Our parents were in a mixed marriage: our father an atheist and our mother agnostic. Fortunately, both believed in stories and neither could forgo German Christmas cookie traditions. These joint enthusiasms meant that Christmas got the go-ahead. We’d be shooed out of the house while Mama put the finishing touches on the tree (real), lighting candles (real), and hanging strands of German angelhair (limp and silvery). Our presents were being delivered by German Engeln, entities of secular fantasy unrelated to Canadians’ Jesus. Meanwhile, we’d hunker in the Volkwagen with Papa, turning on the emergency blinkers to scare away the Grinch.
US (online) launch of 52 Weeks to a Sweeter Life
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Join us to celebrate the launch of 52 Weeks in the US! Wednesday October
16, 7:30pm EDT In conversation with Dr. B. Nilaja Green and organized
by Charis ...
1 month ago
I remember those Christmases of times past, and I miss them (now that both of our parents are gone).
ReplyDeleteI was going through other Facebook messages when I noticed that someone else also had a dislike for that Dr. Seuss character.
By the way, I like "The Slow Storm"--it reminds me of the Northern Reflections sweatshirt that I left at the store for some odd reason (maybe that was the back-
ground).