Tuesday, December 12, 2023

I Believe... by Liz Flaherty

 I don't know when I wrote this, but it's been a while since I used it. I'm filling in for a guest who couldn't make it.

The grandkids mentioned near the end are 26 and 27 now, so it's been a while, but I was happy to find it. I hope you enjoy it. I hope you believe. Merry Christmas to all of you, and thanks for continuing to read the Window Over the Sink.

Thanks to everyone who'd blogged here through this holiday and to those of you who visit each day. Wishing you the best season ever. Be nice to somebody. - Liz

Faith is believing in things when common sense tells you not to. - Fred, in Miracle on 34th Street

I'm a Christian, so believing in and embracing the “reason for the season” was never an issue. I have three older brothers, so believing in Santa Claus was an issue. In short, I never did. In our house, by the time I came along, Santa was a mythological folk hero portrayed, as Susan said in Miracle on 34th Street, by a “nice man with a white beard.” I liked him, I wanted him to be real, but I knew better. Some part of me wondered if the reason a lot of classmates got better presents than I did was that they believed in St. Nick and I didn’t.
         Twenty or so years later, my husband and I worked hard to keep our kids’ belief in Santa alive and well. Duane even gestured over the fallow fields we drove past and assured the back seat brigade that the rows only looked empty—they were actually filled with bumper crops of air oats. This peculiar grain, which grows only where there are children to imagine it, is what reindeer eat that allows them to fly.

         One Christmas Eve, we drove home from my family’s celebration through a Christmas card display of falling snow—great fat flakes falling straight down. Although it was only late afternoon, it was dark. The car was full of gifts and goodies and excited children.
         Duane saw the movement from the side in time to pump the brakes gently and slow to a crawl. Allowing the cluster of deer to cross in front of us to the field on the other side of the road.
         The kids fell silent. Watching.
         “They’ll be working tonight,” said Duane.
         “Uh-huh.” As usual, I had a brilliant rejoinder to add to the conversation.
         “Filling up on air oats before they go out,” one of the kids offered.
         “Uh-huh.”
         I know the deer were whitetail, not reindeer. I know the only thing the field produced that night was a few inches of snow. I know that Duane and I did the Santa job later on that night, laughing and wrapping and eating his cookies and drinking his milk. I know all that, really.
         A year or two ago, I was driving somewhere with two grandsons in the car. I don’t remember how old they were, only that it was wintertime. One of the boys lifted a hand, gesturing toward the fallow field we passed. “Look,” he said. “Air oats.”
         I don’t care what I know—I believe.




12 comments:

  1. Very sweet. Glad you picked this one to share today. Brings back memories of riding with g/children and our delightful conversations. Cheers!

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  2. Can I borrow Duane's air oats explanation? I love it! And I love these traditions that we don't even realize we're passing on.

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  3. So glad I stopped by for this one! You've phrased this beautifully and I couldn't agree more. Every subject seems to have potential controversy and I dislike how Santa's been given a bad name. The spirit of giving lives in us all, and Santa can be part of that, when shared appropriately. :)

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  4. Isn't it funny the things your children chose to pass on to their children? Merry Christmas Liz!

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    1. I know it made my husband feel good that the air oats tradition meant so much to the kids. Merry Christmas to you!

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