la Vie Sirene volume 2 issue 4 - HOLIDAY TRADITIONS

Page 35

Empty Nest Christmas

by Corinne Royer

The kids are all grown up and gone, but this big old house is not empty. No, sir; the two of us have had to downsize twice. We’ve unloaded tons of "things" on the kids; and we still need more space for our interests and hobbies. We began our own Holiday Traditions. First, our Holiday’s start on my birthday in October, and end on New Year's Day. Here's how it goes: My birthday, Indian Summer, Halloween, Harvest Tie, Thanksgiving, Paul's birthday, Our Anniversary, Christmas and New Year's Eve. Focusing on Christmas-we bought these big red and green Matryoshka boxes. They’re all glossy, bright and decorative. We divide them up between us. One year, he starts with the biggest box, me the next size: and so on. Then the next year, I get the biggest box. We each buy odds and ends. Office toys, sewing items, hair products; you get the idea. Nothing expensive, nothing that will put us into debt: so we won’t spend the next year paying the balance. Anyone else? Have you spent your adult life going into debt every year for your kids and relatives? We send e-cards to relatives, now and we Skype the fussy, needy ones. We stack the boxes from biggest to smallest, in two stacks, side by side: instead of a tree (no muss, no fuss). We begin opening one box each, every night for the 12 days of Christmas. Each day, we celebrate and occasionally slip in one, maybe two expensive, beautifully wrapped gifts for the season. Last year I got a special sewing machine that sews loose yarn into fabric-it is an amazingly creative form of decorating cloth. We open the left over boxes on Christmas Eve. We have been married for 33 years, this December. We have had eight years all to ourselves. I recommend that you all consider designing the end years of your lives. The end years that are all your own, single or married. Celebrate everything that you love. Everything!

-35-


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Additional Traditions

18min
pages 101-104

Epiphany

3min
pages 99-100

Twelfth Night

2min
page 98

The 12 Days of Christmas

5min
pages 96-97

Hannukah - the Feast of Lights

5min
pages 90-91

Kwanzaa

3min
pages 92-93

Boxing Day

3min
pages 94-95

The Christmas Pickle

1min
pages 87-88

Baking up memories with Kimberley Thomson Morris

0
page 89

Hang with Care - Stockings

2min
pages 84-86

Pinata Cake

1min
page 81

Christmas Pudding

2min
pages 79-80

Murmerring

1min
page 76

Pudding

5min
pages 77-78

Yule Log

3min
page 74

Holly, Ivy & Poinsettias

6min
pages 72-73

Snow & Ice

6min
pages 68-70

A Kiwi Christmas with Victoria Blake

1min
page 71

Presents

3min
pages 58-59

The Nutcracker

5min
pages 60-67

Handbells

1min
page 57

Christmas Crackers

2min
page 55

From around the world

2min
page 54

The Goff Family’s Traditions

2min
page 53

Worldwide traditions

0
page 52

International Giftbringers

3min
page 51

Christmas comestibles

6min
pages 48-50

Christmas Comestibles

2min
page 47

The Gingerbread Man

3min
page 43

Fruitcake

2min
page 46

Fruitcake 101

3min
pages 44-45

Gingerbread

1min
page 42

Christmas Cards

3min
pages 36-37

A Windsor Castle Christmas

5min
pages 28-33

Wreathed in History

3min
page 34

Empty Nest Christmas by Corinne Royer

1min
page 35

Baking Gingerly

4min
pages 39-41

Oh Tannenbaum

1min
page 27

Candy Canes

1min
page 38

Christmas Trees

8min
pages 22-26

Charles Dickens - the modern Father Christmas

9min
pages 6-11

The Colors of Christmas

2min
page 21

Christmas or Xmas?

3min
page 20

Why the 25th of December?

6min
pages 16-17

A Christmas Message from Patricia Semack- Ritter

2min
page 5

Christmas Memories from Bonnie Ramsburg

4min
pages 18-19

When Christmas is Celebrated

3min
pages 14-15

Advent

4min
pages 12-13
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