T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
855.1 | It Works For Us. | LJOHUB::HEERMANCE | Belly Aching on an Empty Stomach | Thu Dec 17 1992 10:06 | 6 |
| Every Christmas I buy my father an ungodly number of bright yellow
pinnacle 707 golf balls and a bottle of whiskey. During the Spring
and Summer he sends the balls to a watery grave, comes home bitching,
and has a drink.
Martin
|
855.2 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Even if, even if... | Thu Dec 17 1992 10:09 | 4 |
| My father was usually designated carver, not just at Christmas, but
also on Sundays. I can't think of anything else...
andrew
|
855.3 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Thu Dec 17 1992 10:36 | 8 |
|
The women would prepare the meal and serve it, afterwords, the men
would do the dishes, serve dessert. Later on in the evening my mother
insisted on all of us gathering around the organ and sing christmas
charols(sp). I stunk:-)
David
|
855.4 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | somewhere on a desert highway | Thu Dec 17 1992 10:38 | 8 |
| Men are supposed to take care of buying the Xmas tree, getting it home
somehow (tied to the roof of the car or whatever), and then they should
be responsible for setting it up. After this undesirable job is done,
the men should leave and let the women decorate it. This is what I was
raised to believe and I still think this is how it should be done.
Lorna
|
855.5 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | the power of surrender | Thu Dec 17 1992 10:44 | 10 |
|
My father was always the one we'd decorate the tree with - a certain
order to the stringing of the lights, checking bulbs, replacing them,
then the tinsel and/or icicles. Then the ornaments, hung while the
tree lights were on and the room was dark, so we could so how they
could best catch the light, and balance with other ornaments.
Afterwards, we'd call my mother down and her eyes would sparkle.
-Jody
|
855.6 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Thu Dec 17 1992 10:46 | 10 |
|
-1
We always had this crummy aluminum Christmas tree that we( the males)
would have to put up. I still remember sticking every one of the
branches into the little holes in the main trunk of the tree .. I swore
at age 12 " When I am on my on I will always use a real tree."
David
|
855.7 | | IAMOK::KELLY | Fantasies are free | Thu Dec 17 1992 11:14 | 4 |
| Daddy and bro set up tree, Daddy carved main meat, Mom did all
shopping (but Daddy doing is own last 5 years or so), Daddy do
the wrapping and tags, Daddy, bro, uncle and gramps go into
separate room to tell dirty jokes...
|
855.8 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | somewhere on a desert highway | Thu Dec 17 1992 11:15 | 5 |
| re .5, that's right. I forgot. The men are supposed to put the lights
on the tree, too. Then, the women decorate it. :-)
Lorna
|
855.9 | Hey, I LIKE our silver tree! | ASDG::FOSTER | radical moderate | Thu Dec 17 1992 11:21 | 15 |
|
Gee, I *love* our old aluminum tree. Dad got custody of it when mom and
dad split... or else we dragged it over to his apartment after our
first Christmas as a fragmented family. We used to put satin balls on
it. No lights: it didn't need any.
I loved pulling each aluminum branch out of the green wrapper and
placing into the rod. Kinda like making the tree. And I didn't even
mind taking it back down again. Its definitely a lot easier to
dismantle than our big green fake tree which we would put lights and
tinsel and popcorn and decorations on. Detinseling a tree is a PAIN!
Dad still puts up the silver tree. Wouldn't seem like Christmas if it
were gone. That tree is well over 20 years old; I think of it as a
tradition.
|
855.10 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ultimus Mohicanorum | Thu Dec 17 1992 12:00 | 16 |
| The men in my family have always been the ones to procure, set up, and
enlighten the tree. (Other than for a few years in south Florida, when
real trees were entirely without our budget and invariably bone dry
anyway, we've always had the real ones. Fake ones don't smell right.)
My wife and I usually go together to get the tree, but I make the
decision, load the thing on the car, and so on. Why do I make the
decision? Because one year we cut our own tree. Barbara saw a truly
*lovely* full tree and, over my objections about its size, required me
to cut it. We have 10-foot ceilings. I had to cut 4 feet off the tree
to get it into the house... Since then she won't pick the tree.
The men have been the designated bird carvers; however, I am arranging
that we will not have a bird to be carved this year...
-dick
|
855.11 | it was always the man's job to put the lights on | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu Dec 17 1992 13:20 | 7 |
| There is a 16 foot tree in our front yard. I've been putting lights on
it since it was 6 feet tall. It's my job and just don't try and tell
me a woman could do it as well. I've seen trees that women put the
light on. :-) Actually not too many men put the lights on right on an
outdoor tree anymore.
Alfred
|
855.12 | too tall too | TALLIS::PARADIS | There's a feature in my soup! | Thu Dec 17 1992 14:33 | 23 |
| Re: .10 (14-foot-tall tree in a 10-foot house...)
I have my own too-tall-tree story I like to tell... (hit 'n' if you've
heard it already...)
My brother's birthday is Dec. 21. For many years my parents refused
to get a tree until after his birthday (to avoid any holiday
confusion). And they always got real trees. Well, one year they
waited until Dec. 23, and the selection was... shall we say...
rather picked over. The only one left was an 10-footer. Our house
had 7-foot ceilings. So it had to be cut down. So what did daddy
dearest do? That's right... he cut the TOP three feet off the
tree, and dragged the bottom into the house. I almost cried (yes;
Me. Boy. Male. Almost cried. Got a problem with that?), it
looked like a box and so un-christmas-tree-like.
My brother and I fished the top three feet off the trash heap
and set it up in our bedroom with some of the surplus lights and
tinsel on it... if mom&dad weren't going to have a "real" tree,
*we* were sure going to! 8-)
--jim
|
855.13 | Those were the days! | MORO::BEELER_JE | Eine Nacht auf dem kahlen Berge | Thu Dec 17 1992 15:14 | 9 |
| "Tradition"? Absolutely!!!!
This is the time of year where I get my .30-.30 Winchester and my dad
and I go deer hunting (hopefully with doe permits). We had the venison
mixed 50% venison and 50% pork ... makes the best sausage that you have
ever in your life put in your mouth. Christmas morning we have grits
and the sausage with red-eye gravy and home made breads.
Bubba
|
855.14 | | NUPE::hamp | Is your fly buttoned? | Thu Dec 17 1992 15:26 | 5 |
| >Christmas morning we have grits
>and the sausage with red-eye gravy and home made breads.
Good eatin'. <drool>
|
855.15 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Thu Dec 17 1992 16:43 | 51 |
| Hmmm. Dad got the tree, put it in the stand (a big galvanized tub that
he'd fill with rocks; worked great, but was a bear to move once
filled), and put on the lights (after going through the ancient ritual
of Testing the In-Series Lights to find the burnt-out ones; modern
light strings aren't usually sensitive to individual bulb burnout, and
even if they are, new strings are so inexpensive it's more economical
to get a new one than to test each bulb. Our old string of lights
featured those big German-style glass bulbs in very odd shapes and
colors; I remember 'em still, though I haven't seen them in maybe
twenty years).
Dad did the carving of whatever there was to carve - our Christmas
dinners were usually ham, I think, with leg of lamb for New Year's, but
sometimes we'd have something else just to keep people on their toes.
Dad was officially Santa Claus, but in our family all that meant was
that he'd stay up late to assemble any toys that needed it, while Mom
filled the stockings - and Dad would get to eat Santa's milk and
cookies. (Oddly enough, gifts ostensibly from "Santa Claus" were often
labelled in Mom's handwriting, though...)
I don't remember any other Dad-specific duties, Christmas-wise; I do
remember, with great delight, that it always felt like a thoroughly
cooperative event, with everyone in the family intimately involved in
the entire holiday.
There were other rituals: "Children may examine the contents of their
stockings as soon as they get up, but they may *not* come downstairs or
make undue noise - even if they got toy trumpets - until Mom and Dad
have had their first cup of coffee." [The wait for the smell of brewing
java was _excruciating_.]
"Presents will be opened one at a time, so that everyone can see who
got what, and how surprised they are." [This included reading amusing
gift tags aloud, immediately trying on any item suitable for tryings-
on, or mugging ferociously upon receipt of the inevitable "surprise"
gift. It also had the delightful side effect of making the whole
process last much, much longer than if we'd all just torn into the
packages simultaneously. (Pauses in which to let the cats frolic in the
gift wrap while Mom and Dad got more coffee were also encouraged.)]
"Children may use the Christmas tree as an auxiliary playset for their
toy cowboys, dinosaurs, etc., so long as they do not knock it over,
spill the water, or break any of the ornaments." [This - along with
simply lying underneath the tree, gazing up through the branches - was
a favorite pre-Christmas pastime.]
Gee, I'm getting all sentimental. Think I'll go home and lie underneath
my Christmas tree for a while... ;-)
-b
|
855.16 | | TORREY::BROWN_RO | lost angeles | Thu Dec 17 1992 17:19 | 16 |
| the most important male holiday tradition in my familty is this:
Men are the Designated Football Watchers.
Occasionally Basketball Watchers; my dad is the big basketball fan.
Other rituals; bird-carving, and drink-mixing. Wood-chopping, drive-way
snow plowing. Drive that little tractor!
Tennis-playing at an indoor court involves the whole family.
Cross-country skiing. And, perhaps going to the very non-competitive
pro games that happen over the holiday week, like the Pistons versus
the Nets.
-roger
|
855.17 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Dec 17 1992 17:20 | 36 |
| Divison of duties for Christmas in the Zarlenga household, pre 1992:
Mom
Address and mail all the Christmas cards
Select the food
Cook the food
Clean up afterwards (ie: load the dishwasher)
Dad
Decorate the tree
Wrap the presents
Hangup the Christmas cards received
Select the wine
Carve and serve the food
Fall asleep on the couch in front of the TV (snoring optional)
Me
Set up the tree
Set up the manger scene
Get out the tree decorations - lights, ornaments, tinsel, garland
Carry the food from the market to the car and from the car to
the freezer
Drag out all the huge pots and pans that are only used for
big food holidays like Thanksgiving and Christmas
This year will be different, though, because both my parents passed
away a couple of months ago. It's going to be quite different this
year, and it'll take a few more additional years to get back into a
stable Christmas routine.
The only saving grace is that I still have a large extended (all
relatives, just not in the immediate family) family, and they've
always been a significant piece of the entire holiday event.
Not the same, but not nearly as bad as it could be.
|
855.18 | A Blessing on your Head | CAPNET::RONDINA | | Thu Dec 17 1992 17:29 | 8 |
| While growing up, I had a close friend whose grandfather would
pronounce a blessing on all family member present at the family dinner.
For those members absent, he would walk outside, sprinkle Holy Water
(they were Catholic) and pronounce a blessing upon the absent ones.
This tradition/honor fell upon the oldest living male (patriarch) of
the family. Anyone else hear of such a tradition?
Paul
|
855.19 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Thu Dec 17 1992 18:11 | 9 |
|
-1
Yeah .. My Dad would give the family his blessing..
David
|
855.20 | GROG NOG... | AIMHI::BROWN | | Fri Dec 18 1992 13:58 | 12 |
| I havn't seen it mentioned yet, but in my family my dad was *ALWAYS*
responsible for the anual "spiking of the egg-nog"!!! Mom just didn't
have the knack for blending Juuuuust the right ammount of booze with
the nog to get that, shall I say... BOLD yet not overbearing mix!
Right about now, this years batch should be "mellowing" in the fridge,
and I can't wait to test it next Thursday night!!!!!!
I guess my dad's chemistry background *DOES* have a practical use...
Happy Holidays to all,
Tom
|
855.21 | Dad's Christmas Tradition | USOPS::OP_DONOVAN | | Sat Dec 19 1992 04:38 | 12 |
| My father has a Christmas "tradition" that drives me crazy! Every year
around 3 days before Christmas, he calls e and asks me to pick up
someting for Mom from him. Every year I ask him a month in advance if
I can pick something up for Mom and he says no but he never gets off
his chair to get there. So when all my stuff is waiting to be wrapped.
When the last package of dinner rolls and bottle of wine are yet to be
picked up. When I'm going crazy making sure everything is perfect, I
get that inevitable call that lets me know I'll be taking that extra
trip to the crowded mall on Christmas week! If it weren't for Mom's
sake I wouldn't do it!
Kate
|
855.22 | the man's job, wymins need not apply | COMET::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Sun Dec 20 1992 22:59 | 9 |
| I always get the tree, make it fit the stand, and hang the lights,
checking bulbs, wires, etc. Many lights stay lit. Others flash. You
just can't hang them any ole way. These are jobs most fitting for men
because wymins can't seem to get a handle on hanging lights and trouble
shooting problems.
I quit after the lights. The wife finishes up. This year, I started
training my son on the manly chores of trees and light hanging.
|
855.23 | I swear I really saw Santa flying across the sky | TOLKIN::DUMART | | Mon Dec 21 1992 12:40 | 18 |
| Dad would buy the tree (actually he sold Xmas trees for awhile so we
always got the one we wanted),put it up and put the string of lights on
it.....helped by all our good advice. He would also hang the outdoor
lights. Children were allowed to assist. Uncle Bud always carved the
turkey. Uncle Bob always mixed the drinks...except for the Bloody
Mary's...they were my responsibility. After dinner...I cleared the
table...helped by my brother and cousin...the women would wash up and
the men would sleep(someone would always take a picture of the men
sleeping)...then we would all go out for a walk or to skate or to sled.
Now it's a little different...I live far from 'home' and my son is
allergic to Xmas trees. He does put up the 'fake' tree and add the
lights. He also helps with the meal and with the cleanup.
May I add here my wishes for all to have a warm caring holiday season
and blessings on the new year.
Paula
|
855.24 | | KERNEL::COFFEYJ | Ultrix+SCO Unix/ODT supporter..... | Tue Dec 22 1992 08:30 | 14 |
| >because wymins can't seem to get a handle on hanging lights and trouble
> shooting problems.
mutter mutter
as someone who is female and is employed with my primary job as a troubleshooter
the second bit of that doesn't sound so true, as someone who's been to art
college and managed more than once to balance lights on a tree so they look
good in my view and others the first doesn't.... maybe some women aren't so hot
at some of these things but seeing the hash up a group of men can make of a tree
I certainly wouldn't say it was only women who can be a bit lacking
iin this area...
or is it because I'm a woman not a wymin?
|
855.25 | soft bulbs at fifty paces | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Dec 22 1992 09:55 | 11 |
|
>>I certainly wouldn't say it was only women who can be a bit lacking
>>in this area...
Hear, hear. I'd challenge any man to a tree light stringing
duel any time. This is where being anal retentive _really_ pays
off.
8^)
Diane
|
855.26 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | King Leer | Tue Dec 22 1992 10:02 | 5 |
| >I'd challenge any man to a tree light stringing
> duel any time. This is where being anal retentive _really_ pays
> off.
You're on. Next year. You'll do MY tree. ;^)
|
855.27 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ultimus Mohicanorum | Tue Dec 22 1992 11:17 | 1 |
| ...and then MY tree. All 700 lights and 10 feet of it.
|
855.28 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Dec 22 1992 11:34 | 7 |
|
Re: .26, .27
It would be my pleasure, gentlemen.
Di
|
855.29 | it could happen ... | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Dec 22 1992 12:10 | 10 |
| Be nice to invent throw-on lightbulbs, all tuned to a diff RF freq.
Then you bombard the tree with RF energy, and the bulbs light up.
Some blink (responding to one pulsing freq) others glow continually
(on a freq that's a CW signal), etc.
No wires, just a big antenna in the living room, to light the tree.
;')
|
855.30 | a divided family of Xmas decorations | DELNI::STHILAIRE | somewhere on a desert highway | Tue Dec 22 1992 16:11 | 8 |
| My last live-in boyfriend took the lightbulbs with him, so now I
don't have to worry about it! :-)
Now he has a tree with lightbulbs and no other decorations, and I have
a tree with tons of decorations and no lights.
Lorna
|
855.31 | Livingroom Microwave? | MASALA::LCOWAN | | Thu Dec 24 1992 04:20 | 3 |
| re .29;
Great fun 'nuking the family at the same time..... ;-)
|
855.32 | Get on early | SALEM::GILMAN | | Tue Dec 29 1992 14:37 | 5 |
| Kit, why not buy the gift a month ahead whether he says he wants it or
not? If he does get a gift you either have an extra this year for her,
or one for next year. If he needs it, your all set.
Jeff
|