that
Santa sack and the thrill of waking up to find it beside my bed.
But times have changed, and I am as guilty as the next person
of racking up the credit card to an unimaginable level in the pursuit of the
perfect present for my friends and family. Of sending bigger and better
Christmas cards, and of suffering the throes of anguish when I have received
more cards than I sent, and can’t remember who I’ve forgotten.
Oh well, let’s leave Memory Lane behind. I’m sure none of us
would want to return there, we’re far too busy enjoying the benefits of a
modern lifestyle.
A happy and enjoyable Christmas when it comes, or if you
prefer a quote from one of my friends – “Bah, humbug!”
Chris Longmuir
Amazon
Apple iBooks
Comments
I agree about over-commercialisation - not just about Christmas, but other festivals. When I was a child, Bonfire Night was fiercely looked forward to and enjoyed, because fireworks were permitted on general sale only for a few days. Not only did this make the occasion more special but people (and pets) didn't have to endure the artillery bombardment, lasting for weeks, that we do now.
Ditto for mince-pies, hot-cross-buns and easter eggs - they didn't go one sale until very shortly before their respective festivals. Now they're available year-round, or for months before. Very good for mince-pie and hot-cross-bun producers - but it also makes these treats ordinary.