T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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856.1 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Thu Dec 17 1992 10:59 | 13 |
|
My mother would always ask each of us( at the table) to name
something we were thankful for. I always thanked God we were almost
finished so we could eat ( drew a terrible look from my Father) :-)
My mother was a remarkable woman. She had nine children, and alot of
them were like me, and she didn't drink:-) I think this year when I
am asked what I am grateful for I will say " For a heavenly mother".
David
|
856.2 | | ASDG::FOSTER | radical moderate | Thu Dec 17 1992 11:25 | 12 |
|
I've found a lot of men saying that the shopping ritual of finding
gifts for friends and family members BELONGS to women. The average male
who goes is just along for the ride.
My sister used to do apricot bavarian cream every year. She hasn't done
it in a while. Maybe I'll do it this year. Its one of those "Jello"
desserts, and its AWESOME.
Perhaps it is because there are so few men in my family, and we're not
that traditional, I don't think of things as gender-determined. If you
were good at something, you just did it...
|
856.3 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | somewhere on a desert highway | Thu Dec 17 1992 12:24 | 20 |
| Every Christmas my mother used to go way into the woods in back of our
house and pick princess pine and evergreen to make wreaths with. When
I was a little kid she used to make me go with her, and I used to get
bored with it. I can remember my hands being cold and trudging through
the woods and wishing she would hurry up and get ready to walk home.
After I got married she always made me a wreath, too. One year I made
my own but thought it was tedious so after that I let her make them
both again. She enjoyed doing it anyway. My mother is 79 now and has
been in a nursing home for the past almost 6 yrs., because of brain
damage caused by a brain hemorrage. She no longer knows what's going
on in the real world, and I really miss her at the holidays. It's
funny the things we take for granted as kids and young adults, that we
may eventually really miss someday. It would mean a lot to me now to
be able to have one of my mother's wreaths, or even to go trudging
through the woods, with my hands freezing, while she picked the
evergreen. I might even help pick it now if I had the chance. Well,
maybe...
Lorna
|
856.4 | | USHS01::GUNDERSON | | Thu Dec 17 1992 13:47 | 27 |
|
When I was growing up, my family always did all of it together......
We all picked out the tree from designated areas in the mountains
(of course, I'm sure that's not an option anymore), we'd all decorate
the tree when we brought it home while my father would play all of
his Bing Crosby christmas records.....we all cooked dinner together,
each of us assigning ourselves a particular job in the kitchen, which
got to be interesting some years.....
We didn't have Christmas dinner until Christmas day (I think this was
a ploy from keeping my brother and I from eating too much candy) and
of course my brother and I would always wake up every hour on the hour
(because we couldn't sleep anyways) and run into my folk's room, wake
them up too and ask if it was time to open presents yet. My parents
now tell me it's *my* turn.
Most of my Christmas's have been very traditional except for last year
as I was raised in Colorado and now live Houston for the past year
and a half and last year was the first time for a Christmas without
snow. We were actually wearing short and t-shirts at this time of year
last year - allthough I tried VERY hard to decorate my house to make it
seem more like home - "something" was missing.....this year we ARE
heading back to the mountains and I can't wait!
-Lynn
|
856.5 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | the power of surrender | Thu Dec 17 1992 15:45 | 12 |
|
My mother did most of the christmas shopping on everyone's behalf from
us to remote family members (to cousin whoever from the Bobbitt
clan...etc....)...when we had stockings she also bought and
tissue-papered all the stocking stuffers (even the orange that went in
the toe).
she also did the cooking and carving, though my father helped often
with the cleanup.
-Jody
|
856.6 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Thu Dec 17 1992 16:30 | 28 |
| Mom made, signed, and sent the Christmas cards, sometimes with help
from us kids (depending on how complicated this year's arts-and-crafts
exercise was - I remember one year when she made angels using lots of
little bits of colored paper, and we had a regular assembly line going
on the kitchen table for _weeks_).
Mom made the "Paradise Roll," an incredibly dense, rich concoction
involving dates, walnuts, marshmallows, and graham crackers all run
through a meat grinder to form a paste that rivalled tar for
stickiness. This was, with great difficulty, formed into rolls, coated
with more graham cracker crumbs, and chilled; it was served in units of
about one cubic inch, topped with Redi-Whip and a Red Dye #2 maraschino
cherry (ah, the good old days! Mom was artsy-craftsy, but she wasn't
into all-natural ingredients).
Mom bought most of the from-her and from-Mom-and-Dad presents, but Dad
always came up with a few on his own.
Mom delegated the Christmas-tree decorating to the kids at a fairly
early stage - it's hard to get the tinsel off your hands when you're
mixing up Paradise Roll - so we generally did that.
And Mom cooked the Christmas dinner, delegating table-setting and
salad-making to the youngest kids and gravy-making to the older ones.
Oh, and I suspect she chose all the Christmas music, too. ;-)
-b
|
856.7 | Strong family values here | MEMIT::CRUE | Ding of the Round Table | Fri Dec 18 1992 10:44 | 5 |
|
To cook, clean, be quiet, and keep the beers coming.
:')
|
856.8 | women are taking over men according to article i read | STAR::ABBASI | iam your friendly psychic hotline | Sat Dec 19 1992 18:31 | 16 |
| i just read in the national inquire that women will take over in about
20 years, the article , which was about a page long, said that
more women are getting in business and that they are better than the
men in sharing the power and that they dont do the hierarical (sp?) thing,
whatever that is, it also said already about 5 million business are
owned by women (that sounds too much, doesn't?), the article also
said that women will kick men out of top position in major cooperations
and that major TV news anchors will be all women not men. it said this
all will happen in about 20 years .
i do not remember the name of the author , but i think the magazine
was one of those ones at the news stands in the supermarkets.
buy,
/nasser
|
856.9 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Sun Dec 20 1992 07:58 | 11 |
|
Nasser,
First of the National Enquirer is best used to wipe you nose with.
Secondly, this topic is for the discussing holiday traditions, not
articles about takeovers.
David
|
856.10 | | STAR::ABBASI | iam your friendly psychic hotline | Sun Dec 20 1992 17:26 | 13 |
| David,
you go blow your own nose thank very much you and dont tell me to blow
my own nose or what to blow it with, that is my own decisions
to take and not yours by the stretch of any imaginations plus why cant
a take overs happen during the holidays any ways? the papers never said
when these will happen because even you did not read and you coming
here making yourself like and expert at it and all so you go
bang your head with it and come tell us how it feels.
\buy
\nasser
|
856.11 | Mommy's Boy | VINO::SWILK | I'm Unhomogenized - All Natural | Sun Dec 20 1992 19:51 | 8 |
|
NASA
you can blow anything you want; remember you're in the USA now.
Commander
|
856.12 | | STAR::ABBASI | iam your friendly psychic hotline | Sun Dec 20 1992 21:06 | 9 |
| .-1
Commandor, what do you mean iam a Mommy's boy?
IAM NOT!!!
you dont know me, so you better get off it. ok? thank you.
\bye
\nasser
|
856.13 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Mon Dec 21 1992 15:14 | 10 |
|
Nasser,
Ok. Sorry if I upset you. I simply did not want takeover topics to
turn this into a battle. It's Christmas time. Lets save all the fighten
for next year.
thanks for understanding,
David
|