Family
Christmas Memories Evoke Joy, Sadness
The Record,
Thursday, December 19, 2002
By GREGORY RUMMO
FOR
MOST PEOPLE, Christmas is a joyous time of year.
Extended families get together to celebrate traditions,
exchange gifts, and eat way more food than is advisable.
But for some, the Christmas season is a time to
grieve--more to be endured than enjoyed. Painful memories of a
hard childhood, a divorce, or the death of a loved one are
often overwhelming. And all of the surrounding glitter and
happiness intensify those memories.
A new collection of short stories by New York Times
and USA Today best-selling author Barbara Russell
Chesser titled "Keeping Christmas" (Tapestry Press)
was compiled for people wrestling with holiday grief. The 26
stories will remind us "while we may have much to mourn,
we have more to celebrate," she says.
"Christmas rekindles for many people the most vivid
memories and evokes the strongest emotions of them all. ...[W]e
all long for the perfect holiday as the year ends and a new
one begins. To savor the peace and joy of the season, we must
reconcile the disappointments, the tragedies, of the past year
-indeed our entire lifetime --as well as the triumphs, large
and small," she writes.
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"Ties
That Bind" G. Harvey |
My most vivid Christmas memories surround my father. When I
was 6, he braved a snowstorm one Christmas Eve, taking two
buses and walking almost a mile just so he could surprise me
with a puppy.
Several years later, we trudged home together after a
midnight Christmas Eve service through a blizzard. The snow
sparkled like a million diamonds as it swirled through the air
and drifted along the side of the road.
When I was growing up, we always celebrated Christmas Day
at my aunt's house. She was a great cook. Her specialties
included fresh ham, stuffed turkey, potato casserole laced
with mozzarella and covered with bread crumbs, and chestnut pie topped with whipped cream.
Those memories are priceless, but the events of Christmas
Day in 1996 overshadowed them all.
That morning, our two sons were opening their gifts under
the tree in the living room while carols played in the
background. The aromas of bacon, coffee, and nutmeg and
cinnamon-laced French toast wafted through the house as my
wife cooked breakfast.
The telephone rang and she answered it with a cheerful
"Hello, merry Christmas."
There was a long silence. Suddenly my wife gasped, "Oh
no!"
"Greg, it's your parents' neighbor. He says your dad
fell and he can't get up."
She handed me the telephone. My knees grew
weaker as I listened to the details. Dad had been getting
dressed for church that morning when he lost his balance while
putting on a pair of trousers. He fell over backwards into the
bathroom and now he couldn't move.
I jumped into the car for the 20-minute
drive to my parents' apartment. By the time I arrived, Dad was
in an ambulance. He was lying on a stretcher, his neck in a
brace.
"He broke his neck, didn't
he?" I whispered. "We're not sure, but we think
so," the attendant replied.
The ambulance brought Dad to St.
Joseph's Hospital in Paterson while I gathered a few of Mom's
belongings and drove her back to our home.
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Marie and Fabian, Christmas 1947
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"What happened to that nice
man?" she asked. Mom was suffering from Alzheimer's
disease. The "nice man" was her husband. Dad had
promised to love Mom and to care for her "in sickness
and in health until death do us part." He was doing his
best to live up to that promise he had made almost 50 years
earlier. As Mom's condition had worsened, he couldn't care for
her
alone anymore. He sold their home in New York State and moved
to West Milford the weekend before Thanksgiving so that they
would be closer to us.
Those plans had just changed forever.
After I got Mom settled at our home I
drove to the hospital. Dad had already been admitted to the
intensive care unit. He was on his back, his head locked into
position by a metal frame that had been screwed into his
skull.
"Hi, son," he said, forcing a
smile. "What a Christmas present this was." He asked
how Mom and the grandchildren were doing and then he said:
"When I'm up and around in a few days, we'll get together
and celebrate Christmas."
I leaned over and kissed him and told
him I'd be back momentarily. I walked into the adjacent
waiting room. He doesn't know how badly he's hurt, I
thought as tears welled up in my eyes.
Finally, two doctors appeared in the
doorway. Their grim faces told the story.
Dad died two days later. His last words
to me as he struggled for breath were, "You're not my
little boy anymore. Take care of Mom."
None of my aunts and uncles attended his
funeral. They had all passed away years earlier. Mom wasn't
there either. We decided it was better for her to believe that
"the nice man" had simply gone away and the people
at the nursing home where she now lived were nice people also.
Even in death, Dad demonstrated the
lessons he tried to convey all his life: commitment, faith in
God, and being a man. He had died while taking care of Mom,
getting ready for church, and putting on a pair of trousers.
When Dad died, a part of me died with
him. I lost the last person on this Earth with whom I could
share my childhood Christmas memories.
And today as I remember that Christmas
Eve when he walked into the kitchen with a puppy in his arms
or our walk home together from church in the snowstorm, I am
reminded how much I miss him.
But then I am also reminded of God the
Father's promise to me through his little boy, Jesus Christ,
that he would become "a father of the fatherless"
(Psalms 68:5) and my grief is comforted by a peace "which
surpasses all understanding" (Philippians 4:7).
Gregory Rummo belongs to
Madison Avenue Baptist Church in Paterson. He is the author of
"The View
From the Grass Roots," published by American Book
Publishing. You may e-mail him
at TheRecordReligion@northjersey.com
5580303
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