“I will honor Christmas in my heart and try to keep it all the year,” – Ebenezer Scrooge
The angel who graces the top of our Christmas tree is as old as me. My parents bought her the year I was born because my mom thought the angel was beautiful and her cherubic face reminded my mom of my fat, little, round one. The angel has bright red hair, a sweet wise smile and golden cardboard wings. She floats on a cloud of tightly curled, shiny bright “angel hair” (a fiberglass substance that, for safety reasons, is probably not made anymore.) To me, she has always been magnificent.
Carefully unpacking the angel and placing her atop the tree was always one of my favorite Christmas memories. So when my mom died, I was very happy to find the angel in my box of family ornaments. I knew that angel would hover as patiently, spectacularly and lovingly over my young family’s festivities as she had when I was growing up. And, even though my kids never saw what was special about “that old cardboard angel mom likes so much,” they understood putting something else on top of our tree was not a possibility.
When you think about it, it shouldn’t matter what perches on the top of a Christmas tree. After all, it’s not the tree that matters, but the family that gathers around it. Yet little things like seeing that cardboard angel appear year after year warm our hearts. They bring our holidays a sense of continuity and create a connection between things past and present. They provide a bit of predictability in the face of the uncertainly and challenges that lie ahead.
W. Somerset Maugham said, “Tradition is a guide, not a jailer.” That is a thought to ponder as we make our holiday memories. The things we did in the past, no matter how pleasant and precious, often no longer meet the needs of the present. The things we call “tradition” currently may well change in the future.
In our family, we share dinner and open gifts on Christmas Eve, then the kids, though grown, sleep over. The gay apparel we don is a new pair of pajama pants and in the morning we wake up and have breakfast together. The evening meal changes every year; the breakfast menu, however, is set in stone. It’s a breakfast casserole my dad’s wife made for us for years, every Christmas morning.
Like my funny old cardboard angel, it’s not that the casserole is all that special. It’s that eating it reminds us of times we had together, laughing, unwrapping gifts and enjoying each other’s company. We used to travel back to Colorado and spend Christmas with my family every year. Now we don’t do that anymore and the taste of that casserole on Christmas morning brings back those memories and joins us together again. We call, they’re eating the casserole; they call, we’re eating the casserole. It’s as if, just for a few moments, all those years and miles no longer separate us.
For Woody Allen, tradition is “the illusion of permanence,” and while we know things will change as they inevitably do, the illusion of permanence is a precious one, especially as we gather together in groups large and small during this special time of the year.
Seeing that cardboard angel, still resplendent though 56 years old, gives me a sense of continuity…Her wise, cherubic smile, surrounded by that glorious “angel hair” cloud connect me to times past and give me faith in the future – after all, she’ll still be on the tree, won’t she?
Merry Christmas to you and yours! And, may your traditions, old and new, bring you the same sense of warmth, continuity and connection that my cardboard angel and that Christmas morning casserole bring to my family.