Thursday Thoughts

Water Shortage
You will recall that we had plumbing problems the few days before we left for AZ. Finally, we had a plumber come in on Dec. 22. The poor fellow spent from 8:15 in the morning until 5:30 that evening in our crawl space, working first on finding the clog, and subsequently on cutting out the pipe in which the clog lived and replacing it with new unclogged pipe. For some of that day, we still had use of one of our three bathrooms. Unfortunately, it was our master bath, which is upstairs, far, far away from our kitchen. For much of the day, however, after he found the clog and had the pipe cut, we had no water at all. This scenario went on for a three or so hours. All of this would have been not such a problem had I not been cooking my holiday dinner for Court and his family that night. Imagine preparing a twice-baked potato casserole, rolls, three racks of lamb, roasted asparagus, and crème brule in a house without water. I felt like Ma Ingalls in Little House on the Prairie, though I’m pretty sure she never made crème brule. But things turned out fine and we had a lovely dinner and holiday celebration. And no matter how difficult my activities were, I kept reminding myself that at least I wasn’t the plumber, who, upon finally finding the clog, came upstairs soaking wet and explained to Bill that he had gotten showered with, well, I don’t really even want to think about it. There is always someone who has a worse job than you, isn’t there?

UPS and Downs
Rather than checking a bag on the plane, Bill and I decided to send a big box of all sorts of things, from our Google Home to many of my clothes via UPS. It arrived somewhat later than we had expected, and I was pretty much confined to one set of clothes, but the box finally arrived yesterday afternoon. Yay. The mornings here are fairly cool, but this week it has warmed up to the low- to mid-60s during the day. I only had very lightweight clothes, having packed all of my long-sleeved shirts in the mailed box, so I would wear my one-and-only sweater to keep warm in the morning and evening. My family will probably be very glad to see me in something a bit different.

Duke, Duke, Duke, Duke of Earl
Right before we left last week, I came across something at our Denver neighborhood Walmart that I had never seen before……

dukes-mayo

Now, I have never tasted Duke’s mayonnaise, but if you are from the south, apparently mayonnaise OTHER than Duke’s is practically unpalateable. So I bought it, and then shipped it in the aforementioned box since I was not confident that it would be at our Walmart here in Mesa. I haven’t yet checked. I also haven’t yet opened up the jar, having had mayo in my refrigerator to use up, and no need to use mayo in the past day-and-a-half since we received the box. I wonder if I will notice any difference. By the way, the caption refers to the fifties song with these lyrics….

Duke, Duke, Duke, Duke of Earl
Duke, Duke, Duke of Earl
Duke, Duke, Duke of Earl
Duke, Duke, Duke of Earl.

Songs lyrics were so meaningful back in the good ol’ days. Of course, that reminded me of the meaningful lyrics to the University of Oklahoma’s fight song, which go something like this….

Boomer Sooner, boomer Sooner,
Boomer Sooner, boomer Sooner.
Boomer Sooner, boomer Sooner,
Boomer Sooner, OKU.

Sorry. I’m from Nebraska. I was brought up to hate the Oklahoma Sooners.

Time to Plant
This is what I like about Arizona in the winter. While it’s not 85 degrees out, the nights, though somewhat cool, are way above freezing, and the days are typically 65 degrees or more in January. What does this mean? I can plant my herbs and put out my flower pots. Yay!….

herb-plants

Ready for planting!

Ciao.

Beef: It’s What’s For Every Single Dinner

By January 2, I will have eaten the majority of this cow. Sigh.

By January 2, I will have eaten the majority of this cow. Sigh.

Each year after Christmas, after Bill and I are relatively settled into our AZ house, we have a couple of immediate objectives: First, we have to figure out where everything is. Not just location of items in our house, but also things like remembering the layout of the Costco store here in Mesa (where oh where is the toilet paper?) and which direction we turn to get to Home Depot. It always takes a week or so until we can remember such details. We use up a lot of gasoline looking for things in the meantime.

Second, we have to begin our annual year-end Beef Binge. Colons: Start Your Engines.

Actually, this year the Beef Binge began early, on Christmas Eve, when I served our prime-rib-tenderloinfamily the annual Christmas Eve feast. In the recent past, I have prepared a couple of kinds of clam chowders and sliced a pork tenderloin for sandwiches. This year, I wanted something a bit more festive, but didn’t want to prepare it myself. So I let Whole Foods do the cooking, and we ate prime rib and beef tenderloin for our Christmas Eve dinner prepared by their staff.

For the past four or five years, my brother Dave has picked us up at the airport (and, happily – given the boarding pass fiasco about which I wrote yesterday – we were actually there as planned), and we go to The Mining Camp Restaurant where his wife – my sister-in-law – works as a server, and have dinner. What’s on the menu? Well, a number of things – it’s a family-style feast – but the star of the show are the beef ribs.

Our tradition for years has been that my sister Jen (who always comes to Phoenix on Christmas Day and stays until New Year’s Day) prepares dinner the day after Christmas for the family. As an aside, the day after Christmas is Boxing Day in Great Britain and its colonies, and the Feast of St. Stephen – an observed holiday in many other European countries. Though it’s true that we didn’t have a single boxing match, what we DID have (and what we ALWAYS have) is a beef tenderloin. Perhaps appropriately, until the late 19th century, there was a Welsh custom to bleed the livestock on the Feast of Stephen. I’m not sure whether or not Good King Wenceslas bled any livestock when he looked out on the Feast of Stephen, per the famous Christmas carol. But though we ate beef tenderloin, I assure you there was no bleeding involved. From further review, I learned that it was traditional to whip the female servants for good luck on that day. There was no whipping at our beef feast.

New Year’s Day always features a prime rib dinner in our family, and has since I can remember. I have vivid memories of my mother arising early on New Year’s Day, pulling out the standing rib roast from the refrigerator, heavily seasoning it with garlic and rosemary and thyme and salt and pepper, and letting it sit until it was at room temperature. She would put it into the oven, and the delicious smell of roasting beef drove us crazy until we could finally sit down and eat.

In those days, she cooked mostly for our family of six, though little by little, in-laws began showing up at the table. Eventually we kids took over the tradition. I prepared many, many prime ribs on New Year’s Day. On more occasions than I care to recall, I served prime rib to our college-aged children who had a slightly green tinge to their skin and were quite bleary-eyed from too much fun the night before. But the prime rib never went to waste.

becs-prime-2My sister Bec has taken on the role of Preparer of the New Year’s Prime Rib as of late, and so we will be adding to our colon’s beef supply on New Year’s Day as we celebrate with our family. She currently has an 18-lb. standing rib roast in her freezer.

Rumor also has it that a roast beef will appear at my brother’s birthday party this evening as well. Can you ever have too much beef?

Presuming our colons haven’t seized up and are all functioning on January 2, we will all be eating nothing but chicken and fish for the rest of the month.

Well, except for the occasional hamburger or six. They don’t count, do they?

Come Fly With Us

As always, we spent Christmas Day traveling back to AZ for the winter. At least much of the day, because though the flight itself is only an hour-and-a-half, between getting to the airport, getting through security, buying and drinking the required Bloody Mary, and buying the mandatory M&Ms to eat on the plane, you have to allow for a significantly greater amount of time than you would imagine.

And then, of course, there is always someone who holds up the entire show because they can’t seem to get themselves situated onto the plane in a timely manner.

And, oops! This time it was Bill and me.

Actually, we got seated quite quickly. For reasons I can’t explain, the fact that there was someone already sitting in 4D (which was the number on Bill’s boarding pass) didn’t raise any alarms with us. We just took 4E and 4F, and began getting comfortable. In fact, Bill had put our bags up in the overhead bin, we had figured out which seat belt was which, and we had settled in for a long winter’s nap, when another friendly fellow stopped at our row and said to me, “Excuse me, I believe you’re in my seat.”

Nope, I replied to him with great confidence, and showed him my boarding pass which clearly said 4E.

Being a congenial sort, he turned around and began swimming upstream from the people still boarding, like a salmon getting ready to spawn. But by that time, Bill and I were starting to get a bad feeling in our stomachs; something was amiss. Bill pulled out his boarding pass, and looked at the flight number, which was NOT the number of the flight on which we were currently seated. And, in fact, the time on the pass indicated a flight that was leaving an hour later. By this time, the nice man had reached the front of the plane once again and was starting his spiel about double booking. At the same time, the flight attendants were making noises about closing the doors. I stood, waved my hands, and said, “STOP! DON’T CLOSE THE DOORS! We’re on the wrong flight.”

“Where are you going?” the flight attendant yelled to me. (By this time, everyone in rows 1 through 6 was getting in on the fun. They looked at me.)

“Well, we’re going to Phoenix, but not on this flight,” I yelled back. (They looked at her.)

“Well, then you need to get off of this flight,” she said. (They looked at me.)

So we climbed over the young man in 4D with whom I had already bonded, learning that he was traveling with his grandmother and coming to Phoenix to visit his favorite aunt. (I learn a lot about people in a short period of time.) Bill excused himself profusely as he began pulling our bags back out of the overhead where he had placed them mere minutes earlier.

We then began swimming upstream like salmon getting ready to spawn. But all the while I was very confused because we had received a confirmation from Spirit Airlines for our flight, and it was leaving at this time. What went wrong?

Just as we were leaving the plane, I asked the flight attendant to please let my sister know that we were no longer on the plane. Jen was traveling with us, and she was in the back of the plane, wholly unaware of what was transpiring in the front of the plane. The flight attendant assured me that she would tell her.

We stepped out of the plane, understandably discombobulated. Bill set down the bags and literally ran to the check-in desk like a 25-year-old man . I begged the flight attendants to not close the door because we were certain we should be on this flight. In an unbelievably short period of time, Bill came back with two new boarding passes for seats 4B and 4C. We climbed back on the plane, found our new seats, and Bill began putting our bags back in the overhead bin.

“What happened?” I asked Bill as he sat down.

“I don’t know,” he replied. “But she the lady at the counter shows us on this flight, and gave us these seats.”

We spent the entire flight trying to figure out what went wrong. After much consideration, we realized that the boarding passes we had used were from a previous flight when we flew from PHOENIX to DENVER back in November. So, how did we get through security, we wondered.

They should't let these two out without adult supervision.

They should’t let these two out without adult supervision.

Friends, it wasn’t until Sunday night as Bill began unpacking his suitcase that it all came together. This was the reason for the whole debacle: Bill had apparently not tossed those old boarding passes from back in November, and they were in the same suitcase pocket in which he always puts our boarding passes. So when we went through security, we used the correct boarding passes. But when we went to board the plane, the boarding passes he gave the gate attendant were the old passes. For reasons I can’t explain, she didn’t catch the error. So we sat in the seats in which we had sat back in November instead of the correct seats.

But perhaps the funniest thing about the whole mixed-up affair was that about halfway to Phoenix, I asked the flight attendant if she had, in fact, told my sister that we had gotten off the plane. She said she had.

“Would you like me to go tell her you are on the plane?” she asked me pleasantly.

I said that would be very nice, so that she wouldn’t worry about how we would connect up in Phoenix. Jen told me later that she had never been told that we had disembarked from the plane, and sitting way back in the plane, she wasn’t even aware of our plight. Or that there was even a plight.  So when the flight attendant came and told her, “Bill and Kris are on the plane,” she was fairly puzzled, but said, “Well, that’s good.”

But it’s Spirit Airlines, so who knows what makes sense and what doesn’t.

All I know is that we were glad to get settled into our AZ home and equally glad that we won’t be flying any time soon. Frankly, so is Spirit Airlines.

And Bill threw away the boarding passes with great gusto!

Christmas Thisses and Thats

The past few days of celebration have been somewhat of a whirlwind from which it will take a bit of time to recover. In the meantime, here are some photos of our activities.

It isn’t very often that all of our grandkids are gathered together, but this Christmas offered that opportunity. On Friday evening, everyone celebrated Heather’s 40th birthday with bowling and barbecue. We managed to corral the kids — bowling shoes and all — long enough to shoot a photo….

christmas-2016

On Thursday, we celebrated Christmas with Court and his family with dinner at our house. As usual, a sushi tray was the beginning of the show. Kaiya demonstrated her newly-learned chopstick skills to me….

kaiya-chopsticks-12-16

Our gathering was joyous, if the photography wasn’t….

zierks-christmas-2016

On Christmas Eve, we celebrated with the McLain clan. There was plenty of delicious beef…..

prime-rib-tenderloin

Allen and Emma (who you recall comes from Paris) provided fois gras for all to try….fois-gras-christmas-eve-2016

The table was beautiful (and the kids were monitoring Santa’s progress in the background….

mclains-christmas-eve-2016

Joseph models the stocking cap I made him to keep his ears warm during those cold Vermont winters…..

joseph-stocking-cap-2016

I hope everyone enjoyed the Christmas holiday as much as I, and now we get ready for the new year.

Friday Book Whimsy: My Cousin Rachel

18869970Back in 2014, I reviewed what is one of my favorite novels ever – Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier. At the end of that review, I said that I hadn’t read anything else by the author, and likely wouldn’t because the book would never compare to Rebecca and I would thus be disappointed.

Recently, I succumbed to temptation, and read My Cousin Rachel, by du Maurier. I was definitely not disappointed. What an exceptional novel. I simply couldn’t put it down.

Oh, don’t get me wrong. Nothing could compare the romance and intrigue of Rebecca, a book clever because the title character – who really is the main character of the story – is long ago dead and buried. The book also has one of the best opening lines of any novel: Last night I dreamed I went to Manderley again. Mysterious, yet sublime, once you have read the novel.

My Cousin Rachel also has an intriguing first line: They used to hang men at Four Turnings in the old days. Not anymore, though.

Young Philip Ashley comes to live with his cousin Ambrose as an infant upon the death of his parents. Ambrose – the master of an estate in the Cornwall section of England – is a good and loving guardian despite the fact that he is a confirmed bachelor. Ambrose and Philip are very happy together.

Ambrose is a confirmed bachelor, that is, until he takes a trip to Italy when Philip is 24 years old, leaving him to manage the affairs. He writes letters to Philip, telling him of his activities. Soon, he begins talking about meeting a distant cousin named Rachel. Via the letters, Philip learns that Ambrose eventually falls in love with Rachel, and they marry. But then the letters become further and further apart, until finally Philip gets a mysterious letter from Ambrose that implies that Ambrose believes he is being poisoned by Rachel. Philip travels to Italy, but it is too late. Ambrose has died, supposedly of a brain disease believed to have been inherited from his father. Rachel is nowhere to be found.

Philip returns home, deeply saddened and angry beyond words at Rachel. Eventually, Rachel comes to visit, and much to Philip’s surprise, he likes her very much. In fact, as the months go by, he becomes more and more attached to “my cousin Rachel” as he calls her throughout the book. And then mysterious things begin to happen to Philip as well…..

Du Maurier’s story telling is beyond belief. Her stories are creepy without being gory. The characters are multifaceted, the opposite of one-dimensional. Her plotting is creative without being silly. I forbade myself from looking at the end of the book (as I often do, I’m ashamed to admit), and didn’t. Yet, wanting to know how the book ends kept me reading late into the night. Like Rebecca, the house and grounds were almost a character. The author’s descriptions are vivid and allow the reader to feel like they are part of the story.

The ending was highly satisfying.

My Cousin Rachel is a wonderful book that I highly recommend, especially if you like gothic literature.

Here is link to the book.  

 unnamed

Thursday Thoughts

Maybe Outhouses Weren’t So Bad
outhouse
Well, our three-bathroom house is currently down to a one-bathroom house. After spending literally hours here yesterday, the plumber(s) finally located the area that is plugged up. Thankfully, we still have a working toilet, and even better, it happens to be the one in our bedroom. On the opposite end of the luck spectrum, we have company coming tonight, and whether or not we will have an additional bathroom for them to use is as yet uncertain. What is certain is that I could undoubtedly have thought of better ways to spend as much money as this will cost us! But as Bing Crosby crooned, “And when our bankroll is getting small, we’ll think about the time when we had none at all, and we’ll fall asleep counting our blessings.” Outlook on life according to the movie White Christmas.

Speaking of Blessings….
Our Vermont family arrived safely yesterday afternoon, and we spent some time with them yesterday evening. The plane ride was as good as it gets when you’re dealing with a 7-year-old and a VERY ACTIVE 4-year-old. But this happened…..

joseph-cockpit

Yes, it’s true. Joseph had the opportunity to sit in the cockpit of the airplane. I’m pretty sure he didn’t help fly the thing. Nevertheless, that’s pretty exciting business when you’re 7. And, by the way, the thing to the pilot’s left looks like it would hold an iPad. I’m hoping like hell he/she doesn’t read while flying the plane!

Willa Cather Started Someplace
dagny-2016I liked to write from the time I was a small girl. I have mentioned the stories I would write when I was in third grade when I decided I wanted to be a writer. Last night as the grown-ups sat around talking after dinner, 10-year-old Dagny got her parents’ computer, and was quietly typing away at something. Finally, we asked her what she was doing. “Writing a story,” she told us. I of course had to take a look at what she wrote, and was seriously quite impressed. Her story was about two very good friends who were at odds with one another because one of the girls had sort of betrayed the other. I found that her story telling was interesting and her plotting was creative. She didn’t just tell a story from beginning to end, blah blah blah. She used flashback and moved the story along via her dialogue. I was so impressed that I asked her if she would write my blog for today. “I can tell you what I would write,” she told me. “I would say ‘Dagny is a wonderful girl and I love her very much. She is the best child out of the four.'” So there. Consider this her contribution.

Golobki

Last night, in honor of Heather being in town, her mother cooked for us all, making absolutely delicious Polish food. We had fresh and smoked kielbasa, stuffed cabbage rolls (golobki), and creamed cucumbers. My mother — who was 100 percent Polish — always said she learned to cook from her mother-in-law, who was 100 percent Swiss. But I remember eating all of those things that Cynthia cooked last night, so Mom learned Polish cooking somewhere. It tasted wonderful, and made me think about my mom.

Ciao.

Christmas Chaos

At the beginning of every episode of The Pioneer Woman on Food Network, Ree Drummond says, “Here’s what’s happening on the ranch.” Apropos of nothing in this blog post, I love when she says that, because I have a secret desire to live on a ranch. Let me explain something, however. I would be a very, very bad rancher. Considering how many times a day I make my way to the grocery store for one reason or another (like when I realized yesterday that I didn’t have a lemon for my lemon butter chicken just as I was beginning dinner preparation), living in the middle of nowhere simply wouldn’t work for me. Plus, if I was going to live on a ranch, it would be in the Arkansas Valley of Colorado where my ranch would be surrounded by mountains. It certainly wouldn’t be in Oklahoma. I have no beef with Oklahoma (pun intended), but every time Ree Drummond says, “Let’s have a picnic,” she looks like she and everyone picnicking with her are going to blow away. You know, OOOOOOOOOOOOklahoma, where the winds come sweeping down the plain….

Anyhoo, with a wink to the Pioneer Woman, here’s what’s happening at the McLain suburban non-ranch.

It’s been a busy week because, as you know, we leave on Christmas Day for AZ, where we will spend the next four months soaking up sunshine and feeling sorry for all of our Colorado family and friends when the need to shovel snow arises. So in addition to preparing for Christmas – which in my case involves preparing two different meals on two different days – we are also doing the things we need to do to get the house ready for our departure.

This year, there isn’t as much involved in that regard because Allen and his girlfriend Emma are going to stay here and housesit while we are gone. The only reason that’s a panic situation for me is that my house is a mess. I would like to blame it on Christmas, and that certainly has added to the mess. However, I laid on my bed yesterday afternoon and glanced up and noticed about three-quarters of an inch of dust on the ceiling fan, and that can’t be blamed on Christmas. You know what’s really sad about that? That dust will still be there when I get back, because I certainly won’t be dusting ceiling fans any time before we go.

You’ve heard of Murphy’s Law? Well, we are experiencing Murphy’s Second Cousin Once Removed Ernie’s law, which is a step worse than Murphy’s Law. It all started last weekend when the temperature was hovering around 2 degrees and Bill went out to get our mail. Now then, there are lots of things wrong with cold weather, but not the least of these things is the fact that everyone is so clumsy when wearing heavy coats and gloves and hats and scarves. It is almost impossible to move. I always feel like Ralphie’s little brother in A Christmas Story. I’m afraid I’m going to fall down and need to yell, “Ralphie! I can’t get up.”

Anyhoo, Bill got our mail, but somewhere between our mailbox and the front porch, he dropped the mailbox key into the snow. It was 2 degrees, the snow was five or six inches deep, and it was almost dark. And there was poor Bill digging in the snow trying to find the key. The key which, to date, has not yet been found. Thankfully our kids had a spare, and we were able to make a duplicate key. But you know how those things BUG YOU? Both Bill and I have been out there on numerous occasions this week determined to find the key, and yet unsuccessful.

And then, of course, the toilet backed up. The downstairs toilet which is used in the neighborhood of 75 times a day. It happened the night that Court and the kids were over for dinner. Cole is our prime suspect, though he is wisely admitting to nothing. Bill is tenacious. He is determined to fix it himself, despite the fact that his degree is in law and not plumbing. He even ordered a special tool that was supposed to shoot whatever it is that is blocking to toilet (and only Cole knows for sure) to kingdom come so that the toilet will once again flush.

johnny-jolter-tool

So far, he has been unsuccessful. Perhaps I will send him to the grocery store and call a plumber while he is gone.

Not to be outdone, my car had to get its last-minute shots in as well. Suddenly the key remote stopped working. Thankfully, it was an easy fix, but Bill was not able to fix it before I sat in the parking lot waiting for Hobby Lobby to open and listening to my car alarm unceasingly screeching for a reason that I haven’t quite figured out, but which had something to do with my car remote not working. When the Hobby Lobby doors finally opened, the clerk looked at me as though I was driving a stolen yellow Bug.

Nevertheless, my presents are wrapped and ready for the weekend festivities. Our daughter Heather and her family arrive this afternoon to spend Christmas. We are warm and safe and healthy and dry, so I really can’t complain.

Even though it’s clear that I do.

And speaking of A Christmas Story, while the photo of Kaiya and Mylee that I shared yesterday is one of my favorites, here is another…….

Austin (on the left) is about as happy with the Christmas pajamas that his Grammie Jen bought him last year as Ralphie was with his pajamas he received from his aunt in the beloved movie.

Ribbons and Bows, Redux

presentsYesterday got away from me with holiday preparations, so today’s post is an oldie but goodie (from December 2014), with one of my favorite photos ever at the end. Happy Tuesday.

As much as I have talked about how I have to move beyond the secular side of Christmas this Advent season, I must admit that I think the best part about Christmas are the presents under the tree.

Now don’t get me wrong. I don’t necessarily think I need any gifts at all. I am truly blessed, and have waaaaay to much stuff as it is. But I love those presents under the tree. I always have. They are so full of mystery. That gift could be anything at all. It’s a wondrous feeling, especially if you’re a kid.

For his part, Bill can barely keep a gift a secret. He loves to give gifts to people, but the whole waiting and anticipating part of it, well, not so much. Of course, we are both so independent and difficult to buy for since we usually buy ourselves what we want or need. I literally have to tell him with firmness to stop buying himself things as Christmas nears so that there is something to give him as a present. As the years go by, we generally simply tell each other what to buy, and often are present when it is being purchased. I, for example was with him Sunday when he bought my present. In fact, I picked it out. He will wrap it, and I will act surprised when I open it, though we both know I won’t be.

I have mostly been good about not peeking at my presents. I remember, however, one year when I was probably 10 or 11 years old. I wanted a watch. I kept my eye on the gifts as they grew in number under the tree. Finally, one day there was a gift for me that might have been that watch. I would pick it up and shake it and then put it back under the tree. A bit later I would pick it up and hold it to the light to see if I could possibly see what it was under the wrapping. I wanted that watch so, so much.

Finally, I could stand it no longer. At some point when I was alone in the living room, I carefully pried open one side of the wrapping paper. Sure enough, I could see the ripple of the plastic Timex watch box. I took great care to tape the side back up. But here’s the thing. While I was so happy to know that I was getting the watch I wanted so much, the surprise had been ruined, and that made me sad. I never did it again.

Some people are really good at guessing gifts. Jen, for example, is somewhat psychic. I remember one year when Bill and I were first dating and he bought me a Christmas gift. It was a small box, all wrapped up. Jen took one look at it and told me it was a gift card to take a hot air balloon ride. Having never had any desire to take a hot air balloon ride, I didn’t take her very seriously.

Well, ladies and gentlemen, it was indeed a gift certificate for a hot air balloon ride. To this day she swears he hadn’t told her. Now that I have been married to him for 22 years and know how incapable he is of keeping gifts a secret, I’m pretty sure he told her. She will deny it, of course, as will he.

My grandson Alastair is another one who is very good at guessing presents. With a single shake, he will tell me, “this is such and such,” and he’s most often correct. Of course, he is aided by the fact that I get them some of the same things each year – a pair of pajamas, a Christmas ornament, etc. And let’s face it, you don’t have to be psychic to identify a box of Legos.

But the funniest story I have about Christmas presents took place a couple of years ago when Kaiya and Mylee were 4 and 2, respectively. Their mom and dad had placed the wrapped presents under the tree. A couple of days before Christmas, the two kids could wait no longer. When their parents came downstairs that morning, all of the gifts had been opened and the kids were happily playing with the toys. Here is the picture taken after they were scolded and put in time out. Talk about looking guilty….

kaiya-mylee-doghouse

Joseph’s Wonderful Life

Therefore the Lord himself will give you this sign: the virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall name him Emmanuel. – Isaiah 7:14

Every year, the readings for the fourth Sunday of Advent remind us of the good news that the Jewish people had/have long known because it was foretold by the Hebrew prophet Isaiah – a savior was going to be born of a virgin, and he would be king of all.

And each year when I hear these readings, I immediately think about Mary, and her surprise visit from the Angel Gabriel telling her the shocking news that she was going to be the mother of this Emmanuel. Because I have a granddaughter who is 13-1/2, I can easily picture the look on Mary’s face because I can picture the look on Addie’s face. And I always remind myself that rather than saying, “Let me think about it,” or “Let me look at my calendar and see what I have going for the next nine months,” Mary just said, “Yes.” Oh, she expressed an appropriate amount of confusion about the fact that she was going to bear a child even though she was a virgin, but after getting angel-based clarification, she said, “Yes, I will take on this responsibility.”

But while I use Mary as my model for how to turn my life over to God, I rarely think about Joseph, and his role in this marvelous story of grace.

Last week, I mentioned in a post that I watched the movie It’s a Wonderful Life for the first time ever. In the movie, George Bailey – played marvelously by Jimmy Stewart – had his life planned out. He was going to travel. He was going to make lots of money. He was going to leave his crappy little town and live a rich and elegant life with his wonderful wife someplace new and exciting. But, things just kept creeping up that prevented his imagined life to happen in the way he had planned. And finally, just as he had given up hope, he learned the valuable lesson about what is important in life.

At Mass yesterday, our homilist reminded us that Joseph, too, had quite a rude awakening when he learned that his bride-to-be Mary was pregnant, and he knew HE wasn’t the father. But rather than publicly humiliating her, he quietly set out to end the relationship in a way that would be less embarrassing to her and her family. And then, the Angel Gabriel (who seemingly had quite a busy few days) told Joseph in a dream to not freak out because she is with child via the Holy Spirit, and in fact, she is going to give birth to the Son of God and the savior of all.

Like George Bailey, I would imagine that Joseph had his life planned out as well. He and his young bride would marry, kids would soon come along – maybe some sons who could learn the carpentry business and help him, and a daughter or two who would help his wife with her hard work – and they would live a quiet and joyful life in their community of Nazareth. Maybe he would run for mayor. Eventually their children would marry and have kids, and he and Mary would be grandparents, at which time they could feed their grandkids all of the sugary figs they wanted and send them home on a sugar high, like all good grandparents do.

But just as soon as he had that dream, Joseph knew his life wasn’t going to go the way he wanted it to go. God had other plans for he and Mary. And, like Mary, he didn’t Google flights out of Jerusalem, but instead, said, “Whatever you say, God.”

The children from Wellshire Presbyterian Church performed a living nativity Sunday night in the frigid weather. The little shepherd kneeling in front is Maggie Faith. The shepherd behind her wearing glasses is Dagny. Addie is the wise man wearing the gold robe. Dagny and Maggie chose to be shepherds because, well, live goats were involved.

The children from Wellshire Presbyterian Church performed a living nativity Sunday night in the frigid weather. The little shepherd kneeling in front is Maggie Faith. The shepherd behind her wearing glasses is Dagny. Addie is the wise man wearing the gold robe. Dagny and Maggie chose to be shepherds because, well, live goats were involved.

According to St. Matthew, Emmanuel means God is with us. And so the very name of Jesus means that he is with us always, even when it seems he couldn’t possibly be further away. He is within us. We just need to get out of his way and let him lead us.

This post linked to the GRAND Social