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Friday, 19 December 2008
Having time to stop and stare
The first winter camellias are starting to show, and our Christmas houseguests will shortly be upon us. Yikes! It seems to me that calling Christmas a Fixed Feast must be some sort of elaborate, clerical joke. Christmas is definitely a Moveable Feast and always comes sooner than you expect. That's if you're a parent (read secret Santa), of course. If you're an excited child of four, however, Christmas takes an awfully long time to arrive.
Copyright © Louise Bostock 2007, 2008. All rights reserved. Please ask first.
Friday, 19 December 2008
Having time to stop and stare
The first winter camellias are starting to show, and our Christmas houseguests will shortly be upon us. Yikes! It seems to me that calling Christmas a Fixed Feast must be some sort of elaborate, clerical joke. Christmas is definitely a Moveable Feast and always comes sooner than you expect. That's if you're a parent (read secret Santa), of course. If you're an excited child of four, however, Christmas takes an awfully long time to arrive.
Copyright © Louise Bostock 2007, 2008. All rights reserved. Please ask first.
4 comments:
- MsTypo said...
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To this day i don't know how my mother pulled off Christms all those years. I know my father was little to no help and yet she kept everything under control and perfect. Mothers are the secret elves of the holiday season! :)
- Saturday, 20 December, 2008
- Louise | Italy said...
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I'd agree with you there. One year my parents gave me the giant (and I mean about a metre high) teddy bear I had fallen in love with. How they smuggled it into the house without me seeing it, I don't know. I think my father's workshop, which was usually out of bounds to kids, was a useful repository.
- Saturday, 20 December, 2008
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My sister also got a metre high bright blue teddy! And we didn't see if until Christmas Day. Oh - those lovely memories!
- Saturday, 20 December, 2008
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Hi Louise,
I remember that teddy, but can't remember how we kept it a secret. I do recall your naughty brother finding the christmas pressies in our wardrobe and in his excitement tearing the corners off the paper to see what there was in them. How disappointing was that. He never got the chance to do that again.
Dad. - Sunday, 21 December, 2008
4 comments:
To this day i don't know how my mother pulled off Christms all those years. I know my father was little to no help and yet she kept everything under control and perfect. Mothers are the secret elves of the holiday season! :)
I'd agree with you there. One year my parents gave me the giant (and I mean about a metre high) teddy bear I had fallen in love with. How they smuggled it into the house without me seeing it, I don't know. I think my father's workshop, which was usually out of bounds to kids, was a useful repository.
My sister also got a metre high bright blue teddy! And we didn't see if until Christmas Day. Oh - those lovely memories!
Hi Louise,
I remember that teddy, but can't remember how we kept it a secret. I do recall your naughty brother finding the christmas pressies in our wardrobe and in his excitement tearing the corners off the paper to see what there was in them. How disappointing was that. He never got the chance to do that again.
Dad.
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