Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Friday, December 11, 2020

The Coldest Christmas

It was the winter of 1946 and it was very, very cold.  In our community in the Mendips, we suffered terribly. The hills were covered in snow and the livestock were already in poor condition. The land girls did a good job, but the farm I lived on suffered a loss of a good third of our sheep due to them being in poor condition when the bad weather hit.  We were more or less trapped, and getting to the village for supplies was difficult; the old horse could only do so much.  

On a farm each day is the same – you look after the animals first. So, on Christmas eve we got up early and went out to find the sheep so we could feed them whatever silage we could dig out from the barn. But we couldn’t find them. Our day was spent with the dog and the horse, looking for them.

The days were winter short, and Christmas eve was cold, but bright, the hills draped in snow as if they were ready for a wedding. We went out again after lunch to look for the sheep, me, my brother and my father. Just the three of us. My brother Jeff was always a quiet lad, and since coming back from the war was even more withdrawn. He was happiest with the sheep, and his dog, so not finding them today caused him some distress, though the only way we knew it was because he was frowning more and hardly spoke at all.

Jeff took the lead with Scrap, the dog. She bounded up and down in the deep snow, her black markings standing out on the white landscape. The sun was low over the hills and shone bright, like a searchlight. If we hadn’t been so concerned for the sheep, it would have been a beautiful scene. It was hard for me to move through the snow, being the shortest, but I was determined to keep up with the adults. After all, at 13 I was just about an adult anyway.

Scrap barked, and disappeared - the snow must have been very deep. We headed towards her muffled calls and, wading through the snow, we found her digging. Jeff looked hopeful, anticipating finding the sheep perhaps, but Scrap had dug a tunnel in the snow not to one of our beasts, but to an old wooden box. We finished Scrap’s work and dug it up; it was old, black oak, and bound with brass fixings and a fastener with a padlock. Jeff looked at it in disgust, so I took hold of it, out of curiosity. Father just looked thoughtful.

We looked for the sheep until the sun dipped behind the lowest of the hills, and headed home in the weird light that you get when the snow is lit by reflection upon reflection. We trudged home, still looking for signs of sheep on the way, with Scrap bounding ahead happily, and me still carrying the small wooden box.

When we got home, I asked father if I could have the box, and he just shrugged. Jeff was totally uninterested, just tried fiddling with the radio to try and get some signal and a sign of life outside or small, frozen and desolate world. To me, the box was like a Christmas present, so I laid it by the hearth so I could open it in the morning.

Christmas eve we ate some bread and dripping, and went to bed early – Jeff hadn’t got a squeak out of the radio, and we were all downhearted at not finding the sheep. Father let out a huge sigh, and Jeff frowned some more. Scrap curled up by the fire, her tail wagging and her one white and one brown eye looking up at me as if to say ‘goodnight’.

Christmas morning broke and we rose, wished each other the usual seasonal greeting, and then went about our work. My job was to feed the chickens and I wanted to do it quickly – the snow had fallen again overnight but the blanket of white was almost insulating, and with the yellow winter sun, the world was glowing as the sun rose. The chickens were pleased to see me but not impressed with the few food scraps we gave them; they would have to scavenge and dig in the snow.

Jeff had taken Scrap to look for the sheep again, but promised to be back soon, he wouldn’t go far on his own. Father was busy with the horse and the cow in our yard, and having finished my chores I went back into the kitchen. It didn’t feel like Christmas – there was no tree, no presents, but there was plenty of snow. I thought about my mother briefly – wondering what she might have done for us on Christmas day if she hadn’t passed away with smallpox when I was just a babe.

I started preparing for the one thing that would make us feel like Christmas – lunch! Father had killed and prepared a chicken for us and I peeled some of the wrinkly potatoes we still had. And then, I heard a noise – a sort of muffled jingle. I stopped my work and looked around the cottage, trying to fathom the source of the noise. And I came to my box – the one from the field. The noise was coming from it, and getting louder as I got nearer.

Father was in the yard, Jeff was in the fields with Scrap, so being brave I picked up the box and shook it. The noise continued! Something in my head said that I had to open it and let out the sound so I put the box on the kitchen table to see if I could find remove the padlock. I put the box on the table and turned to our ‘everything’ draw. I found a bunch of old black keys, some from the cottage, others just collected over the years. And one, just one key on the bunch, looked more silver than black. It looked just about the right size too.

I fitted the key into the padlock and it turned. It creaked and was stiff, but with my small fingers firmly pulling the bar, the lock slipped open and I took it off and opened the box. Inside was a small bell – silver, bright and shiny as if it was new. As I lifted the bell out to look at it, the door opened and Jeff and an excited Scrap came in. “Found ‘em” he said. And, for the first time in weeks, he smiled. Father came in too; “There’s a cart coming.”  

I showed them both the bell, then popped it back in its box and returned to getting the chicken into the oven and the potatoes on the burner. We would need a hot meal today, and if we had visitors, I’d best put the kettle on.

The cart and its occupants finally pulled into our yard, with their horse steaming like the kettle. Jeff went out and rubbed the horse down and Father invited the Carters in. He brought them into the kitchen as I poured out a piping brew. “’Tis Martha and James,” said Father, “and they brung us Christmas.” I was a little confused until Martha, smiling and slightly steaming herself, came into the kitchen and put a large box on the table. “Presents,” She said, “and some vittles. Thought it would be good for us all to eat together today, seeing as how we are on our own too, just across the valley.” It must have been quite a journey from their small farmhouse. Jeff smiled even more; I think he liked Martha, and she was just about his age too. Father and James sat at by the fire to discuss the challenges of the terrible winter, and Martha helped me get more food on the go and set the table ready for a Christmas feast.

After a wonderful meal and more talk at the table than I’d heard in months, Martha brought the box with the presents out. There was a white handkerchief for father, a small bear with a red ribbon bow around his neck for me, and a penknife for Jeff. “We bain’t got no presents for you,” said father regretfully, but I had an idea and took the ribbon from the neck of my bear, and threaded the silver bell upon it. “Yes we have father, we have this Christmas bell for them.”   Martha was delighted and her smile made Jeff blush with pleasure. Since finding the bell we had found our sheep, and found Christmas. I hoped the bell would be as lucky for Martha and her father as I believed it had been for us.

Story (C) Carolyn Sheppard

Photo (C) Carolyn Sheppard (it's Royston, not the Mendips, but there you go)

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Friday, December 04, 2020

Christmas movie season

Photo by New Line, Warner Bros., Miramax, RKO,
20th Century Fox/courtesy Everett Collection
Housebound doesn't mean I have to watch Christmas movies, but I confess it's become a bit of a habit these last couple of weeks. There are channels dedicated to Christmas films, and a regular two or three on some channels daily, so there's plenty of choice.

I now consider myself well informed on Christmas movies and have distilled the plot lines as follows:

1.    Small town beats the city every time

2.    The girl will fall in love with the 'home town' boy 

3.    If he has children, the lead man will be widowed

4.    If she has children, the lead women will usually be widowed

5.    The children are all perfectly behaved and encourage the relationship with a new potential 'step'

6.    Christmas is magic. Fairies and elves do exist, as does Santa

7.    Americans in movies can put up hundreds of extremely complex decorations in record time

8.    The lead man will have a talent such as wood working or some other art

9.    If the lead (male or female) has an ex who shows up, they will want to get back together and the     new lead love interest will catch them kissing

10.    It will end happily ever after at the last minute, usually on Christmas day

11.    Song written for the films (where a character plays them on guitar/piano) are usually terrible

12.    Setting the film in a real snow scenario is a lot better than the fake snow - especially as the poor    cast are usually sweating in the fake (warm) settings

I think that's enough - so with that information above, I think all of us could write a Christmas movie script easily!  I haven't found one yet with anything but a heterosexual love story. 

The benefits of watching Christmas movies that are so formulaic that you can guess the plot in 5 minutes? Simple - escapism, feel good, and some pretty scenery.

CHALLENGE!

I am going to give it a go (watch this space) so if you can, write a 1,500 word Christmas story including at least three of the the above points. 

Ready? OK - go! And if you want to share them, send them to me and I will publish here. 

Fun links

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Friday, December 28, 2018

Too busy to blog


I got an email with that title, and it gave me a sharp reminder that I’ve not done a blog recently.
The email was a nice round up with links to their recent blogs, but I’m ‘too busy to read blogs’, and I didn’t read the email.  At this time of year the good old ‘round robin’ messages are circulating in emails or letters – and even social media. They seem impersonal but serve a purpose.

Last year my ex-husband’s cousin sent a letter with her Christmas card and told us of a serious family health issue – I felt guilt at not having contacted her during the year (but we never do keep in contact except at Christmas and funerals).  

So what about this blog, that I’m too busy to do? Because I’m working, because I’m doing this that and the other?  Well, this blog is just going to be really short because there’s a humdinger in the making, and I don’t want to trivialize it.

I just want to wish you all the very best for this festive season, whatever your faith (or lack of), and hope that the year has been good to you and that next year is the best year of your life.

Monday, November 12, 2018

I hate Christmas

Therfield Heath, December 2017
As you get older, it’s easy to forget. You start to view Christmas through the prism of shit-tinted glasses instead of the rose ones you wore as a child. Christmas becomes about ‘making the kids happy’ or ‘doing the right thing’ and commercialism.  Our cynical brains engage with the hype and see it for what it is and forget the fun, delight and anticipation that it brought when we were children.

Some are deeply sad that Christmas seems to have lost its Christian message, but for me the sadness is about losing the spirit – the feeling that this celebration allows, cultivates and brazenly promotes. Whether you believe in a religion or not, it’s hard to ignore Christmas. The television channels fill with movies where the grumpy cynic is transformed by a magical (or evangelical) intervention, and songs about love, peace and harmony (and good old rock ‘n roll) pervade the airways. 

I am one of those whose associations with Christmas have been soured by a past event. From 1973 all my Christmases henceforth were coloured with a brushstroke of experience that left me feeling distanced, cold and downright Scroogeish.  There’s nothing I could ever do to change what happened, so regret has been my constant reminder every Christmas. This is partially why I do not like Christmas very much and have, in the past, said that I hate it.

Do I still see the blatant commercialism as distasteful? Do I still feel the pang of angst as I revisit that past Christmas and wish that things could change?  I do.  But I now enjoy the balance of the season of goodwill because I choose to do so.

No matter how much money is being prised from the fingers of the susceptible public, no matter how schmaltzy the movies, there is something wonderful about making one time of year (for most in the Western world) about being good, kind, and giving.

It’s taken me a long time to shift from that distrustful cynic to someone who can enjoy Christmas. I engage with the family and my joy at their delight never ceases, but for my own heart to be at peace and happy at Christmas it is still a challenge.

No matter how commercial the adverts, no matter how predictable or thin the storyline of a Christmas movie, no matter how much I react against the religious aspect (due to other incidents in my past and my own atheist inclinations), I have to say that Christmas does endear many to goodwill. And that, in this world of such terrible and tragic loss and violence daily, cannot be a bad thing.

I will enjoy this coming Christmas heartily and honestly; my values brought into sharp focus as life throws up yet more new challenges and promises. It’s easy to forget, and sometimes hard to remember, but it should be the living for the now, for the good of all, for the best reasons you can think of, that can make Christmas or any day of the year, a day worth celebrating.

Photo credit (C) Carolyn Sheppard

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Sunday, December 03, 2017

The perfect (American) Christmas story

Miracle on 34th Street (C) 20th Century Fox
Having watched a few – I have to say ‘schmaltzy’ – Christmas movies, I’ve come up with a formula for the perfect story.  The ingredients you need are:
  • Small US town
  • Snowy region (preferably near Minneapolis, Milwaukee, Buffalo etc – cities in the ‘snow zone’ or miraculous snow in New York)
  • Single parent family (this facilitates the inclusion of children whilst permitting a romantic storyline)
  • The children are polite and well behaved 
  • A problem (St Nick has lost something, one of his elves is in trouble, his ‘magic’ is being depleted, family home about to be repossessed etc)
  • A ‘miracle’ themed object (star, angel, animated snowman, special house etc)
  • An ‘unbeliever’ (cynic who has had a negative Christmas experience, loss of family, etc)
  • A supporting cast of friendly uncles, aunts, neighbours, friends
  • A reluctant romance
  • A penchant for choosing the rural career over the city life
  • The conversion (cynic is provided with undeniable evidence that ‘Christmas miracles’ exist – whether Santa is real or that against all the odds lost family members are found)
  • The ‘spirit of Christmas’
  • A happy conclusion

And by observation, it seems to be a largely white, middle class cast of characters - though I think we can dump that in the ‘historical’ bin and be a bit more inclusive!  Sometimes (but not always) there is a bit of religion.

By contrast, UK Christmas stories seem to contain a mix of the following:
  • Disaster (sometimes averted)
    'Nativity' 
  • Unlikely romance with a specific challenge (societal, etc)
  • Badly behaving kids
  • A nativity play
  • A supporting cast of idiots/comedians
  • Cynicism in the majority
  • Conflict resolution
  • A happy conclusion

What’s do you think – do you have a ‘top ten’ (or top three) ingredients for Christmas stories? Post your thoughts in comments below. 

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