Every year at Christmas, the overwhelming, unceasing rush to provide more, more, more strikes me in the heart. When did more start to equal better? Sometimes, more can't cut it. Sometimes...sometimes the best gift is the gift of service to others.
Christmas 1960.
A bleak, un-Christmasy year. My mother died at the end of May in an
automobile accident in the midst of our move to Gary, Indiana where we
were strangers. We had family there but I felt disconnected and lonely.
It wasn’t Christmas without my mother and our own family rituals. I did
not like snow and cold weather when it wasn’t a novelty. I didn’t like
the schools. I didn’t like the teachers or neighbors. Most of all I
didn’t like the kids that made fun of my soft, gentle Arizona accent.
My
grandmother was living with us, keeping the house together, cooking and
cleaning. She noticed that I felt left out. One day, she gave me a
miracle. It was the miracle of belonging.
She
invited me into her bedroom and shut the door. On her bed, heaps of
wrapping paper, bows and boxes overflowed. Shopping bags on the floor
bulged with any number of secrets and surprises.
“I
need a helper,” she confided, “so that I will be ready for Christmas,
but it must be a very special helper—one who can keep secrets no matter
what the cost. Would you like to be my helper?”
My
heart squeezed tight within my chest. Absolutely positively! She
patiently taught me how to wrap presents, cut the paper, miter the
corners, remove the price tags, mark the names on the gift tags… Looking
back, I know she could have wrapped them in half the time it took to
teach me, but oh! what a gift she gave me when she trusted me to keep
her secrets. For several years, on and off, I wrapped her Christmas
gifts. It was my contribution. It meant that I belonged.
Grandmother
is gone now. Every Christmas as I wrap presents, I use every skill that
she taught me, including her most important one: to look around and
notice the person on the fringes of the family celebration and draw them
into the heart of the family by allowing them a “special”
responsibility, the gift of being needed.
As
my children grew up, each traveled through the “lonelies”—times when
they were on the outside looking in. I tried to take care to ask them to
serve in a “special” capacity. Individually, they decorated the tree or
house, wrapped presents, shopped for the whole family, baked cookies,
assembled toys that were labeled “no assembly required.” Each year
Grandmother’s legacy lingers in the memory and in the heart.
A miracle.
What a lovely story. How wonderful!
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