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Month: December 2025

Have a Blessed Christmas

I remember the year I noticed people, mostly my Christian friends, start telling me to have a “blessed” Christmas instead of a “merry” one. It was about five years after my first husband had died. The message was clear and not in opposition to my desires, but I thought to myself. Great! I’m finally able to hold back my tears and enjoy the season, and now you want me to put aside my merriness?

I wanted to lean in on the true meaning of Christmas, for my three children and me. But I’d also decided to work longer than usual shifts and pick up a few more hours as a registered nurse to have a little extra cash for an extra special Christmas. I wanted my son and two daughters to have everything the other kids (with two parents) would have under their trees and in their stockings.

I shopped … for weeks. And I didn’t drop. I was a pro. Incidentally, that was about the time store clerks were instructed to say “Happy Holidays.”

And it was a beautiful tree with plenty of presents. Everything on every list lined out. I managed not to miss a single Christmas program. I had cleaned and decorated into the late night hours and only complained a little. Those were the days when political correctness was a newer thing, but I was a rebel and proud of it.

I said “Merry Christmas” to the clerks I encountered, people at church, to the mailman and my neighbors. I mailed “Merry” Christmas Cards to relatives and friends without giving thought to the price of stamps. Patients and their families gifted me with candy and trinkets of appreciation. I thanked them with a “Merry Christmas to you as well.” With all the hustle and bustle, I still managed to watch some Christmas movies. I didn’t miss a church service. I practiced and sang with the church choir and worked on children’s programs. I baked cookies.

A homemade fruitcake flopped. The kids hated it, but that was only reason to laugh and be merry with co-workers.

I knew that my five-year-old would be the first to wake me, and I was correct. I’d planned well, so that rifling through their stockings would be distraction enough to keep them away from their wrapped presents so that I could get cinnamon rolls started in the oven.

It was a wonderful life—really wonderful.

Brunch at Grandma’s house wouldn’t be until 10am and the cinnamon rolls were ready. The table was set with paper plates, but we had matching napkins and a fresh, wreath centerpiece with berry and pinecones and red bows.

There were five plates on the table when there were only four of us. A mistake on my part.

“That’s for me,” I’m fairly sure it was my thirteen-year-old son who said that. “I get the extra cinnamon roll.” Teasing, but he caused the girls to cry.

“No,” I said. “It’s just an empty plate.”

“It’s for Santa,” the youngest said, although she already knew that Santa was a ruse. I was only waiting for her to admit she knew before giving the older two permission to speak.

But the empty plate continued, nagging me.

I’d been blessed, being able to provide as a single mom, and preparing for this day had been fun and fulfilling, but that empty plate reminded me of who was missing.

“It’s for Jesus!” I said. 

We had some discussion about why I didn’t give Jesus a glass of milk and a napkin, and why we’d have an extra plate without an extra chair. I wished I had prepared for that blessed Christmas people were talking about and planned that extra plate as an object lesson, but I hadn’t.

The gifts called with the last bites cinnamon rolls, and we went back to the Christmas tree to gorge in another way. I don’t recall which of my daughters noticed, but one of them did, and jumped from the floor to give me a hug. “Mom! I got everything on my list!”

Later on, at Grandma and Grandpa’s house, we enjoyed a full spread brunch. Then Grandma made us wait for presents until she’d read the story of the first Christmas. She always read it straight out of Luke 2, the King James Version. Her living room was packed, per usual, with presents and people of all ages. (Some of you with larger families know exactly what I mean.)

Grandma’s reading made everyone, from the youngest child to Grandpa, listen. Of course, I can’t say what they were all thinking, but Grandma’s voice as she read that story is something most of us won’t forget.

It was a wonderful life—a really wonderful and merry Christmas.

I had trouble falling asleep that night. If it weren’t for that empty plate! How could I have made such a stupid mistake? I reviewed the events of the holiday over and over and believed my efforts to block a sullen mood had been effective. I fell asleep with tears and woke with them. That was the first Christmas I did not mention Jack’s name or hear it said. I felt guilty for that, and I grieved for days after.

And so that brings me back to the beginning of this article—the title. Now that the kids are grown and seldom make it home for the holidays, I’m touched to have someone wish me a blessed Christmas. Merriness isn’t something we can plan. Why … the other day, I told a grocery store clerk to “Have a blessed Christmas.” She looked at me as though I had shoplifted her merriness. She’ll get over it.

I’d been in her line previously, during the week before Thanksgiving. I’d asked her how her day was going and she mentioned working longer hours and extra shifts, and that her young son was sick.

“Sorry to hear that. I was a single mom for many years, so I know how you feel. You need the money and your kid needs you.”

She nodded and sighed.

“I’ll be praying for you.” I held bills in my hand, the change she had just handed me, and would have left her a hefty tip, but the system would punish her for accepting it.

And I am still praying for that grocery store clerk. I mean it. I want her to have a blessed Christmas. I want her to have a blessed life. And I plan on God leading me through her check-out lane again, and again.

Lord, I want to be one of those people who blesses her by pointing her to the giver of every blessing.

 “When he saw the crowds, he went up on the mountain, and after he sat down, his disciples came to him.”

            Lord, I want to be one of those disciples who is willing to follow you up the mountain and bring someone with me.

“Then he began to teach them, saying:

‘Blessed are the poor in spirit,
for the kingdom of heaven is theirs.
Blessed are those who mourn,
for they will be comforted.
Blessed are the humble,
for they will inherit the earth.
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness,
for they will be filled.
Blessed are the merciful,
for they will be shown mercy.
Blessed are the pure in heart,
for they will see God.
Blessed are the peacemakers,
for they will be called sons of God.
Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness,
for the kingdom of heaven is theirs.

You are blessed when they insult you and persecute you and falsely say every kind of evil against you because of me. Be glad and rejoice, because your reward is great in heaven. For that is how they persecuted the prophets who were before you.’” (Matthew 5:1-12, CSB).

So tell me to have a “Blessed Christmas.” You can wish me a “Merry Christmas.” And I won’t judge you if you say to me “Happy Holidays.” But who will challenge me and spur me on—to keep following Jesus, and to bless someone by bringing them with me?

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My Unmagical Day

There’s nothing magical about Christmas. Now, before you start thinking of names to call me, or think me rude and depressed, yes, I love seeing lights twinkle and candles flicker. I love the season, even though I also get melancholy, even sad, and some days wish we could skip it all and jump right into the new year.

I hear others repeat that same sentiment. Life circumstances, good and bad, seem to boil over at Christmas time. We all have longings and memories that beg to steal our joy. For many of us, that battle repeats during the winter holidays. Just from what I hear from friends and know of my own experience, no matter how hard we try to avoid “the” enemy, “he” shows up … if not for months and weeks, then days at time, or for a little while.

I can fortify myself, prepare for the season and do all the recommended procedures, but the melancholy comes.

My melancholy came last night. A suspicious-looking man stood in a shadow, wearing a dark hoodie that covered most of his face. He stared at me as I walked out of the grocery store. I hurried to get in and start the car. The click of doors locking gave me a modicum of safety when the man left the shadow to walk in my direction. I turned the radio on, feeling ridiculous and recalling my husband’s request that I “stay in tonight” and do my shopping in the morning.

Christmas music from a Christian station took the edge off, and seeing the man in my rearview mirror gave me some calm, so I tried to sing along. I had a boat-load of groceries in the trunk of my car. Rain splattered on my windshield when I would rather have had snow, but that wasn’t it. Tonight was as good a night as any for melancholy.

I drove from the parking lot, wanting to sing. Instead, I began to tear. By the very first stoplight, I was crying and talking to Jesus, letting Him know how hard “all this” was on me. I can’t do it. More than nine years! Isn’t that long enough? It’s Christmas!

You see, I have a daughter—a grown-up, gave me grandchildren and then took them away—prodigal daughter. I have good reason to cry, Lord, but I want not to. Not again. Do something for me. With me. In me. I need you. The rain blurred my view, and tears blurred my vision, but I wiped my eyes with the back of my glove and turned on the wipers.

My melancholy came just that fast. Typical, and I wonder if it weren’t for the loss of relationship with my daughter and grandchildren, would melancholy come at all. This I know: The loss of that relationship appears permanent. Nine years! And it has absolutely nothing to do with the season. The season merely accentuates it. Wait! It may only have been nine years, but this is the tenth Christmas.

I did the math. I tapped out the years on the steering wheel as if being exact made a difference. That’s something I do. I wish that I’m wrong. Ten is a much bigger number when there are 364 days and nights involved between each of those Christmas’. The math is so simple it troubles me. I wish this estrangement were about forgiveness. 70 times 7 is a much smaller number so that any debt, on either or both sides, should have been fully paid by now. I can’t say what I feel when the melancholy lands on me, except that it’s heavy and it hurts, and that I can’t swallow, or breathe for a while. And there are always tears. Copious tears. It must not be about forgiveness.

Then what is it? Why are you being so cruel? My thought was half self-talk to my daughter and half prayer.

I pulled into the garage, determined that my crying would stop. Melancholy is contagious. I’m terrible at stoic, but pulled it off last night, determined not to share tears over the same old story this year, I spoke to the backside of his recliner. “Hello-oh. I’m ho-ome.”

He started to get up. “I’ve got this. Only a couple of trips. You hungry?”

“Not really.”

“Well, I’m craving comfort soup, so I’m going to get some veggie beef soup started before I start baking. I’ll tell you when it’s ready.”

“Don’t cook for me,” he said. “I’ll make a sandwich later.”

I plopped the chopped beef into my heavy-duty, ten quart stock pot. (I paid seventy or eighty dollars for that thing twenty-five or thirty years ago, and using it makes everything taste better.)

I yelled from the pantry toward the television in the living room. “Do we have onions? I don’t see onions.”

“They weren’t on the list when I shopped on Monday.” Roger’s voice reminded me, like spouses do for each other, of another failing.

I said to myself, “No onions then.” I lit the oven to 350° and lined up the ingredients for my soup, minus the onion.

The soup hadn’t started to boil before the first batch of cookie dough was ready. The warning not to eat raw cookie dough was printed in bold on the recipe, but I scraped the bowl and licked the spoon anyway. What’s a little salmonella on top of what I’m already feeling?

I set the timer and sighed over a sink full of dirty bowls and utensils. 8-10 minutes. Long enough to wash the dishes, but not long enough to sit and rest, so I cut open a package of chocolate kisses and started unwrapping the little treats, having them ready to press into hot-from-the-oven cookies. I didn’t sneak even one of those chocolate drops. My attitude deserved the punishment.

Six dozen cookies (two dozen at a time) had my kitchen smelling like heaven, and I was feeling somewhat better. I scooped up a small bowl of soup that smelled almost as yummy and offered it to Roger.

“Too hot,” he said as he sat the bowl on his placemat. “I’ll eat it later.”

I served myself a bigger bowl and ate until all that was left was the red stain from the tomatoes. Roger’s soup sat there, still chillin’, and he sat in front of the television. Ours is an exciting life, but we can handle only so much after 7pm. Yep. That happens every year when daylight savings time robs us of daylight. Someone needs to fix that. Why should we wait until Easter to get our energy back?

I scrambled to find disposable containers with room enough for six dozen cookies, and then ran out of the heavy duty, long roll, aluminum foil needed to cover them. Uggh! There might have been more on the top shelf of the pantry, but that would require the step ladder … also in the pantry, but what a nuisance. I “made do” as my mother would say, by adding plastic wrap that rebelled and clung only where I didn’t want it to. I rolled my eyes and “rolled with the flow” as no one has said since the mid-seventies. Or is that “roll with the punches?” Look it up and let me know if you have the energy or the need to correct me. I told you this was an unmagical day.

Done. Well almost done, except the pot of soup needing to cool before filling single-serving containers with leftovers and putting them into the freezer. Wow! Five meals for the two of us for less than the price of one dinner out. I wanted to feel proud, but my melancholy would not allow it.

Roger said, when I asked about the soup, that it was “good,” and he smiled as he lifted the stock pot and tipped it for me to get the last bits of veggies and beef into the freezer containers. I joined him in the living room where he resumed watching You Tube—something to do with car engines, so I checked my phone. One friend complaining that her son … something I shouldn’t repeat here, although she published it on Facebook.

Text messages. One friend was back in the ER, interrupting what had been a fairly uneventful recovery after major surgery. Another friend warned of slick roads. A friend who had missed a fun outing the night before informed us that her headache was somewhat better. And there was more added to our prayer chain. I scrolled backward to make sure I hadn’t missed any prayer requests, and noted that it had been a few days since I’d heard anything about a premature baby that had yet to spend a Christmas at home with her family. We’ve been praying for many weeks … and had some of those prayers answered miraculously. Of course we weren’t the only ones praying, but we were blessed to have been invited into those prayers.

The day was almost gone and had lived up to my low expectations.

But then … another text. Something that happens every year, but not usually to one of your friends or family members. It was one of those stories that happens in winter where a furnace clogs or breaks somehow, and gas fumes accumulate, putting lives at stake without the occupants of a home being aware. People die.

Not this time. “Praise be to God!” my friend reported. She and her grandson had arrived at her daughter’s house and smelled the noxious fumes even before they entered the home. Lives were saved, according to the utility worker who responded to the call. “They wouldn’t have lived through the night with this level of carbon monoxide.”

There was more to her story, but it’s hers to tell. Anyway, I cried before I finished reading her text. I read it again. Gotta make sure I’ve got this right.

“Roger,” I said. I continued even when he didn’t turn to face me. “(My friend’s name) arrived to smell gas at her daughter’s house. She smelled is as soon as she opened her car door. It was really strong, super strong when they opened the door. They got the furnace turned off right away and let fresh air in the house.” I read the rest of the text aloud.

Roger and I talked a bit. I got a husbandly lesson and reminder of what to do in such a situation while my face was wet with tears. I really don’t want anyone to get the wrong impression of my husband. He’s the best. I suppose other husband’s would have responded similarly. Plus, the living room was lit only by the television and the Christmas tree, and I was trying to hide my tears with a normal voice.

“Who did you say?”

He hadn’t started listening to me until a sentence or two in, and I needed to repeat. I do the same to him, so there’s no complaint here.

And, just like that, my melancholy was gone. Tears flowed heavier, but my heart was lighter. Filled. With gratitude and praise. Thank you, Jesus, for being there, for hearing and knowing our needs before we pray and for coming when we call your name. You are so good.

“We can try to find a movie,” Roger said.

I reached for a tissue from the box on the small table between us. “That’s okay. Finish your video. I need to review my lesson for Sunday.”

Experience tells me that it’s seldom just one thing that brings on my Christmas melancholy. Too little sleep. Too much busyness, even the best kind of busyness. When every other area of my life is going well, there is still something/someone missing. Perhaps it’s when I learn how someone else is “doing” Christmas and begin to compare notes. It can also be a song, a hug from a friend or witnessing a kindness or generosity that would not happen except for the season. My daughter has made herself and her children unavailable for things like that from me and most of our family, making it easy for my melancholy mood to slip in and steal a chunk of joy.

And that man I judged suspicious was probably hiding his face from the cold wind.

This will be the tenth Christmas of my family not being together. And I’m not talking location. One of my kids lives overseas and another lives out east. Togetherness does not require being under the same roof. It’s good that sadness doesn’t need to be our loudest emotion. I’ve experienced some best-ever Christmas’ since my daughter stormed out of our home. She thinks she stormed out of our lives, but that won’t happen. Ever.

Last night was nothing magical, but my melancholy ended in less than a couple of hours, without needing Roger’s shoulder. The smell of fresh-baked Christmas cookies and my tummy comforted with hot beef and veggie soup didn’t do it. That text from my friend is what started the turn in my mood. It was her story on my mind as I opened my Bible.

 “And so it was, that, while they were there, the days were accomplished that she should be delivered.” (Luke 2:6, KJV).

“And so it was …” I anticipated the rest of that verse, Recited it, and oh how that lifted my attitude. God’s powerful and eternal story spoke to me again. I kept reading. Every time I’ve heard that chapter read or read it myself, there is a certain tone of voice that calms me and comforts me. Again, it’s not magical or mystical. Luke did the storytelling, but the word of God speaks. I don’t care that it’s Charlie Brown who does the reciting, that story speaks to me whatever my current circumstance.

  • This is a moment in time, a bump in the road. Settle down.
  • Stay with me, right here for a while. Don’t be in such a hurry. I’m taking you to a finer place. I’m doing things that you can’t see and won’t realize for a while.
  • I’ll accomplish every good thing I’ve started in you. And by the way, you cannot fathom the good I’ve already done, or how great my finish will be.
  • I promised that you’d be delivered. Wait. Anticipate and see.

Now, Jesus didn’t say those words to me, aloud or otherwise, but our encounter left me knowing they were true. Nothing magical. Far better than magic … I encountered the Living God. Jesus is but one of His names.

I woke to my alarm this morning, two hours earlier than usual. I had cookies to deliver. Coat and gloves, not cold enough to need a scarf, but the sun hid behind some pretty thick clouds. Dreary is how I describe days like today.

I went to the church with my cookies and was back in less than twenty minutes. My car barely had time to get warm. Roger was still asleep and those dirty bowls and utensils were still in the sink. My phone says its 45°and Sunny in Pekin, IL, and sunny is spelled with a capital S. We must be living on the wrong side of town because it’s been cloudy the entire time it’s taken me to write this. But we have homemade soup ready to be microwaved when it’s time for lunch, and I had tucked a few cookies away last night for safe from Roger keeping.

My melancholy gone, it wanted to return. My phone had something to do with that, but I sat in my recliner and picked up my Bible for what I’ve come to know as a prompt care visit. No appointment necessary.

 “For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.” (Isaiah 9:6, KJV).

There’s nothing magical about Christmas. But the lights and sights and sounds of Christmas eventually point me to Jesus, my Wonderful counselor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father and The Prince of Peace. He is all those things to me, and more.

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Precious Peace

(I feel I may have missed the mark by using rhyme (imperfectly) for this week’s writer’s word prompt that was posted on Monday, By the way, it’s supposed to be a spiritual word – one that prompts thought and writing on spiritual things. But rather than offer up a bounty of excuses, I’ll trust you to give me some grace. Until next week, when perhaps, depending on the spiritual word prompt our writing group is assigned, I’ll have a story for you.)

“Paint a word picture of peace,” she said.

“Pull it from one of the psalms.”

I pondered and prayed,

painstakingly paid,

‘til my tears and my patience were gone.  

My laptop then lost all its power.

A blank page pressed hard on my brain.

At the pantry I pause.

Pasta, pancakes, bear claws.

Now, my diet postponed once again.

Plump pillow, it called with pure passion.

I was prompted and promised “good rest.”

But that blank page poked fun.

“Not even one pun?”

That P word woke me. What a pest!

Well, at least she didn’t choose “patience.”

The P word she posts could be worse.

The sky hints of pre-dawn,

I’ve no words to pass on.

So, I plead, “Lord, prime me with verse.”

In Psalm 119 we’re assured.

Read it. Learn how peace is procured.

In scripture it’s plain.

As through clear window pane.

Peace. I’m glad precious peace was her word.

Psalm 119:165: “Abundant peace belongs to those who love your instruction; nothing makes them stumble.”

And you thought, perhaps hoped, I’d be finished.

But I’ve P words creating loud noise.

Puppies, prove, pretty pansies

Pithy proverbs

Pen and paper. And what about poise?

Now, rhyming plagues me more than some.

Silly poems prompt thought and are fun.

One pointed idea.

Not the whole panacea.

Limericks push to get writing done.

But rhyming can be problematic.

It can pick up a thought and replace …

the purpose/intent of the poet …

with plentiful prose, but wrong pace.

Rhyming does please me, the writer.

I purpose that it might annoy you.

Put the pieces together. Start planning.

Your turn.

Next week’s letter is Q!

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A Devilish Tool

I’ve been caught by this tool of the devil,

and suppose that you might have been too.

It sneaks through our thoughts to our actions,

then soon drives many things that we do.

As a sin, it gets little attention.

It can be really hard to ID,

but there’s evidence of its destruction

in everyone’s family tree.

As children, we might have been scolded,

without hearing this sin called by name.

Maybe that’s why there’s so much frustration

when we want what another has gained.

Have you guessed which of the commandments?

Is it two, four, six, eight or ten?

Here’s a clue:  This tool of the devil

makes us feel that we always must win.

We call it the big, green-eyed monster,

and preach without offering grace.

Yet, when we spend time with the mirror,

we see plenty of green on our face.

The haughty and proud deny envy,

but if they would only think twice,

Beyond their material possessions,

would more skill or influence be nice?

You won’t hear me saying, “It’s easy.”

Instead, hear my cry, “Help me, Lord!”

I use up my time and my wages,

and then want what another has stored.

When we do harbor envy or covet,

it’s disguised rather well as a need.

Our fam’ly and friends might not see it,

but God knows our pride and our greed.

He said to us, “Thou shalt not covet,”

not to punish, withhold or control.

For each of us personalized blessings.

More than needs, his abundance can flow.

Help us run from the good and the better,

and to chase after all of God’s best.

Then His goodness should pour out on others.

Not hoarded. Not owned as a quest.

Oh, the list could go on – what we covet.

Some drag this sad sin to the grave.

Where they want for the peace and contentment

of others, forgiven and saved.

The last of the Ten Commandments

should never be seen as the least.

When we fail to obey the nine others,

could covetous be the true beast?

So I ask of the Lord to reveal it

when my discontent gets in His way.

I can rest in His tender reminder.

It’s something like this that I pray:

Now I lay me down to sleep.

I trust the Jones’ you will keep.

If all my stuff someone should take,

I’ll be content when I awake.

Thanks for your wise and clear commands.

Thanks for your strength and guiding hands.

Whatever circumstance I find,

help me not want for what’s not mine.

Help me to pray this every day,

for envy has a sneaky way.

I pray your mercy on this fool.

Help me avoid this devilish tool.

( I wrote this rhyming poem way back in 2013, before I knew how fulfilling it is to “play” with words. I’ve been thinking all week that I need to revisit what I started back then, and write the four more poems needed to include all of the 10 Commandments. The last 6 of the 10 are complete, but as you can imagine, commandments 1-4 lend themselves to a deeper respect and caution. I’ve started them, and then deleted them, having been unable to capture the significance of those commandments and do it in rhyme. Anyway … my goal in this particular poem is to draw the reader in with rhymes, and then bring them to ponder how disregarding and disobeying this 10th commandment might be a bigger problem than we think. And by the way, I can’t deny this poem as “autobiographical.” Even as I proofread before posting, the Lord revealed to me where my envy has tarnished an otherwise friendly relationship. I owe someone … probably more than one someone … an apology and another chance. Envy does have a sneaky way, and it is a favored tool of the devil. )

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