Back at home we put the tree in its stand and Tom carefully wrapped lights around and around. They were little white ones to which were added many red bows. Then the tree was finished with ornaments and placed in front of the window where it stood quite proudly. During the next days it drank and drank and I thought that was a sign, of a tree that would stay quite lovely. Family was coming for Christmas and I wanted everything to be just right. And it was, until the tree lost a needle and then more. I called my dad wondering what I should do and he shook his head (I didn't actually see it, but I knew) and said don't overreact that all trees lose needles. No, no I replied, this one is losing a lot. No sympathy there, so I told Tom and my mom and I think my sisters too and no help I found.

Then the day before Christmas Eve, I brushed against it perhaps, a little too hard and all of a sudden I heard quite a rustle and not one, not two, but all of the needles released from the tree. Only minutes later my parents arrived and saw a quite bare tree with a skirt of green needles below. Except for feeling quite vindicated about my lack of exaggeration, there was not much to do but laugh at the sight and shrug at the thought of starting over again.
All of that is to say that some of the joys of Christmas that year came not from my preconceived notions of how things should go, but embracing what is and through that finding laughter and cheer.
Very nice, welcome back!
ReplyDelete