The Family Tree

“Steve, please get the Christmas decorations out of the attic. Now.”

The response from the recliner in the other room was very unChristmas-like.

“Bah humbug,” a man’s voice growled.

It was the annual battle of their marriage.  Judy Gibson loved decorating for Christmas. Her husband loved watching football.

“Why are we putting up a tree anyway? The kids are gone. They live out of state.  We’re flying out to see them this year.”  Steve knew the answer, but picked at his wife anyway.

Judy quietly shook her head.  Married to Steve for nearly 40 years, she closed her eyes and remembered their wedding. The base chapel had been decorated for Advent.  She could still smell the fresh-cut cedar branches and see the burning candles.  And there was Steve, standing proudly at the alter in his Naval uniform, weighing maybe 160 lbs.   Steve was like a tree now; you could cut him in half and count forty rings from where he had put on weight over the years. Judy remembered their honeymoon at Biltmore House in Asheville. The Vanderbilt’s mansion was so beautifully decorated for the holidays. Being a young girl from Mississippi, she had never seen a house that big.  Something about the mountains, the trees and the Christmas ornaments touched her heart. When she saw the banquet room and its big tree, she vowed they would always have a great tree, too.

Father Noel’s Tree Farm had provided their one.  Steve struggled to strap it to the top of their Chevrolet Impala wagon.  She remembered it looking like a walking tree as he hauled it into their one-bedroom base apartment.  They were so poor that the only ornaments they owned  were ribbon ornaments made from a red and white checkered table cloth.  Hot lights and reflectors illuminated the dry tree. It was a miracle they didn’t burn base housing down.

It was 1972.  And since there was little Peace on Earth and goodwill to men, Steve had been overseas for most of the year.  That fall, he brought back ornaments from all his ports of call.  And then they took a trip to Hawaii. That December, their new tree had five new ornaments joining the ribbons.  Her favorite was the palm tree with the lady with the ukelele. She could almost hear Don Ho singing “Tiny Bubbles” when she saw it at the tacky little souvenir shop.

The next Christmas Steve and Judy had a new member of the family.  Frances May Gibson was born nine months after their trip to Hawaii and the new tree had a new ornament as well. It was a wooden stork with the time, date and weight of the new baby.  The next two trees found two more storks joining Frances May’s.  Steve Jr. and Albert Frances were now part of  the young family.

Steve was promoted to a command position on the U.S.S. Enterprise and soon a small aircraft carrier ornament joined the storks and the ribbons.  Judy diligently saved up Green Stamps and got a set of beautiful gold glass ball ornaments. Those were bought when they lived in Norfolk, Virginia.  There was a Norfolk ornament, too.  Every town they lived in would have its own ornament. Like in their heart, it would have a special place in their tree.

The next year, Frances May came home with a special ornament made in preschool.  It was made from a margarine lid, red construction paper and a photo of her ponytailed, tooth-missing freckled face.  Each kid would come home with similar ornaments over the years. And each would have its own place on the tree.

The next summer found the Gibsons headed to Disney World.  Most folks would have pitied the couple hauling the three kids around the Magic Kingdom. But Judy and Steve were having as much fun as the kids.  Judy saved up her spare change and bought a beautiful globe with Cinderella’s castle on it.  Mickey himself would have been proud of the place of honor given to the ornament.

In the mid-1980’s Steve came home from a cruise with a big box.  “I saw this and had to get it for you.”  Judy unwrapped the golden paper and saw the most beautiful angel she had ever seen. “I thought she looked like you,” Steve grinned. He climbed up the stepladder and proudly placed it on the top of the tree.

Steve and Judy had a little cat named Nixon when they were married.  Nixon had his ornament.  Nixon was soon joined by a terrier-mix named Snowflake.  She had her own ornament, too. Nixon tragically was hit by a Captain’s car on a rainy November night.  Snowflake died of old age and soon a small puppy named Lady Bird joined the family. The pets were well represented with ornaments. So were all the trips Steve and Judy took around the world. Barcelona, Paris, New York, Washington D.C., London all hung on their family. Steve liked the little Eiffel Tower the best.   It reminded him of holding hands with Judy during strolls down the busy Paris streets.

Tragedy struck the family in 1992.   Albert, their youngest, died in a car accident on the way to The University of Maryland.  Judy’s hand shook uncontrollably as she hung his ornaments on the tree the following Christmas. Steve had not wanted to put up the tree. He felt that they should cancel Christmas and take the family as far away from their home as possible. But Judy insisted the tree be put up.  Seeing the ornaments hang on the conifer’s branches healed her battered heart.  She stretched out on the floor every night, staring at the tree and cried.

Soon there were ornaments with college mascots, wedding photos and birth announcements. Grandchildren’s favorite toys hung from the branches.  The joy of the early 1970’s returned as the little kids stared in awe at the giant tree covered with ornaments.  Judy loved the tell the kids the stories behind every single one of them.

In 2005, Steve retired as a Rear Admiral.  A single star hung from a branch signifying his distinguished naval career.  Judy survived a bout with breast cancer earlier that year and a pink ribbon was placed on the tree.  They continued to travel.  Ornaments from towns from far across the nation soon joined the tree. They were where their children now lived. The tree and the memories it represented filled the empty nest.

“Steve, get up in the attic and get the boxes down. It’s time to decorate the tree.”

Grumbling preceded the retired Admiral as he faked protest.  He knew the importance of this day.

First the lights went up. Then the beads. Christmas music from every year of their marriage played on the iPad. Then came the red ribbons. The sacred red ribbons. They always were the first to go on. Each box held ornaments from an event, place or person. She and Steve put up Albert’s ornaments. Her hand shook slightly as she looked as her lost son’s handsome face. Copious tears ran down her cheeks.  How she missed the boy.

Then, branch by branch, the ornaments filled up the giant Scotch Pine.

Their Christmas was a scrapbook of their life together. Branches were chapters and ornaments were pages. Each represented a special time or place.

Steve and Judy held hands and admired their work when they finished. To them, it was more than just a Christmas tree. It represented their amazing life together.

It was their family tree.

 

 

 

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Sunday Free-For-All

Good morning! To all my Ole Miss fan friends, congratulations. To my State fan friends, you had a good run. To my Southern Miss fans, I’m so, so sorry.  Here’s the U.S.S. Alabama as your random photo of the day.

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Saturday Free-For-All

Good morning! Hope you have a fantastic Friday!

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Truth

Someone asked me on my Facebook page if a particular story was true. My answer? Simple: Yes and no.

No, no, I’m not trying to sound like a fence-sitting politician. Every story I write is like gumbo. The ingredients and seasoning are scraps of things I’ve experienced. I throw them into the pot and allow them to simmer.  I stir and then serve.

So no story is 100% “the truth.”  But they have enough truth in them to make them real. They’re just observations I’ve made while stumbling around this crazy world where we live.

Mark Twain said, “Truth is stranger than fiction.” I couldn’t agree more.

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Thelma East’s Black Friday Rebellion

It was 10:59 p.m. on Thanksgiving and the scene outside of the MegaMart Superstore looked like a kicked over fire ant nest.  Hundreds of impatient shoppers pressed anxiously against the doors. They were eagerly awaiting their chance to get a MacroSoft U-Box video game system (for the amazingly low price of $199.)

Little did they know, there were only five of them. The Security Guard knew it. That’s why there was fear in his eyes.

Just hours before, these dark angels of greed gathered around their respective dinner tables giving thanks for what they had.  It was now Black Friday. And they wanted MORE.

Thelma East knew the Pilgrims had probably done the same thing.  They had a nice meal with the Indians and then went and raided their food stores the very next day.   The crisp cold air nipped at her nose as moon danced in and out of the clouds.  An assistant manager walked toward the front doors with the look of terror.  Black Friday shoppers, like dogs, smelled fear.  The assistant manager would have been safer wearing a red cape while running with the bulls.

A rather loud lady tried to cut in line.  Another woman, still committed to the last thread of civilization that could possibly exist on Black Friday, quickly set her straight. The rest of the crowd offered support and the line-busting woman slinked to the back of the crowd in shame.  Black Friday turned average Americans into a scene from Lord of the Flies.  Thelma East expected to see a pig head and hear a conch shell blow at any moment.

As the key unlocked the door, the bloodlust for the U-Box reached a fever pitch.

“U-BOX, U-BOX, U-BOX, U-BOX!” the crowd began to chant.

The assistant manager, using the same technique he would use to escape an oncoming tornado, ran at a ninety-degree angle.  “God have mercy on your souls,” he muttered as he ran back toward his duty station.

Like water pouring through a failed dam, the mass of humanity poured through the MegaMart entrance.  The greeter ducked behind a Dark Knight Rises display. But even Batman couldn’t save her.  A 68-year-old woman with a cane body-checked her into a pile of Twinkie boxes. Twinkies and the greeter were both history.  One shopper shoved another in the back, getting a purse aimed at her head.

If Christmas represented Peace on Earth, Goodwill to men, it had taken the night off.  There was none of that. And there was no Thankgiving, either. This was all about the prize.

The cashier in the electronics department heard the rumbling coming toward her.  Dust rose in the front of the store as the hoard crashed like a tsunami toward the helpless teenager. Hundreds of shoppers were about to fight over five U-boxes.

Civil Wars have started over less.

Thelma East looked older, but was remarkably agile.  She outpaced the man on oxygen and reached the front of the pack.  Thelma thought of the joke, “Can you outrun a bear? No, I just have to be able to outrun you.”  She could see the U-Box. She could taste the U-Box. She would soon possess the U-Box.

Her hands gripped the cardboard box as she hustled past the display. If she had stopped, she would have been mobbed and probably had her prize stripped from her fingers.  But she never broke stride.  In the Black Friday Olympics, she had just won the gold in record time.  She quickly ducked behind a Honey Boo Boo video display to catch her breath.  Her eyes admired lovingly the cardboard box.  The U-Box. The finest of all game systems.

She. Had. Won.

Epiphanies hit at the strangest times and in the strangest places.

As she looked at her hard-won prize, Thelma East thought, “Why do I need a U-Box?”  Thelma had no children. She had no grandchildren.  She realized it was just about wanting, not needing.

The Pilgrims would have puked.

She looked over at the still large crowd. They were shoving not loving. They were spiteful not thankful.

In the back of the crowd was a slender woman. She looked to be about 35 and had dark circles under her eyes.  By the looks of her clothes, she probably wasn’t particularly wealthy, either.  The look of disappointment on her face told Thelma that the slender woman had come here for a purpose.  Thelma made eye contact with her and quietly gestured for her to come over to the video section.

“What’s your name? Mine’s Thelma.”

“Sandy.”

“You have kids, Sandy?”

“Yes, ma’am. Two boys.  This has been a tough year for us.  They lost their dad in a car accident.  I’m trying to give them what they really wanted from Santa.  I thought I could get a U-Box tonight, but I guess I was kidding myself.”

Thelma smiled. Like the Grinch, her heart grew two sizes that night. (But it probably had more to do with the fat-laden meal she had eaten earlier in the day.)

She bent over and picked up the box off the shelf next to her. She handed it to the shocked woman and said, “Sandy, Happy Thanksgiving and Merry Christmas.”

The tired mother’s eyes lit up at the sight of the precious U-Box. “Um.”

Thelma waived her hand and said, “Don’t say another word. Let’s go to the cashier.  My treat.”

And at that moment in the middle of a suburban MegaMart, Thelma East had a glorious Black Friday rebellion.

 

 

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Black Friday Free-For-All

Good morning!  I’ll be at Lemuria Books at 11 a.m. today signing Fried Chicken & Wine if you’d like some copies to finish your shopping!

Hope you have a great Black Friday!

Signing last night at the Outlets at Vicksburg.

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The Borrowed Family

Atticus looked up, swished his tail in disgust, spun around and settled back down in the middle of the sunbeam.

Twenty pounds, striped and slightly cranky, Atticus was the only family Joseph Jordan had.  And while the cat wasn’t much when it came to conversation, he was a good listener.

“Happy Thanksgiving, you lazy fat cat.”

Atticus swished his tail again.  Someone would find pee in his shoe in the morning.

Joseph Jordan lived in a one-bedroom efficiency apartment in the wrong part of town. He didn’t care, though.  The rent was cheap and for the most part, no one bothered him.

He flipped through the cable channels and watched a few moments of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.  He remembered watching the parade on his grandparent’s old cabinet television.  He’d lie there, on the floor and watch all the colorful floats and balloons pass thorugh the cold New York streets. Those were more innocent times.  Now if he tried to get down on the floor, it would take EMTs and a crane to get him back up.

His grandparents were now gone.  And so were his parents. His wife left him years ago.  And his kids lived out in Seattle near her.  So it was just him and Atticus.  “You’re a good cat, Atticus.”  Atticus, his best friend, rolled over in approval.

He had a hot date with Marie Callender.  Sure, she was kind of cold at first, but she warmed up quickly.  He liked that joke — and his frozen dinner that was awaiting him.  Dust floated around in the sunbeam like dancing fairies as Atticus began to snore. A fat cat will do that.

Thanksgiving was a challenge for Joseph.  He had so much to be thankful for — but an equally long list of disappointments.

Being alone on Thanksgiving was number one on his list.

He had seen too much death in Vietnam to take his own life, but he understood why people committed suicide. The pain of loneliness taunted him nightly.  Atticus acted as his guardian angel, driving the demons away.

Joseph had retired from the Post Office in August.  Now his life involved going to the grocery, the bank and a handful of other chores.  But he always loved going to the grocery. There he liked to talk to the cashier in lane number six.  Her name was Emily Rose and could be a clone of his daughter Becky.  “Hi there Mr. Joseph!” His heart raced when he thought of her voice.

Emily Rose was young, married and struggled to make ends meet.  Studying architecture at night, she had her dreams.  Her husband Bobby worked on an oil rig. He noticed that she looked older than her years. She had lines on her forehead that came from long nights of studying and worrying. Where would the money come from? Would Bobby be OK on the rig? She was still paying the hospital for emergency surgery in April. Emily Rose was also a cancer survivor.

“Atticus, what will it be?  Fish sticks or beef tips?”  The cat, of course, wanted fish. “Beef tips it is.”

Atticus was not happy with his two-legged friend.

Joseph hobbled over to the freezer, pulled the dinner out and put in the microwave.  Four minutes on high, stir and then two more minutes. Let it cool for two minutes.  And then Thanksgiving dinner would be ready.

Knock knock knock.

Someone stood at the door.

Joseph grabbed his pistol and walked over to the peephole.

Knock knock knock.  “Mr. Joseph?”

Joseph’s heart skipped a beat.

He unchained the doors and threw it open. There stood Emily Rose and her husband. Both were dressed warmly to fight the evening’s chill.

“Happy Thanksgiving, Mr. Joseph!  Emily Rose and I want you to come have Thanksgiving dinner with us.” Bobby smiled as he put his arm around the old man. “And Atticus is invited, too.”

Within moments, the old man, the fat cat and the young couple were headed across town to a small house in a small neighborhood.  Cars lined the streets in front of it.

The front door swung open, revealed a wild scene.  Smells of turkey and dressing wafted through the room. Small children played chase around the table. An elderly lady in an apron smiled and scolded them half heartedly as she held a pumpkin pie.  Four men cheered as the Redskins quarterback threw yet another touchdown.  A fire blazed in the living room, glowing almost as brightly as the love that radiated from people in the room.

“Meet your new family, Mr. Joseph. Happy Thanksgiving!”

The family sat at a huge table, prayed and began to eat.

As he listened to all the family’s stories, Joseph decided the first on his list of things to be thankful for was the borrowed family.  He took a bite of turkey and dropped a piece onto the floor.

Atticus swished his tail in complete approval.

 

 

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CARTOON: Thanksgiving First

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Thanksgiving Free-For-All

Hope you are having a great day!  What are you thankful for? Me? You.

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Fit-to-Fat-to-Fit Blog: Turkey Day 8K

First of all, Happy Thanksgiving. On a day devoted to overindulging, I thought I’d go an run five miles with 800 of my closest friends.  At 7 a.m., I ran the Fleet Feet Jackson 3rd Annual Turkey Day 8K.

It was a very well organized race. Unfortunately, I did not pick up my packet yesterday and someone picked it up stole it for me. Therefore, I didn’t get a packet nor was able to be chip timed (although I did get a replacement number and a shirt).  So the time I report is from my watch.

We started in front of Fleet Feet on Highway 51 and ran north.  We ran down to the road that cuts over to Old Canton by the Madison airport.  From there, we ran south Old Canton, past three churches and Ross Barnett’s son’s house to the Natchez Trace.  There we picked up the Ridgeland Multipurpose Trail — a trail that I run every weekend anyway.  The course was mostly flat –except the part on the Ridgeland Trail. The next mile was uphill.  We then continued north on 51 back to Fleet Feet.

I started out the gate fast. I had a comfortable pace and looked down at my heart monitor — it was 160 beats per minute, which is a little high for me. But I felt strong. So I kept it up.  By the time I got to the last quarter mile, I poured on the gas. My heart rate rose to 180 bpm.  I still felt strong.

I finished strong at 45:30, a personal best for me.

Here are a few of the pics I tried to take along the way.

The Madison Airport as we turned onto Old Canton Road.

It’s blurry on the trail. I run without my glasses. Everything looks like this.

Running south on Old Canton Road into the fog.

Heading over the Trace. Runners behind me are in the distance.

Into the fog.

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