the annual christmas tree fight

The perfect tree.

If you celebrate Christmas, you’ve undoubtedly gone on at least one epic quest to find the perfect Christmas tree. And believe me, the search for the holy grail of conifers can be a daunting task. Even if, instead of trekking through the woods with a saw and a sled, you pull yours from a big box and assemble it in the middle of the living room, there had to be that first year when you went on the search for the perfect artificial tree.  My mother, who gave up on real trees somewhere around the same time my parents divorced, bought hers during one of the big “after Christmas” sales. 

This year, I got mine from the parking lot of one of the big box building supply stores. I found it in less than ten minutes time (it was really cold, and I didn’t have a coat.)

But it wasn’t always that way.  Once upon a time, in a childhood far, far away, the annual quest for a Christmas tree was something far more epic. 

Now, in my house, there was none of this “putting up the tree at the end of November” nonsense.  My father made us wait until the weekend closest to December 10th to get a tree. We never complained, and we always had our tree decorated at least two weeks before Christmas.   It also created a level of excitement throughout the first ten days of December that came close to rivaling the holiday itself.

The day was always clearly marked on the calendar.

My mother made us an Advent Calendar with a giant felt Christmas tree.  The calendar pockets were filled with delicate felt decorations…stars, stockings, wrapped packages, a small tree, and Santa, to name a few.  My sister and I woke each morning and raced to the calendar to put the next ornament on the felt tree.  The smaller tree represented the day we would trek out into the woods to find the real tree. 

We lived deep in the country in upstate New York, where almost every day in December brought with it near blizzard conditions, and the snow was almost always up to my knees. Mom would bundle us up in snow pants and fur-lined coats until only our eyes were visible to the outside, like Kenny from South Park.  But despite the inclement weather…the blowing snow and ice…nothing deterred us as we set out to find that perfect Christmas tree. With a saw in hand, and two young daughters in tow, my father would lead my mother into the winter wonderland.

We trudged deeper into the woods, passing tree after imperfect tree, as my mother would reject each one for some reason or other. 

“No…”she would say. “Too short.” or, “Too tall.”

The next tree was, “Too skinny.” And the one after that, “Too fat.”

The more trees we passed, the more frustrated my father would become.

Again and again he would ask, “…what’s wrong with this one?”

“It’s completely bare on one side,” was a frequent reply.

And every time, my father would shake his head and grumble under his breath.

After what seemed like hours, as the sun was getting lower in the sky, we would finally find a tree my mother could agree on. It wasn’t too fat or too skinny. Not too tall or too short. And it wasn’t bare on one side.

“This one!” she would shout.  And before she could change her mind, my father would whip out the saw to cut the tree down.

Now, we were pretty far into the woods at this point, and without a sled to tow the tree back to the car, my father would drag it behind him, leaving a Christmas tree shaped trail in the snow.  Once the tree was loaded on the roof of the car…tied down with enough twine to secure a dozen trees…we would head home to do the decorating.

My mother pulled out the boxes of ornaments and lights while my father wrestled the tree, first into the iron base, then into the living room.  Mom always seemed to be too distracted with untangling lights to notice as Dad brought the tree in to the room.   

But it wasn’t long before she turned around to see her perfect tree, propped up in its base, and ready for lights.

“This isn’t the tree I picked out!”

“It’s the same tree.” Dad would grumble.

“It’s not the same tree.  Look here…” she pointed to the side of the tree at a very bare patch of limbs. “This has a great big bare spot!”

I think it must have been Christmas amnesia, because every year, after dragging the perfect tree from the woods to the car, it found its way to the living room with a giant bare spot that was invariably up front and center. And every year my mother reacted as if this was something horrible.

This is where the spinning of the tree came in.

My mother would give orders as my father rotated the tree, trying to ensure the bare spot would be hidden from view.  And every year, I listened to, “No, a little more to the right.  Wait…a little to the left. No…go back to the right.  I can still see it.  Can you see it from…try turning it just a little more…I said RIGHT!”

And then Dad, “It’s fine right where it is! No! I won’t turn it just a little more to the left. No! You can’t see the bare spot from this side. I don’t care if you can see if from the bathroom.  Just put more tinsel on it!”

By the time they had the giant colored lights strung, they weren’t speaking at all. Mom finished hanging the ornaments herself, and my sister and I helped toss giant wads of tinsel onto the branches.

Christmas past (2).jpg

It was always the most beautiful tree ever.

As I've discovered over the years, there are some things you look forward to each year, and you don’t even realize how important they are until you have a chance to miss them.

My husband doesn’t do the tree lights.  He doesn’t hang ornaments. He will go with me to pick a tree and he will quietly stand by and wait until I have chosen the perfect one.

Without a single word.

Somehow I think he’s missing out on the best part of the whole thing.

My mom is in town for Christmas and I managed to talk her into baking cookies and pies with me. But I'm no fool. I've seen her glancing at my Christmas tree, undoubtedly scrutinizing it with eyes only a mother has. And like every other year, I just smile and nod when she tells me there’s a great big bare spot in the back. I don't even tell her I like it that way.

Until the next time…Merry Christmas everyone!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

I believe in Santa Claus

I happened across an airing of Miracle on 34th Street a few days ago and it brought up the subject of Santa Claus.  I’ve participated in many a lively debate on the subject over the years, and the classic movie put a lovely point on the topic for me.

The debate with my friends was about at what age children should be told the truth about Santa.  And if Santa is even relevant in this day and age. 

I believed in Santa Claus as a child. 

It is one of the strongest, most vivid memories I have from childhood.  In fact, if I think back, I could probably recall at least one present from each year I believed.  Santa Claus is quite simply the definition of the “magic” of childhood.  I think I knew the truth long before it was confirmed, but I didn’t want to stop believing, so I held on for as long as I could.  I was almost twelve when I finally had the indisputable proof.  But because my younger sister still believed, I was able to hold on to the magic for a few more years through her. 

And that is what it is all about for me.  The magic.  It is something every child should feel and every adult wishes they could recapture. 

Finding out there is no Santa Claus is the first official step away from childhood.  And it’s a steep step that most of us spend the rest of our lives trying to back track.  At least a little.  Even if it’s just once a year. 

While my children were little, because of their belief in Santa Claus, my house was again filled with the magic of Christmas.  It wasn’t quite the same as when I was a child, but it is the closest I have ever come to that wonderment from my childhood. 

It certainly doesn’t stop me from trying to recapture it each year.  I still watch the classic Christmas specials like Rudolph, Frosty, and Charlie Brown.  I immerse myself in the twinkling lights, Christmas carols, and frosted cookies until my memories swirl around me like a tornado of snowflakes on Christmas Eve and Santa Claus becomes real again. 

When my children asked me, so many years ago, if Santa was real, I told them that Santa was as real as we believed he was.  I still consider this to be the truth. 

Christmas is the one time of year when believing in magic is not just for children… because Santa real if you believe.

And I believe in Santa Claus.

Until the next time…I’ll be hanging my stocking by the chimney with care.

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

wool socks and polished floors

I was standing in line at a sporting goods store this evening. What possessed me to walk into a sporting goods store to begin with is completely beyond me. No, that's not true. We were looking for a coffee maker. And not the sort of coffee maker you find in a high end electronics store, or a kitchen store. Mike wanted a campfire percolator to make coffee over an open flame. Not that we're planning on going camping until, at least, spring. But as you well know, in the event of a zombie apocalypse, there might not be any other way to make coffee, and man can not exist on beer alone.

As it happens, the camping aisle was completely out of coffee makers (I can't imagine why) so we found ourselves perusing the aisles for whatever else might catch our eyes.

I didn't find anything I needed or wanted, until I discovered the peanut M&Ms in the checkout lane, (just wait, I'll get there) but Mike weaved his way through aisle after aisle in search of a pair of running pants to train for his upcoming Warrior Dash adventure race (I will keep you posted on the insanity that is the Warrior Dash as it gets closer to spring.)

With the efficiency of a man on a mission in a department store, Mike grabbed a pair of compression pants and we made our way to the roped off section leading to the cashiers like we were waiting for in line for a ride at Disney.

The crowd of holiday shoppers packed the store, making it nearly impossible to move without pressing up against someone, especially in the checkout lane. With less than nine full shopping days left til Christmas, there were only three registers running, and I suspect this was a calculated ploy to entice shoppers to snatch up those last minute impulse buys. Like peanut M&Ms.

Or wool socks.

Have you ever really looked at a pair of thick wool socks? At first glance, they don't appear as if they'd fit inside a pair of shoes. Like if you put them on, your feet would suddenly be twice as wide and bulge out of your shoes like a pregnant belly after a holiday meal. But put those same wool socks inside a nice pair of winter boots, and well...perfection.

When I was a young child, my dad had a drawer filled with an assortment of thick wool socks. At the time, they seemed enormous. As if my entire leg could be swallowed up by each one, and, in fact, I would pull them on, drawing them all the way up my thighs like a pair of tights. My sister and I used to steal Dad's socks and take them to the freshly polished floors of the large dining room to "skate".

Catching snowflakes

Catching snowflakes

With my mother's worn but well-loved Elvis Presley Christmas album playing on the family stereo, my sister and I would skate around the dining room for hours, watching the snow flakes fly outside the large picture window.

If Dad noticed his socks were vanishing, he never said anything, and if Mom knew, she kept quiet. I suspect it was because we were adding a final shine to the polished floors that never looked better than during a heavy snow.

I picked up a pair of those socks at the sporting goods store tonight. I don't know if I'll ever wear them, or if I'll just leave them in my top drawer as a constant reminder of snowy days and shiny floors.

Until the next time...I'll wrapping the gifts I bought tonight.

it's beginning to feel a lot like Christmas

Cue the music...

I have a tree!

And not just a tree. I have a decorated tree. With lights and ornaments. And I have a wreath on the door. And a few assorted decorations scattered around the house. I think I’ll even hang a few jingle bells from the antlers on the wall. Why not? It’s Christmas!

My terrible funk has miraculously lifted, thanks to my new book deal and all the excitement that brings, and just in time for the spirit of Christmas to work its way under my skin. What does that mean in the grand scheme of things? Well for starters, it means I went shopping today. I picked up some gifts for the kids…a few shiny silver jingle bells for the tree.  Oh, and some socks. It’s getting cold out there.

I even made cookies.

I have a sudden urge to decorate and bake. I might even paint something. Well…maybe not paint. But I’m definitely going to hang wreaths on all the windows, and some lights on the porch.

And more shopping. I have so many to shop for this Christmas.  I’m making a list and checking it twice. Gotta figure out who’s naughty…who’s nice.

And for my readers? Well…I have a few surprises in my stockings for you too! But you’ll have to wait for Christmas.

Ok…maybe I’ll let you peek….next week.

Until the next time…I’ll be at the mall!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.
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Christmas in Nakatomi Plaza

I love this time of year. And I'm especially partial to the classic holiday movies and shows airing on TV all through December. Just yesterday I watched How the Grinch Stole Christmas, A Charlie Brown Christmas, It's a Wonderful Life, and Frosty the Snowman, all thanks to the magic of satellite TV and the DVR. But it's not just the shows from my youth that make me feel all festive and Christmasy. There are a few other movies that make the holiday season for me, as well. And I'm not just talking about the Home Alone movies. No...I'm taking Christmas uptown just a bit.

I'm spending Christmas with John McClain.

When Die Hard originally hit theaters back in 1988, it was a summer blockbuster, but for me, it's a Christmas classic. I mean, what holiday could possibly be complete without blowing up Nakatomi Plaza?

Before he was Professor Snape, Alan Rickman was even more diabolical as the slick Hans Gruber, holding a building full of 80s era yuppies hostage on Christmas Eve. Leave it to Bruce Willis to save the day and deliver Christmas to all. Even now, I find myself humming, "Yipikaye motherfucker," as I bake cookies. And when we're finished watching Die Hard, it's time to pull out Lethal Weapon. Seriously, who doesn't want to find a circa 1985 Mel Gibson under their tree Christmas morning? Sure, the haircut needs to go, but the rest of the package can still pass the test of time. And yeah, I may share the sentiment felt in Danny Glover's signature line, "I'm too old for this shit," far better now than I did back then, but that doesn't take away my enjoyment of the movie. Not one bit.

So while the rest of you may be perfectly content with a little boy and his Red Rider BB gun wreaking havoc on the holidays, I'll be out here dialing it up a notch and looking for plastic explosives, diabolical villains, and hot sweaty guys in my stocking this year.

And sure, I might toss in a few singing rodents while I'm at it. It is Christmas after all.

Until the next time...I'll be dreaming of a hot Christmas.

t'was the blog before Christmas

T’was the blog before Christmas and all through the town

The people were nasty…they all wore a frown

The stores were all packed with these last minute shoppers

With bags filled with perfume, TVs, and corn poppers!

And I was among them as if on a dare

One last present to find…but it wasn’t there

I searched and I scavenged without any luck

So on the day before Christmas I said, “what the fuck!”

“I’ll hop in my car and I’ll head to the store

There might be one place I hadn’t thought of before.”

But I wasn’t alone on my last minute outing

In fact, there’s a mob in the parking lot shouting

“On douchebag, on dickhead, on asshole, on prick.”

Guaranteed language to piss off Saint Nick

So when they open their stockings first thing Christmas morning

They’ll probably find lumps of coal and a warning

Remember that Christmas doesn’t come from the mall

It’s not about presents or shopping at all

I love giving gifts though the holiday season

But remember, gift giving really isn’t the reason

There are so many things that make Christmas for me

And most of those aren’t even under the tree

I wish peace on earth and goodwill toward men

But I just hope the kids let me sleep until ten!

 

Here’s wishing you a very Merry Christmas!

Until the next time…I’ll be spending some much needed time with the family!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.
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santa vomit

Welcome to the Weekly Guest Blogger series

 

Rachel ThompsonTonight’s guest blogger is Rachel Thompson, bestselling author of A Walk in the Snark. For more about Rachel, click on her photo to visit her website.

 

People approach Christmas decorating in three ways.

The bare minimum – a few lights, hang the stockings, perhaps an artificial tree. Easy, done. As long as the fridge is stocked with eggnog and the cupboard has brandy, life is good.

I call that MY KIND OF PEOPLE (of course, I don’t live in that house. More in a moment.)

There’s normal – gets the tree, spends a nice evening decorating along with decking the outside lights, bakes cookies for the neighbors and the kid’s teachers, sends out the Christmas cards the day after Thanksgiving…ya know, everyday people.

I’ve met them. I know they exist. They don’t live in my home, either.

Finally, we have over the top. You’ve seen those homes – blow up Santas, lights that can be seen from space, poinsettia-lined driveways. You enjoy the pretty lights as you drive by and thank the lord you don’t have their electric bill.

I live in Category Number Four: Santa Vomit.

See in my home, Santa has vomited his red and green jolly shit over every square inch of every single surface to the point that we hand out maps if you come visit so you can find your way back out.  

I didn’t know, when I exchanged vows that fateful October nineteen years ago, that the man I’d known for only five months and therefore had yet to spend a Christmas holiday with, was in actuality Buddy the Elf.

Surely it was a Jedi mind trick.

Though I suppose his idea of one our first dates in NYC: “First we’ll make snow angels for two hours, then we’ll go ice skating, then we’ll eat a whole roll of Tollhouse cookie dough as fast as we can, and then we’ll snuggle,” should have been a warning sign.

It’s not just that the ten-to-twelve foot tree (I withhold the penis jokes here ‘cause I did marry the guy and that area is not elf-sized. I know. Mazel Tov) has to be just so. Always a Noble Fir by the way. No other tree exists in our universe. It must be perfect. We visit at least three lots in our small town to be sure we’ve (and by that I mean he) has picked out the most perfect Noble in all the village.

I gird my loins with vodka first. And bring a flask, just in case.

I grew up Jewish. We had a few gifts on the fireplace and candles. Prayer, presents, done. When husband had our first tree delivered and I saw all the mishigas with the ‘watering mechanism’ and the drilling and the needles and…oy. I ran for the brandy and hid in the corner until he found his little jew girl and talked her down with promises of wine and chocolate. And a new Louis Vuitton handbag.

Not much has changed, really.

There are stacks and stacks of fabric-lined (yes, I did just write that) boxes lining every corner of the living room, filled with delicate, hand-blown glass ornaments collected over the years. (My Santa has a special storage unit JUST for the holiday stuff.) As he decorates the tree (placement is key), he has either traditional Christmas music on or one of the three Santa Clause, Deck the Halls, or Christmas Vacation movies on a continuous loop.

There’s also a small tree for the kids. Cause ya know, nobody touches the big tree ornaments. #gasp

One friend came by to pick up her daughter from a playdate and after she lifted her jaw from the floor (that is covered in sleighbells ringing), she said felt inadequate in her own decorating abilities. I said no honey, you’re just normal.

The table full of at least twenty-five Santas he’s collected over the years, staring at me with their beady little eyes, late at night while I’m up, writing, alone.

You might think I’m being harsh. Shut up. You don’t have fifty beady little eyes staring at you as you write this. Then talk to me.

So why is my husband such a Christmas psycho? I could go on and on but I’m just easing you in. I haven’t even discussed our four advent calendars, elf presents, the two Elf on the Shelf(s), the daily crafts and cookie baking (not by me. I repeat, I’m Jewish), and the daily trips to the m…m…mall.

His mom. His mother passed away years before we ever met. She adored Christmas. She went all out, cooked amazing meals, fed all the stray kids who had nowhere to go, and was, from what everybody says, the most generous person they all had ever known. This is his homage to her.

So while I tease him a bit and call it Santa vomit and feel like stabbing myself in the eye if another Santa Clause movie comes on, I indulge the man his collection of Radko ornaments, little villages, trains, and other stuff. He’s making memories for our kids just like his mom did for him.

Now go have a nog and wrap something, would ya?

Merry whatever. 

 

Thank you Rachel…for reminding me why I keep my decorating to a minimum. But I have to admit…in my head my house is an explosion of Christmas. Just like yours.

Merry Christmas everyone!

Until the next time…I’m going to have a nog or whatever and hit the sheets!

the annual christmas tree fight

The perfect tree.

If you celebrate Christmas, you’ve undoubtedly gone on at least one epic quest to find the perfect Christmas tree.  Even if, instead of trekking through the woods with a saw and a sled, you pull yours from a big box and assemble it in the middle of the living room, there had to be that first year when you went on the search for the perfect artificial tree.  My mother, who gave up on real trees somewhere around the same time my parents divorced, bought hers during one of the big “after Christmas” sales. 

This year, I got mine from the parking lot of one of the big box building supply stores. I found it in less than ten minutes time (it was really cold, and I didn’t have a coat.)

But it wasn’t always that way.  Once upon a time, in a childhood far, far away, the annual quest for a Christmas tree was something far more epic. 

Now, in my house, there was none of this “putting up the tree at the end of November” nonsense.  My father made us wait until the weekend closest to December 10th to get a tree. We never complained, and we always had our tree decorated at least two weeks before Christmas.   It also created a level of excitement throughout the first ten days of December that came close to rivaling the holiday itself!

The day was always clearly marked on the calendar.

My mother made us an Advent Calendar with a giant felt Christmas tree.  The calendar pockets were filled with delicate felt decorations…stars, stockings, wrapped packages, a small tree, and Santa, to name a few.  My sister and I woke each morning and raced to the calendar to put the next ornament on the felt tree.  The smaller tree represented the day we would trek out into the woods to find the real tree. 

We lived deep in the country in Western New York State, where nearly every day in December came with near blizzard conditions, and the snow was almost always up to my knees. Mom would bundle us up in snow pants and fur-lined coats until only our eyes were visible to the outside.  But despite the inclement weather…the blowing snow and ice…nothing deterred us as we set out to find that perfect Christmas tree. With saw in hand, and two young daughters in tow, my father would lead my mother into the winter wonderland.

We trudged deeper into the woods, passing tree after imperfect tree, as my mother would reject each one for some reason or other. 

“No…”she would say. “Too short.” or, “Too tall.”

The next tree was, “Too skinny.” And the one after that, “Too fat.”

The more trees we passed, the more frustrated my father would become.

Again and again he would ask, “…what’s wrong with this one?”

“It’s completely bare on one side,” was a frequent reply.

And every time, my father would shake his head and grumble under his breath.

After what seemed like hours, as the sun was getting lower in the sky, we would finally find a tree my mother could agree on. It wasn’t too fat or too skinny. Not too tall or too short. And it wasn’t bare on one side.

“This one!” she would shout.  And before she could change her mind, my father would whip out the saw to cut the tree down.

Now, we were pretty far into the woods at this point, and without a sled to tow the tree back to the car, so my father would drag it behind him, leaving a Christmas tree shaped trail in the snow.  Once the tree was loaded on the roof of the car…tied down with enough twine to secure a dozen trees…we would head home to do the decorating.

My mother pulled out the boxes of ornaments and lights while my father wrestled the tree, first into the iron base, then into the living room.  Mom always seemed to be too distracted with untangling lights to notice as Dad brought the tree in to the room.   

But it wasn’t long before she turned around to see her perfect tree, propped up in its base, and ready for lights.

“This isn’t the tree I picked out!”

“It’s the same tree.” Dad would grumble.

“It’s not the same tree.  Look here…” she pointed to the side of the tree at a very bare patch of limbs. “This has a great big bare spot!”

I think it must have been Christmas amnesia, because every year, after dragging the perfect tree from the woods to the car, it found its way to the living room with a giant bare spot that was invariably up front and center. And every year my mother reacted as if this was something horrible.

This is where the spinning of the tree came in.

My mother would give orders as my father rotated the tree, trying to ensure the bare spot would be hidden from view.  And every year, I listened to, “No, a little more to the right.  Wait…a little to the left. No…go back to the right.  I can still see it.  Can you see it from…try turning it just a little more…I said RIGHT!”

And then Dad, “It’s fine right where it is! No! I won’t turn it just a little more to the left. No! You can’t see the bare spot from this side. I don’t care if you can see if from the bathroom.  Just put more tinsel on it!”

By the time they had the giant colored lights strung, they weren’t speaking at all. Mom finished hanging the ornaments herself, and my sister and I helped toss giant wads of tinsel onto the branches.

The most beautiful tree everIt was always the most beautiful tree ever.

I’ll tell you what…there are some things you look forward to every year, and you don’t even realize you do until you have a chance to miss them.

My husband doesn’t do the tree lights.  He doesn’t hang ornaments. He will go with me to pick a tree and he will quietly stand by and wait until I have chosen the perfect one.

Without a single word.

Somehow I think he’s missing out on the best part of the whole thing.

My mom is coming to town tomorrow. And if I’m lucky, she’ll be in the mood to bake cookies and make some fudge. She’ll undoubtedly scrutinize my Christmas tree with eyes only a mother has…and I’ll just smile when she tells me there’s a great big bare spot in the back of my tree.

Until the next time…I’ll be baking cookies with my mom!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

we wish you a merry christmas

Ok, if you know me at all, you know I avoid talk of politics or religion. And it’s not because I don’t have an opinion…I do. I just prefer to keep my opinions to myself. But once I year, I feel the need to buck the system just a little bit and say out loud how much I hate how politically correct everything has become.

I mean…since when are people afraid to wish you a Merry Christmas?

I found myself in the Hellmouth this evening…otherwise known as the local WalMart (it’s Christmas, that’s why!) As I walked in the door there was a lady greeting everyone. She wore the requisite blue smock along with big smile and a necklace made of vintage Christmas lights. They were the kind my parents used to put on our tree…huge colored lights that burned hot enough to power an easy bake oven.  She smiled and waved, and said, “Hello.” But despite the lighted trees and blow up Santa’s that surrounded her, she never once mentioned Christmas. That wasn’t strange in and of itself.  I don’t necessarily run around town saying Merry Christmas all day long…but I’m not a greeter at WalMart either.  Even the guy ringing the Salvation Army bell avoided the word like it might draw fire from the angry natives. 

So what did I do?

I made the first move. I said, “Merry Christmas!” All happy and cheerful-like.  And like a spell had been broken, these people suddenly smiled widely and proclaimed, “Merry Christmas!” right back to me. It reminded me of years past…way past…when everywhere I went, people were wishing me a Merry Christmas.

I think it’s very sad that something so innocent has become such a political statement. In an attempt to be fair to all religions, they have managed to unfairly muzzle an entire group of people.  People who want nothing more than to send holiday wishes to those who share their holiday. 

Like I said, I’m not trying to make a religious or political statement, but this country was founded on the principle of freedom of religion. I would never prevent another individual from practicing their religion or celebrating their holidays.  It’s time that courtesy was extended to Christmas again.

Until the next time…I’ll be wishing you a Merry Christmas!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.
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you better watch out

It’s December 8th and I still don’t have a Christmas tree.

I know. It’s practically criminal at this point. It’s at the top of my To-do list for tomorrow.  I need to infuse a little holiday cheer into my life.  Sort of like an intravenous dose of holly and mistletoe.  I mean…you know who is watching.

Miracle on 34th StreetNo, not my husband.  Santa! 

And if I expect to get anything other than coal in my stockings this Christmas, I need to stop crying and pouting!  I need to wipe that sour Grinchy frown from my face!  I need to rinse the Bah Humbug out of my mouth!  I need to put on Miracle on 34th street and remind myself Kris Kringle is as real as I want him to be.

I wrote about this last year…

I had a debate with some friends about the age children should be told the truth about Santa. And if Santa is even relevant in this day and age.

I believed in Santa Claus as a child.

It is one of the strongest, most vivid memories I have from childhood. In fact, if I think back, I could probably recall at least one present from each year I believed. Santa Claus is quite simply the definition of the “magic” of childhood. I think I knew the truth long before it was confirmed, but I didn’t want to stop believing, so I held on for as long as I could. I was almost twelve when I finally had the indisputable proof. But because my younger sister still believed, I was able to hold on to the magic for a few more years through her.

And that is what it is all about for me. The magic. It’s something every child should feel and every adult wishes they could recapture.

Finding out there is no Santa Claus is the first official step away from childhood. And it’s a steep step most of us spend the rest of our lives trying to back track. At least a little. Even if it’s just once a year.

While my children were little, because of their belief in Santa Claus, my house was again filled with the magic of Christmas. It wasn’t quite the same as when I was a child, but it is the closest I have ever come to the wonderment from my childhood.

It certainly doesn’t stop me from trying to recapture it each year. I still watch the classic Christmas specials like Rudolph, Frosty, and Charlie Brown. I immerse myself in the twinkling lights, Christmas carols, and frosted cookies until my memories swirl around me like a tornado of snowflakes on Christmas Eve and Santa Claus becomes real again.

When my children asked me, so many years ago, if Santa was real, I told them Santa was as real as we believed he was. I still consider this to be the truth.

Christmas is the one time of year when believing in magic is not just for children… because Santa real if you believe.

And I believe in Santa Claus.

Until the next time…I’ll be making my list and checking in twice (and getting a Christmas tree pronto!)

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

when life gives you lemons

What the hell does that mean anyway? When life gives you lemons?  I might not mind life giving me a few lemons…it’s the whole, “pulling the rug out from under me” thing I have a problem with.  

Welcome to Wednesday’s challenge blog. Or as I like to call it…here’s lemon juice in your eye. Do I sound bitter? (Get it? Lemons? Bitter?) Ok, ok…bad joke.  But seriously…lemons can be far more dangerous than their bright sunny appearance would indicate.  Have you ever been hit in the back of the head by a low flying lemon?  No, me either (Mrs. Doubtfire called it a “Run-by fruiting.”) but I imagine it would hurt!  Or what about a whole lemon tree? Don’t stand under the lemon tree…especially if there happens to be a lightning storm and all that. 

Lemons could kill you!

Ok…so lemons don’t kill people…people kill people. But rub a little lemon juice in the wound and it’s not going to be pretty!

Hey, I’m not saying I don’t like lemons. There’s nothing as refreshing as fresh squeezed lemonade on a hot day. And lemon pie is pretty tasty. I rather like frosted lemon cookies. And I’m even partial to lemon pledge. But trust me when I say…there are way worse things than life giving you a few lemons.  In fact, bring them on. Back the truck up and pour them right here.  I’m ready for some lemons. 

Hey, if I can manage to get a Christmas tree in here, I can hang those damn lemons from the branches!

Until the next time…I’ll be making lemonade!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

the dreaded Christmas card

The dreaded countdown to Christmas

Today is December 5th.  Twenty days before Christmas, and I suddenly feel the pressure bearing down on me like an avalanche. Especially when I can feel the box of Christmas cards staring at me from across the room. I buy a fresh box of cards each year. It’s part of my holiday tradition to meticulously shop for Christmas cards that never get mailed. My pen is perched on top where I left it when I decided I would actually fill them out this year. I really do fill them out most years, but my epic fail comes when I get to the addressing and the mailing.  I have several years’ worth of poignantly written Christmas cards sitting in a box in my closet where they will likely remain for many years to come. That new box will be the exception…this year I’ll get them mailed. I still have a few weeks to go.

And what a crazy few weeks they will be.

I haven’t finished my shopping. And the bunch of bananas I bought to make banana bread may have gone off.  I haven’t made a single batch of cookies yet.

I don’t even have a tree.

That’s right. I don’t have a Christmas tree and it’s going to be December 6th any minute now.  My neighbors all have trees.  Their houses are decorated with lighted wreaths and bows. Even their dogs are wearing festive bandanas and jingle bells. 

My dogs are wearing shredded tissue paper found inside a shoe box. They ripped it themselves.

So this is my plan for tomorrow…

Get a tree. Hang some lights. Bake cookies and bread. Groom the dogs and add jingle bells. Fill out Christmas cards (including addresses and stamps). Oh, and go to a Christmas party in the old neighborhood. 

Ok…maybe I’ll just get a tree.

Until the next time…I’ll be decking a few halls.

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.
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