by josh24.15couple » Fri Oct 23, 2009 1:04 pm
Here are a few of my memories that come to mind...
Our house did not have a fireplace for Santa Claus to come down, so Mama made sure the front door was unlocked. One year we put out cookies and milk for Santa and wrote a note to him that said, "Did you like the cookies? Yes or No." and Santa had to circle yes or no with a crayon.
My favorite smell of Christmas is a real cedar tree. We always had cedar trees, cut from the woods around our neighborhood.
One year was a sad Christmas----a couple of weeks before Christmas my sister and I were playing hide and go seek and I hid under Mama and Daddy's bed. Guess what I found? You got it, I found some games and puzzles that weren't wrapped. When Mama told me the truth, I cried and cried. My sister laughed at me!
After Santa quit coming, our Christmases were timed according to what shift at work my Daddy was on. He worked for International Paper and worked a different shift each week, so if he was working the day shift, we opened gifts that afternoon when he got home. If he was working the evening shift, we opened presents the next morning. if he was on the graveyard (night shift) we would open presents the next morning or in the late afternoon if he was able to get up earlier than usual before going to work.
Our mother was the one who taught us how to correctly wrap presents so they turned out really pretty and nice. My sister and I have relied on those lessons all through our lives.
Our family does not like turkey, so our meal (and usually at Thanksgiving also) was ham, chicken and dressing, English peas, fruit salad, strawberry congealed salad, deviled eggs, and sweet potato casserole or creamed sweet potatoes. For dessert it was usually pecan pie, egg custard pie, coconut cake, etc. Our mother is an awesome cook, taught by her mother, who was taught by her mother, etc. She doesn't fix fancy dishes and meals, just wonderful Southern cooking!
All of this talk of memories has made me ready to get out the decorations!!!