I begin the year with Christmas Day.

Before January is half over, I will share the last of my Christmasy activities and images. I don’t want to wait until next year to tell of the occasion shown above, when my grandsons Raj and Rigo were quick to lend a hand moving decorations into the church, the Sunday before Christmas.

I went back to having a freshly cut tree this year; it only required getting help from a friend and a son. But I had no time to trim it before family started arriving, so Raj and Rigo helped me with that, too, almost as soon as they walked in the door.

One toy I bought in advance of figuring out whom I would give it to, was these Magnet Men. They turned out to be the perfect toy to give to the whole bunch of (nine) kids to play with together, and in my house they provided hours of fun. For most people, I think, the refrigerator might be the only object they could interface with, though I heard of children using a set of dumbells for a Magnet Men playground.

They are very acrobatic, and hold on to each other, as you can see, but my entry and stair railings made the perfect equipment to show off their gymnastics. I sent all the cute toys home with the grandchildren, but maybe I should have kept some here, where they are the most fun.

I had a friend over for tea one day and used some of my Christmas gnome placemats for the last time, serving up the last of the Christmas cookies I’d baked, and four little pieces of rose-flavored Turkish Delight that I’d bought especially for Christmas. That rose candy was so beautifully flavored, to me it seemed the exotic star of every plate of sweets. If only it weren’t so, so sweet…. but then, it wouldn’t be Turkish Delight.

We Glads have a few Christmas traditions that we return to, not always every year, but when the combination of people and days aligns properly. I’m thinking of oyster stew, which came through Mr. Glad’s German and English families. Or was it just the German side? I have made it many times using the recipe in the Joy of Cooking that my mother gave me at my marriage. This year son Soldier volunteered to make the stew, which is really a bisque or soup, and he began to read the recipe in that book.

Soon everyone in the kitchen was laughing uproariously as he read aloud the amounts of some ingredients. For example, 1/4 teaspoon chopped onion, and “a sliver of garlic.” I didn’t see how much onion Soldier put in, but I heard that several cloves of garlic were minced and added. From my garden I brought in chives and parsley, which were used in generous quantities. After all 18 of us were seated at two tables, the oysters were dropped into the broth, and soon the glorious stew was served into bowls and set before those who were willing or eager to try it. I found it to be the best I’ve ever eaten.

I have another “Overthrow the Tyranny of Months” calendar from Beauty First Films, which leads me in joyful anticipation of upcoming weeks, often several more than four at a time. Here is the page I’m looking at now:


How sweet is it, to have my 2025 calendar start with Christmas Day?? I’m waiting until February 2 to take my tree down, and will wait until next December to write any more about Christmas. More feasts and seasons are upon us, the days full of good things.

One of those that happened in our family recently was the birth of my son “Pathfinder’s” first grandchild, my second great-grandchild. I may need to meet him before I will think of a nickname, and he lives a good distance from me, so you will have to wait for details. The Whole Glad Family welcomes Little Guy ❤

Rejoice Evermore!

 

9 thoughts on “I begin the year with Christmas Day.

  1. I can’t tell you how much I love this post. Your family Christmas is so beautiful and so are all the photos you shared. I love that the kids trimmed the tree and seeing the magnet men there really made me smile. I might have to get some of those for the boys. They look like loads of fun and I’d love to imagine them building something for them. That stew looks fabulous and I love your new placemats. I have a soft spot for gnomes! Oh, I’ll smile all day thinking about this one!

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  2. A wonderful read! We are down to the last of the ginger cookies I baked at the request of my youngest grandchildren – but haven’t yet cut the fruit cake! That will keep us going for a while still 🙂 🙂

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    1. Do you always make fruit cake, Anne? I think I am going to make some kind of fruit cakes next Christmas instead of cookies… Is your cake a traditional recipe in your family? What is it like?

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      1. I tend to make a boiled fruit cake almost at the last minute – the traditional way is to make it months in advance and soak it with brandy. It is rich and keeps well. We never got to it this Christmas because each of my children and grandchildren – and husband – had requested different things, which I was happly to oblige with: coconut biscuits, ginger biscuits, fruit squares, fruit mince pies and melt-in-the-mouth biscuits 🙂 🙂

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  3. I enjoyed reading about your Christmas with your dear ones. Those magnetic monkeys look like fun!!
    I love the gnome placemats.
    Congratulations on a second great grandchild.

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  4. Wasn’t it just grand to have your son and grandchildren there to help with the bringing in of the green and the decorating? That for me says Christmas.
    Loved your tea table.
    And my daughter-in-law’s family eats oyster stew as a traditional Christmas Eve dish. Personally, I do not like oysters served any kind of way, and it is one of the only foods I will not eat! But yours certainly “looked” inviting.

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