It’s that time of year again. It may have happened to you
just this morning. It seems like only a
week ago it was Halloween, Veteran’s Day, or Thanksgiving Day. And today
you woke up and looked at your calendar, or saw the date in a corner of your
computer or your phone and realized… It’s
almost Christmas!
I have worked in retail for almost three decades (yes, I
started working as a toddler). What I described above happens to me every
year—sometimes it’s in early December, sometimes it’s… later December. Many years I have finished my Christmas shopping
around 5 pm on Christmas Eve. A couple years, I’ve started it at about that time. So whatever manic mood, blissful
ignorance, sheer panic or even terror you feel, I have felt it. And today, I
offer you a little help.
I do not know how to turn back the clock or speed up the UPS
truck; I offer and claim no mastery or manipulation of the rules of time and
space. But I do have some ideas on something that is almost as good. I can help
you feel Christmas-y during this
frenzied season.
Whether I am worried about money, worried about food,
worried about gifts, worried about whatever, connecting myself to Christmas
helps me manage the madness, and even enjoy
ninety-hour work weeks (I’ve had ‘em). This helps me feel like I’m with the
ones I love, even if they are at home while I work… or even if they are hundreds
of miles away (many of them are).
Here are my surefire ways to get yourself more into the
Christmas mood and thinking of others, thinking of giving, thinking of living and not just surviving. I guarantee at least one or two of these
will work for you!
Without further adieu, here are my Christmas Spirit Inducing
Secrets… Satisfaction guaranteed.
Watch the right
Christmas show or movie. There is a long list of holiday classics that fit
the bill here. Elf, the Rankin Bass stuff like Santa Claus is Comin’ to Town,
Charlie Brown, A Christmas Story, The Grinch, It’s a Wonderful Life, A
Christmas Carol, etc. You have a favorite, you know it. Dust it off, pirate it, borrow it, do whatever you have to
do to watch it now!
Everyone in my family loves some Christmas show that no one else gets. One kid loves Polar
Express (ugh), another loves Arthur’s Perfect Christmas (better), and my wife
loves Charlie and Lola (pretty good). And Spongebob and the Simpsons have a
couple good ones too. Guilty pleasure
shows are the best—the ones that you have the most perfect link in the world
to. The one that makes you think, “I am the only person on the planet watching
this right now.” And it. Is. AWESOME.
My guilty pleasure is Mr. Krueger’s Christmas, a short film
done in 1980 starring Jimmy Stewart (the holiday movie king) and produced by
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Maybe it is because it just
takes me back to my childhood, when my family hunched around a small black and
white TV to watch Christmas specials. Maybe it’s because I love the message.
Maybe I just love Jimmy Stewart’s enthusiastic portrayal of the title character
in one of his last few starring roles… I just love it! My kids make fun of me, of it, of Jimmy, of the little
girl, of Jimmy’s daydreaming, but I can barely get through it without tearing
up as I remember, once again, the meaning of Christmas. Cheesy, dated, over the
top, and absolutely priceless. Watch it until the end!
Watch your favorite un-Christmas movie. You know, a movie that has Christmas as the backdrop, but is not exactly about Christmas. But if you set the movie with, say Arbor Day as the setting, it wouldn’t be quite right. There’s a bunch: Gremlins, Better Off Dead, Batman Returns, Home Alone, some Harry Potter movies, and of course stuff like Die Hard. Note… these movies are not guaranteed to bring the Christmas spirit, but my favorites get me laughing every time. And when you are laughing, you’re probably not stressing.
Watch your favorite un-Christmas movie. You know, a movie that has Christmas as the backdrop, but is not exactly about Christmas. But if you set the movie with, say Arbor Day as the setting, it wouldn’t be quite right. There’s a bunch: Gremlins, Better Off Dead, Batman Returns, Home Alone, some Harry Potter movies, and of course stuff like Die Hard. Note… these movies are not guaranteed to bring the Christmas spirit, but my favorites get me laughing every time. And when you are laughing, you’re probably not stressing.
Make your house smell
good. Go to the grocery store and buy the two-dollar bag of pine cones that
smell like Big Red chewing gum. It will give you a Christmas buzz every time
you go in the same room as said bag of pine cones. I love me some Big Red scented
pine cones.
Maybe that’s not your thing. Don’t fret, there are other
things you can do to get your house smelling like Mrs. Claus’ kitchen. Go to
Pinterest and find an elf’s recipe for homemade Christmas potpourri—just like
grandma used to make. Or, be adventurous and start chucking nice smelling stuff
into a pan of water and gently heat it til it smells like Christmas. Orange
peels, cloves, cinnamon sticks, candy canes, whatever. I bet you can throw
enough stuff in that pan to make your Christmas blues fly away on a Christmas-scented
breeze.
If that’s not your
bag either, get yourself a Christmas-y smelling candle. Come by my house, we
have probably a dozen you can sample. Heck, you could probably steal one and we
wouldn’t even notice. Nothing like stealing from Uncle Kevin to get you in the
Christmas mood! But seriously, as much as I complain about my wife’s candle
addiction, they do add an
unmistakable difference to the house, especially at Christmastime.
Eat something. Better
yet, make something, then eat it. Not
just anything, preferably something nice and wintry. An easy favorite of mine
is coconut candies with chocolate on top. They’re super easy to make, just a
few ingredients (coconut, melted butter, sweetened condensed milk, powdered
sugar, maybe a little vanilla) stirred up, then refrigerate and top with a blob
of chocolate (melted chocolate chips for example). They only take a few minutes
to make, and they are tasty… if you like coconut and chocolate and sugar. It’s
one of my favorite things about Christmas—just like Mom taught me to make as a kid.
You’re thinking, right now, about something you like that is
sure to put a smile on your face, and make your belly shake like a bowl full of
jelly. Make it, or get someone else to make it for you, then devour it,
preferably while watching Mr. Krueger’s Christmas in your Snuggie.
One more thing you can make and eat, that has the bonus of
making your house smell good—bake some bread. Even if you don’t know how to do
it, take a shot at it, and you’ll probably do just fine. And if you mess it up,
your home is gonna smell awesome—bonus Christmas spirit. If you haven’t smelled
that around your place for a while, you need
to try it! My wife made bread this week and the house smelled amazing, and
it just felt like Christmas.
If you are just completely pressed for time, and have no one
up to the task of making you something tasty, you have my blessing to buy a
store-bought treat. Might I suggest Trader Joe’s candy cane-flavored Jo-Jo’s
(like Oreos with candy cane flavored crème filling), or pfeffernusse– German
spice cookies. There is a 70% chance you will toss the pfeffernusse in the
trash, and a 30% chance you will thank me forever if you’ve never had them
before. If you like stuff like gingerbread and molasses and ginger snaps,
you’ll love pfeffernusse.
So your house smells good and you’ve watched that show or two,
and made and eaten plenty of Christmas-y treats, but are still feeling more
like Scrooge or the Grinch than Cindy-Lou or Tiny Tim? My next suggestion will
help.
Turn on the Christmas
music. You probably have a list of favorite songs or albums to listen to
this time of year. Here are some of my favorites, with a couple links. I bet
there’s something here you’ve never
listened to before, or at least not for way too long.
The classics: Elvis, Charlie Brown (by the amazing Vince
Guaraldi), and my all-time favorite Christmas classic, the one Johnny Mathis
did (called ‘Merry Christmas’). Johnny has a distinctive voice somewhere
between Sinatra and Alvin and the Chipmunks, with amazing energy and passion
poured into every song. It is perfect to sing along to. In fact, I’m singing
along to it now, so forgive me for any typos.
Some fun family favorites: Barenaked Ladies, Cee-Lo, Michael
Buble (yeah, I know), Band-Aid, the Carpenters (listen at your own risk), The Lower Lights, and
some girl named Taylor Swift.
New age-y stuff: George Winston’s ‘December,’ Windham Hill’s
‘Winter Solstice’ series, Kurt Bestor’s ‘One Silent Night.’
Off the beaten path (and some of my favorites): Sufjan
Stevens’ ‘Songs for Christmas’ (check the link above, just amazing, sprawling,
by turns silly and beautiful), Patty Loveless’ ‘Blue Grass White Snow’ (awesome
bluegrass-tinged, folky country Christmas songs), Brian Setzer Orchestra, Sarah
McLachlan’s ‘Wintersong’ (check the link to her cover of the Gordon Lightfoot
classic below), and anything by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir… just pick your
favorite Christmas song and I guarantee they have sung it.
I like driving around at night with the family or a friend, listening to Christmas music and looking at the lights on all the houses we drive by. Sometimes we count how many houses have Christmas lights on our route. The other day I drove my kids to a function at the church, just a couple miles away, and we counted 39. It reminded me of doing the same thing with my family as a kid, driving home from Grandma’s on Christmas Eve, counting the lights, watching the sky for Santa and his reindeer.
If you’ve followed any
of these suggestions, by now you are certainly feeling better about the
holidays. I have a few more things that help me really make the most of
Christmas. The next one is service.
Doing something for someone else helps us feel more like Jesus,
and thus feel more in tune with why we celebrate Christmas. Even if it is simply
tipping a waitress a bigger amount than she’s expecting, or giving a few
dollars to a homeless man, those little acts of kindness go farther than we’ll
ever know. If we can do something even bigger, we’ll feel even better.
I wrote last Christmas Eve about one of my favorite
Christmases. The center of that memorable Christmas was my family taking time
to do something special for some special people. That story is here if you’d
like to read it: http://the-kla.blogspot.com/2014/12/the-best-christmas-ever.html
Speaking of Jesus, the final thought I have is this: read Luke Chapter Two. Even just the
first half. It will only take you a couple minutes, but it is a beautiful
account of the events surrounding Jesus’ birth. I can’t think of anything that
better invites the spirit of Christmas than reading words written by and about
Him and His prophets.
I love November and December! Though they are the two most
draining, demanding, frustrating and stressful work months I have, they are
also the most joy-filled months of the year, if I take a few little moments to remember all I’ve been blessed
with, especially the gift of our Savior, Jesus Christ. I hope you have a
wonderful holiday season, and seriously, give me a call if you need some
Christmas cheer.
Merry Christmas!
Having spent more than one Christmas in your home, all of the things you have mentioned bring back special memories for me. I have experienced these traditions first hand in your home and felt the spirit of Christmas!
ReplyDeleteHaving spent more than one Christmas in your home, all of the things you have mentioned bring back special memories for me. I have experienced these traditions first hand in your home and felt the spirit of Christmas!
ReplyDeleteMerry Christmas Louise! We love it when we get to have Christmas with you! Hope you have a great Christmas up north!
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