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Loving the Holiday Season
By Fay A. Klingler
Holidays,
specifically Thanksgiving and Christmas, are joyous
for some individuals and heartaches for others. As grandparents,
relationships, time, and/or finances hit the center
of and often determine the direction of those feelings.
For me, it’s numbers. I mean my family has grown to
such a size that I have difficulty accomplishing what
I want and am accustomed to doing just because there
are now so many people involved. Although I still do
a lot of “planning and preparing,” I’ve been forced
into doing far more “adapting.”
Holiday
events don’t start with the invitations. They start
with your attitude. The most important gift you can
give to your family for the holidays is an emotionally
healthy attitude. Some years I’ve felt really “put upon”
by my family. I mean I’ve done all the work preparing
meals and gifts while they just come and eat and visit.
But when I look back on it, I realize I played the martyrs
role. I didn’t ask them for help, and I didn’t even
accept it when it was offered. So it wasn’t that they
“put upon” me; I did it to myself. Being a tiny bit
wiser now, I try to think ahead about my attitude and
what I want to see happen for my family and for me when
I plan a holiday event.
I
start with feelings. I ask myself, “What do I hope people
will feel when they come to this event?” Then I ask,
“How do I want to feel when they leave?” If my goal
is for them to feel welcome, accepted, and loved, and
for me to feel happy and fulfilled, then I have to prepare
my attitude and my activity to accomplish that. Both
my body language and my mouth must convey a feeling
of safety to those who choose to attend.
Sometimes
the event is focused on the grandchildren having fun.
So I plan numerous activities that involve them. Other
times I focus on the adults, either an activity I think
they would enjoy together or my not “putting upon” them
so they have time to relax and just visit with each
other. At times my goal has been for us to work together
and feel the natural resulting camaraderie. There is
no “only” way to handle the holidays, and no two years
necessarily have to be handled the same. But if I want
to facilitate the well-being and happiness of my family,
one thing is sure. My attitude will make all the difference.
In
planning your events, consider the following:
- How much energy can you provide?
- How much time can you invest?
- How much money can you use?
- Will the way this event is handled become a tradition?
- How many people should you expect?
- Where can you hold this event?
- What date works best for the most people?
- What time?
- How should you extend your invitations — phone
calls, e-mails, written letters?
- How much advance notice will your family need?
- What specific activities do you want?
Holiday
events can be successful in many ways. Consider possible
options:
- Make food assignments to family members, limiting
what you are providing to the home and the main course
or dessert.
- Provide your home for the cooking, a day ahead
and just hours before the event, where family members
can prepare their food assignments.
- Ask the strong-backed family members to come early
and set up the tables and furniture.
- Ask mothers to bring an activity to share with
the grandchildren.
- Plan an open house where family members come and
go throughout the afternoon.
- Have each of your extended families prepare and
serve a portion of the meal at their home, having
the entire family travel car-caravan fashion from
one home to the other.
- Instead of the traditional main meal, plan a holiday
breakfast, brunch, or evening, in-home movie snack.
- Allow one of your children to plan and host the
holiday event for the family at his or her home.
- When your numbers are small enough, consider inviting
neighbors or friends.
Look
around you; perhaps there is a young family who cannot
afford to travel to be with grandparents this season.
Or you may find grandparents who do not have the means
to travel to be with their children. One year we invited
an elderly gentleman to join us for Thanksgiving. Jim
Sherman was in his 90s, and my husband and I were his
home teachers. Jim brought his saw. In his hands, that
tool was the most remarkable music instrument. He knew
hymns he could play and sing by heart. We listened in
awe to the sweet melodies. Then he delighted some members
of our family by instructing them how to play the tunes
on his saw.
It’s
a cliché to say it, but it is true; all families are
busy. So giving your family members enough notice helps
to see more in attendance. However, because of in-laws,
illness, finances, or other reasons, no matter how close
your family is, there might be members who are unable
to attend. Instead of berating those who do not come,
focus on understanding their reasons and point of view
and on being grateful for those who do attend.
In
my last column I wrote about our family’s annual trick-or-treat
party. In preparation for that event, I send out by
snail mail a written invitation. Traditionally, I include
the dates, locations, and times for the Thanksgiving
and Christmas events. Every other year our family enjoys
a slumber party in July. In the trick-or-treat party
invitation I also introduce the theme of the upcoming
slumber party and the specific date so families can
begin to organize their vacation schedules to attend.
The location is always our home, and the traditional
date is around July 4. I follow up later with more specifics
about the event.
Traditional
dates, foods, and activities can add to the warmth and
expectation of happy times. One family always uses a
specific tablecloth for their Thanksgiving meal. Each
year new members of the family sign in permanent ink
their signatures on the tablecloth. Some families traditionally
give each member a turn at Thanksgiving to tell something
specific they are grateful for.
We
have a tradition at Christmas. Each year I make homemade
chicken enchiladas for our family meal. We used to have
a Christmas piñata for the children. (This is part of
the “adapting” feature of my grandparenting life!) Now
because of the numbers and because the grandchildren
have grown and consequently have considerably more muscle
hitting the bat into the swaying piñata, this activity
has been suspended. Perhaps we’ll pick it up again when
we have great-grandchildren!
This
year I want to share something special with my family
for Thanksgiving. My visiting teacher came last night
and mentioned a magnet note that she has on her refrigerator.
The note’s message is taken from the comments of Lucy
Mack Smith, mother of the Prophet Joseph Smith. I was
grateful for my visiting teacher’s sharing. That note
was exactly what I needed. Today I began preparing that
message on a canvas sheet to give to each of our children.

If you cherish your loved ones, they
will have cherished memories of the holidays they spent
with you.
What
do I hope people will feel when they come to Thanksgiving
dinner this year?
“Let
us cherish, watch over, and comfort one another that we may all
sit down in heaven together.”
|
| About
the Author: |
| 
Fay A. Klingler
loves having fun and close ties with her children and grandchildren.
Her book The LDS Grandparents’ Idea Book was a
bestseller for Deseret Book a few years ago and is now reprinted
and available under a new cover by Spring Creek Book Company.
Fay and her husband, Larry
N. Klingler, have twelve children and twenty-four grandchildren
in their blended family. They reside in Sandy, Utah.
Fay’s other publications include
Shattered: Six Steps from Betrayal to Recovery; Daughter’s
of God, You Have What It Takes; My Magnificent Mountain;
The Complete Guide to Woman’s Time; Our New Baby; and A
Mother’s Journal. |
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