CHRISTMAS - PAST - PRESENT - FUTURE

“I heard the bells on Christmas day - their old familiar carol play - and wild and sweet the words repeat - of peace on earth good will to men!”

It was all so simple then.

It was all so simple then.

Christmas Eve is pretty much my favourite night of the whole year. The gifts are wrapped - the cookies are baked - the turkey is ready to be stuffed - the veggies prepared - the breakfast cinnamon buns ready to be baked - the tree is lit - the overhead lights are turned down low - the Christmas Eve service has come and gone (one Christmas Eve - we watched two pre teen boys turn their candles ever so slightly and drip wax from the balcony to the seats below - or the night the whole church erupted in laughter as a gentleman in the back pew passed a rather loud amount of gas that reverberated over and over again and my boys lost it as did everyone else) - I digress - Christmas Day is almost here.

Growing up in the 60’s and 70’s was pretty sweet. I remember the Christmas I received a new doll - complete with the homemade clothes mom had sewed after I was in bed and the cradle my dad made for me. I can still see it under the tree that morning when I was 5 years old. I remember the year I got a “Chatty Cathy” doll. I remember the year my brothers and I got new sleds and right after Christmas dinner we headed to the hill to slide for the rest of the day.

When I was a young mom - it was my turn to make Christmas perfect for our children. I remember the year the boys got their golf clubs and we gave out clues for them to find them - ending up at our neighbours down the street. I remember sharing Christmas Day with friends - who were like family - when we couldn’t get “home”. I remember decorating our tree together - even waiting one year until almost Christmas Day so we could do it together. I remember Risk games that turned not so Christmasy! I remember singing The Messiah every year - watching White Christmas and The Sound of Music. (Why do we watch The Sound of Music at Christmas?) I remember the first year we had 3 grand babies under the age of 1 come for Christmas - with their parents of course. Oh my heart. I have no words. Nothing more blesses the heart than watching your children’s children.

The carol “I heard the bells on Christmas Day” was one of my dad’s favourite’s and the words were written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and then adapted by Johny Marks. Henry Longfellow penned the words to this carol in 1863 - a 57 year old widower with 6 children - the oldest having been wounded in the American civil war - even with all these difficult things - he had great hope. He believed that the Christmas music - though old - was familiar - and the words on repeat were peace to men on earth. Christmases past. So many great memories.

Christmas 2020!!!

“And in despair I bowed my head - there is no peace on earth I said - For hate is strong and mocks the song - of peace on earth, good will to men!”

  • Stay home

  • Stay away from family and friends

  • Be afraid

  • Death

  • Disease

  • Despair

  • Fear

  • Loneliness

I refuse - to give in to F-E-A-R.

365 times in the Bible it says “fear not”! In fact, those were the words that the angel, Gabriel said to Mary! “Fear not, Mary, you have found favour with God. You will conceive and give birth to a son, and you will call His name Jesus. Don’t be afraid Mary!” Guess what Mary did? Exactly that. Mary said - “I am the Lord’s servant - may your word to me be fulfilled”. (I want to be like Mary).

I will not fear this Christmas. I will not listen to inner voices or outer voices that tell me to be afraid.

I will sing Mary’s song this year - “My soul glorifies the Lord - my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour - for the Mighty One has done great things for me - holy is His name.

I will sing the carols at the top of my lungs.

I will bake cookies and share them with my neighbours and friends.

I will sing The Messiah from start to finish.

I will mail Christmas cards to family and friends who live far away.

I will cook a great big turkey dinner (for 3).

I will rejoice.

I will glory in the story of the shepherds, the angels - the couple - the Baby.

Upper Canada Village

Upper Canada Village



Then pealed the bells more loud and sweet - God is not dead nor doth He sleep - The wrong shall fail - the right prevail - with peace on earth - good will to men!

Christmas in Moosonee

Christmas in Moosonee



Christmas in Morrisburg

Christmas in Morrisburg

The future is bright. Why? Come and behold Him - born this happy morning - Christ the Lord. The future is bright - not because COVID may be gone - not because who wins or doesn’t win an election - not because of protests or no protests - not because sports may or may not happen - not because we can go south again and escape the Ontario winters….no the future is bright because we trust in that Baby of Bethlehem - the future is bright because the WORD became flesh and dwelt among us - the future is bright because one very ordinary night with ordinary sheep and ordinary shepherds God did something extraordinary - the future is bright because that night the sky exploded with angels and music announcing the birth of a KING.

We will eat together again.

We will laugh and play games.

We will sing loudly and proudly.

We will cuddle and hug our grandchildren.

We will worship together again in our churches on Christmas Eve.

We will watch our grandchildren go to bed on Christmas Eve with the anticipation of gifts and treats under the tree.

It will happen.

IMG_3932.jpeg

WHEN I LOOK AT YOU I SEE............

…..a beautiful baby girl born to a handsome WW1 war hero and his precious bride. My grandparents were married in 1919 and a year later, Alice, my mom was born.

IMG_6980 2.jpeg

My grandparents were good people - so young and so hopeful for a long future together.
The war was over, my grandfather had a job and my grandmother stayed home to care for my mom and then, her younger sister born the next year. Two babies in 14 months and they were a happy and content family of four. Tragedy struck the next year. My grandmother passed away suddenly at the age of 24 - leaving a 2 year old, a 14 month old and my grandfather was lost without her.

I see you infant daughter of Pliny and Winnifred.

…….a two year old adopted by her maternal grandparents. If you were to come over to visit my mom today, there would be 4 or 5 things she would tell you. These things are on repeat. The first thing she would tell you was that she was “thankful to the Lord for my parents, who were really my grandparents.” She still has the scrap of paper her father signed to give the girls and the wedding presents to her grandparents. Incredulous really. Mom says “When I think of it, I had a very protected childhood. I definitely did, but when I kept my grandchildren, that’s when I learned why my mother was the way she was. When you are keeping someone else’s children you don’t want anything to happen to them. My grandmother lost her daughter in 1922 and then lost her son, my Uncle Frank, two years later - to TB.”

I see that toddler who doesn’t remember her birth mother and looks forward to meeting her in heaven one day.

…….a young woman of 16 who just graduated high school and began her first job at Domtar - “the mill”. Mom’s first job was sorting papers! Boring, boring boring. She made $9.00 a week and gave $5.00 to her mother for room and board. A few months later, mom was told to report to the office as the staff were behind in their typing. She never went back to sorting paper. She worked for the paymaster, typing up the cheques, answering the telephone and telegrams. She had permission to give the cheques to some of the wives on Friday afternoon before their husbands finished the shift as the men would squander the money at the bar and it would be mostly gone before they got home. She worked for two years.

I see that young woman.

……an eighteen year old bride. “We were engaged at 17. The engagement wasn’t all that romantic but he (Stan) had the ring in his pocket and he couldn’t wait to give it to me! He proposed right there and then and we were married a year later - August 27, 1938.

I see that bride.

IMG_8440.jpeg

Another story that is on repeat is the story of mom’s first pie she made for dad. Apparently she made an apple pie and hid it in the cupboard. After supper she brought the creation to the table and dad apparently said - “you know how to make a pie!” Apparently he was quite impressed with his new bride.

I see you - beautiful young bride who loved and adored her husband “Stan the man!”

……..a busy wife and mother to 9 children. Mom had babies from 1940 - 1958 - and took good care of her home and family. She says “we had lots of fun as a family and not costly fun as we didn’t have much money. We played lots of games with our kids. “One time Stan saw in the paper that swings and a teeter-totter were for sale. So, after the kids were in bed went out and looked at them and by darned, he came home with them and had it all set up by the morning!” The kids were all surprised and so were the neighbours. Mom says every kid in the neighbourhood played in our yard. There wasn’t a blade of grass when you stepped off the back step!

I see you young mom - middle aged mom - older mom.

……grandmother to 27 and great grandmother to 72 and great great grandmother to 8. My parents retired to beautiful Devil Lake near Westport, Ontario. They spent almost 17 years there before the property became too much for them to take care of in their later years. The cottage was a gathering place for the family. Most weekends - many of us gathered for family time together. Saturdays for supper was hamburgers and Sunday suppers was chicken and potatoes and salads. We lived further away so didn’t always make it for a lot of day trips but for 17 years we spent a week or two of our holidays at the lake and a week between Christmas and New Years. We swam, fished, boated in dad’s little piece of tin, played games, and made memories. My mom and dad babysat for all of us - a day here - a day there - a weekend getaway and the occasional week (if necessary). Our kids loved when Gramma and Grampa came to our house but if you asked any of my boys, their memories are of the lake when they were kids.

I see you Grammie.

And now - in these declining days, mom’s memory and life revolve around the things I have mentioned. She often says “there was a time the grass didn’t grow under my feet! Now all I do is lie around!”

I see you!

And when I look at you I remember the span of your life and all the things you were. Those things make you the incredible woman you are today.

I see you.

IMG_8531.jpeg




LIFE OF A PICKLE BALLER

I moved to Kincardine in April 2016 when I married my husband, Harvey. During the first year of our marriage we did everything together. We took the Bible verse from Deuteronomy 24:5 very seriously. “When a man is newly married, he is not to be sent off to war or sent away to do public duty. He must be allowed to stay home for a year and make his wife happy!” We travelled, we golfed, we enjoyed yummy meals, we walked, we rode our bikes, we visited our kids and grandkids and extended family, we shopped - everything we did - we did together. It was a magical first year of marriage.

It was early into our second year of marriage that I discovered the game of Pickleball. Pickleball is a paddleball sport that combines elements of badminton, table tennis and tennis. The game is played on a badminton court, has a net, and players use paddles and a plastic ball. There are rules (of course) but it is an easy game to play. After my first introduction to this game - I was hooked and I haven’t looked back. I try to play two or three or four times a week.

DRESSING UP FOR CHRISTMAS PICKLEBALL WITH MY FRIEND - TERRI. (Sorry the photo is a bit blurred - it’s not your eyes!)

DRESSING UP FOR CHRISTMAS PICKLEBALL WITH MY FRIEND - TERRI. (Sorry the photo is a bit blurred - it’s not your eyes!)

Here are some things I have learned while playing pickle ball that apply to life!

#1. BE HONOURABLE.

There are no referees or umpires in the game of pickleball. Everyone must call their own faults and lines. Most people are very honourable and make the right calls. But - some don't. Sometimes you or them - get it wrong. If you step in the “kitchen” and smash the ball - that’s a fault and even if your toe touches the line a tiny bit, it’s still a fault. Be honourable and call yourself on it. If the ball is out and it’s on your side, call it out. If it’s close, give the benefit to your opponent. This is hard to do when the score is close, but do it anyway.

OFF THE COURT WE ARE CALLED TO BE HONOURABLE AS WELL. I’m doing a Bible study in the book of Matthew this fall and living honourably reminds me of the teaching of the Beatitudes in the Bible. The Beatitudes are part of Jesus’ first sermon to His followers and his words were unexpected. He said that weakness is strength. He said dependence on God is power. He said that the religious, the cheats, the liars, and the ones who think they are righteous - are equally dependent on grace. The Beatitudes are so counter-cultural. They are upside down. Jesus shocks His listeners and us when He says things like - “you have heard it said to the people long ago - ‘you shall not murder’ but I tell you that anyone who is angry with a brother or sister will be subject to judgment.” What? Say again? Anger or malice that is nursed inwardly makes people destroyers instead of builders. I would rather be a builder instead of a destroyer. Or how about this one - “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.” Rejoice - when someone undeserving is shown grace. That’s a struggle for a lot of us. Hey! In everyday life - DO THE RIGHT THING - BE HONOURABLE!

ELIZABETH ELLIOT SAID - “IF YOUR GOAL IS PURITY AND HONOUR - BE PREPARED TO BE THOUGHT VERY ODD!”

#2. PLAYERS PLAY AT DIFFERENT LEVELS.

Ratings in Pickleball go from Level 1.0 (beginner) to Level 5 (top players). Ratings are used primarily for tournament or league play and it’s helpful to know your rating even while playing in your own club. In our little town we have level one players right up to 4.5. Pickleball in Kincardine - though - is drop in - not league play, so we play all together. Sometimes you play with a newbee and other times you play against very skilled players. The thing is - we all play together. Sometimes we have to up our game in order to play with the more skilled players and sometimes we have to tone it down a notch when playing with a beginner. The thing is - we all are at different levels but we all play together.

OFF THE COURT WE LIVE AND ASSOCIATE WITH PEOPLE WHO ARE DIFFERENT FROM US AS WELL. Imagine how sad it would be if we all were the same height, had the same colour of hair, weighed the same, had the same skin colour, the same interests, the same skill levels, read the same books, watched the same shows, ate the same foods, had the same schedules, and hung out with the same people all the time.

Because I have moved several times in my adult life, I have had to reach out - become open and vulnerable - in order to make new friends. I have joined choirs, gym classes, church groups, neighbourhood coffee get-togethers, bookclubs, walking clubs, golf courses and have met hundreds of people - some very different from me but each one poured something new into my life and me into them. Some made me uncomfortable. Some I made uncomfortable. Some whom I loved immediately and some not! The thing is - real life is allowing ourselves to be in relationship with others who are not exactly like us but we still get along!

#3. WORK ON THOSE SKILLS.

Always be in ready position!

Learn how to dink!

Dink early and dink often!

Perfect your 3rd shot!

Serving is the key!

Groundstrokes!

Lobbing!

Getting to the line!

Forehand!

Backhand!

There are so many skills involved in this wonderful game and so much to work on. In any match - your opponents will quickly discover your weak area and always try to capitalize on it. Deep on the left side of the court is where many players have difficulties - if you are a right handed player. That’s me! My backhand is one of the weakest parts of my game. It’s an area that always needs more work. And that 3rd shot drop shot? So difficult to be consistent. But I work and work and work on perfecting it.

LIFE SKILLS WORK THE SAME WAY.

Love sincerely.

Hate what is evil.

Cling to what is good.

Don’t repay evil for evil.

Don’t take revenge.

Live at peace with everyone.

Be joyful.

Share your home with others (but not during Covid)!

If you don’t have anything nice to say - don’t say it at all.

#4. THERE’S ALWAYS TOMORROW

Most days I have a lot of fun at pickleball and it’s great exercise. It’s pretty easy to put 10,000 steps on my fitbit in 2 hours of play. Two weeks ago - though - it wasn’t fun. I felt sluggish. My game was off. My serves were zipping into the net or flying out past the backline. My lobs were hitting the ceiling. My 3rd shot drop shot was not existent. The longer the afternoon went on - the worse I seemed to play. I went home early.

Some days in real life - are like that too. It seems conversations don’t go the way you want them to. It seems you take things the wrong way. You are crusty with the kids. You are short with your spouse. You snarl at the dog! And the dog snarls back! You get what I mean.

The good news is - after a week lay off of pickleball - I went back this week and all was well. The shots were (mostly) going where I wanted them to go. I had fun again. I worked up a sweat.

With my mom moving in on Sunday - I’m not sure how much pickleball I’ll get in in the next few months but when I do have a free afternoon - you know where I’ll be - at the Davidson Centre - dinking with my pickleball posse!