Helloooo all you frazzled hoomans!
When I was younger ( like in the days when Christmas tress were silver tinsel, rotated, and had a color wheel illuminating the tree in multi-colored splendor), Christmas was a fun time we could hardly wait to experience. The decorations would majically appear when we came home from school. The wish lists were sent to Santa but curiously never needed a stamp. My Mom would stock up on pickles, black olives, and pickled herring (don't judge me).
But as I grew older I realized that all this magic was really loads of pre-planning and WORK. Having secret meetings with dear hubby while pretending nothing was going on during the day. Having one of us divert the kids while the other one tried to sneak packages into the house and hide them.
Like most families, we had traditions and procedures that veered little each year: Hubby reading Luke 2 while dear son squirmed with impatience to get to the presents. Someone wearing the Santa hat and giving out the gifts.
When the kids were younger our Advent calendar was a 'must.' We finally decided that they'd outgrown it when dear daughter graduated high school and went off to college. Son just didn't think it was fun to count down the days till Christmas when it cut into his shaving time.
Now that my kids are grown, married, and living their own lives, Christmas has gotten more complicated.
Most of you in our situation experience the same thing:
What to do when the OTHER side of the family has plans. Traditions and procedures.
Lots of families institute a kind of lottery- THEY get them this year but WE get them next year (never mind what the kids want). Or YOU got them for Thanksgiving so WE get them for Christmas.
I've also noticed families who get mad/insulted when they have to adapt to the kids' choice to actually stay at home and develop their own holiday traditions. Or they get irritated when the other side WINS when "they- don't-even-care-about-Christmas-like-we-do-so-why-are-they-being-so-spiteful-they-always-act-like-this-what-did-we -do-to-them-they-are-just-jealous."
So a rift develops between families because someone can't or won't adapt to change. I'm often amused how we invest in family so they can live happy and healthy lives and then get offended when they attempt to do so.
I also have found it interesting how we gorge ourselves with cookies and treats and special foods when we have the recipes and could make them any time the rest of the year but I digress.
As challenging and scary as it is to adapt to change I think we need to do so. Change can often be a transition toward something that is really beneficial to everyone. As we adapt to change we can delegate some responsibilities to others, relax, and begin to enjoy the holidays like we used to.
Hey! Who baked the cookies using my recipe? The decorations have majically been put up! Where did those gifts under the tree come from?
Perhaps adapting to change is God's way of giving us back the child-like joy we once felt at Christmas. Change might allow others to bless us by taking over the responsibilities we grew to find tedious.
Who know? Maybe I'll have dear children climb up into the attic and look for that old Advent calendar. I think it's MY turn to count down the days before Christmas.
Thursday, December 6, 2012
Adapting to Change
Labels:
adapting,
challenge,
challenging,
children,
Christmas,
family,
holidays,
joy,
lottery,
traditions
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