Christmas Traditions (1 Viewer)

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My wife wanted some quirky traditions during Christmas so a few years ago she surprised our daughter with Bells the Christmas goblin. Same as the elf on the shelf. Every night "Bells" gets up to some mischief, like eating the gingerbread cookies or playing with my daughters toys. Every morning she rushes out to see what he did during the night.

So tonight Bells got into my sample sets and set up a game.

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Feel free to share any traditions that you and our family may have.

Happy holidays
Paul
 
Feel free to share any traditions that you and our family may have.

My parents always put the presents under the tree as soon as they were bought and wrapped. Then on Christmas Eve they would put a present or two from Santa.

My wife nixed that idea right away. She suggested that Santa bring all the gifts, and that they don't go under the tree until the kids went to bed. The only presents under our tree were any that were received in the mail from the grandparents. This was a great call on her part. The look in their faces on Christmas morning was priceless. We never over did it with gifts. We kept things simple.

About 20 years ago we also started making a birthday cake for Jesus. We would sing Happy Birthday on Christmas morning. As the kids all got older we were just going to blow that off one year. They said no. My two youngest made the cake.

We don't have any extended family in the area. Its just the Colleen, the kids and I. We don't do a big Christmas dinner. We hit church in the morning. Then my wife already has quiche prepared. We have kind of a brunch. Then we just snack all day. Watch some movies, play a game.

This used to be the day my son and I would play Lord of the Rings "Risk". Once a year. Game took about 4 hours to play.
 
Awesome thread idea. I love Christmas and couldn't wait until my daughter was old enough to really get into it. Now she's a teenager and I find myself decorating and singing christmas carols all by myself :( Christmas is funny is how it evolves as you age...you love it as a kid, loathe it as a teenager, usually spend it drunk as a young adult, you become a kid again once you have kids, and then finally you want grandkids so you can enjoy it all over again.

Anyways, traditions have always been a big deal in my house. I tried early on to establish some. Not all stuck but my daughter and I usually do the following without fail

Decorate a gingerbread house

Do a bunch of holiday baking including the cookies for Santa. We also usually do at least one themed cupcake or cake where my daughter comes up with the idea and I scour the internet on ways to make it a reality lol.

One night we load up the dog and pick up hot chocolate and then drive around town looking at all the Christmas lights.

I read her "Twas the Night Before Christmas" every Christmas Eve. The first Christmas after her mom left and she wasn't going to be with me on Christmas Eve, she asked me to read the story before she left. I started and she pulled out her phone and asked if she could record it. I realized that she wanted that so she could play the recording at her moms before bed. Touched and broke my heart at the same time.

I continued this one from my mom, but I always leave a "letter from Santa" on Christmas Eve. I know she doesn't believe in Santa anymore but she does a good job humoring me. I recap her year and reference all of her big accomplishments and events. It's one of the first things she looks for because it's personal.
 
My wife wanted some quirky traditions during Christmas so a few years ago she surprised our daughter with Bells the Christmas goblin. Same as the elf on the shelf. Every night "Bells" gets up to some mischief, like eating the gingerbread cookies or playing with my daughters toys. Every morning she rushes out to see what he did during the night.

So tonight Bells got into my sample sets and set up a game.

View attachment 26309

Feel free to share any traditions that you and our family may have.

Happy holidays
Paul

Took me a sec, but I knew your Christmas goblin reminded me of something I had as a kid.

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We generally stay home and the kids that are now all adults got to open one present on Christmas Eve. Before doing so I read Luke 2:1-20 just to remind the family of the true meaning of our celebration. We would then have a nice home cooked dinner. We then stay up and chat before going to all sleep and then wake up in the morning after sleeping in and open the rest of the gifts.

Oh, and being from the South, and more especially Texas, we have tamales at some point.

The reason we have tamales you ask?...........................................
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so everyone has something to unwrap! :ROFL: :ROFLMAO::LOL: :laugh::ROFL: :ROFLMAO:

Merry Christmas Everyone!!!
David O
 
Last year was my 10th Christmas with my wife. We decided to be incredibly selfish last year and tell our families that we were going to spend Christmas alone, just the two of us. Yes, I know this time of year is all about spending time with family, yadda yadda yadda. We do plenty of that, too. The date we celebrate doesn't really matter anymore. We had two Christmases this past weekend and have two more this coming weekend. And my dad's side of the family does Christmas in July (80% of them are educators and most of them travel during break). What we *don't* do enough of this time of year is have enough "just us" time.

Last year was truly special. We slept in (and by slept in, I mean I listened to our dog get incredibly antsy for about a half hour when I didn't get up at my normal time to feed him and let him out) and I made homemade buttermilk pancakes and bacon from a local butcher for breakfast. We watched our four favorite Christmas movies (Love Actually, Christmas Vacation, Charlie Brown Christmas, and the Jim Carey version of the Grinch) in our pajamas and then took a nice long walk with our favorite 4-legged mutt. Then we made a fancy dinner (by our standards) together with Christmas music blasting. Mushroom and gorgonzola stuffed beef tenderloin with a currant and merlot sauce, brussel sprouts cooked w/ bacon, and garlic smashed potatoes. And a couple bottles of nice wine (in links_strong glasses, obv (y) :thumbsup:).

I don't know if any of this qualifies as "tradition" since it's only one year old - but one things is for sure: I'm looking forward to it again this year already more than any of you know.
 

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I grew up in a small Levitt tract house (1000-1200 sf, lr, kitchen, one bath, on a 60x120 lot) in central NJ. My main memory of that house was the winter warmth of heating pipes in the concrete pad underneath the linoleum floors and carpeting. I'm reminded of that because we stayed in a hotel in DC two weeks ago that had similar heating under the slate flooring in the bathroom... ;)

My mother was a war bride from Wales, which contributed to our xmas traditions. We always put our fresh tree up during the day on xmas eve, then put up a cardboard fireplace in the living room so there would be a place to hang the stockings, and decorated the tree after supper. There was always a Lionel train set and a small village underneath the tree. Our parents put the gifts from our Welsh and American relatives plus Santa out after the kids went to bed. Xmas morning was always a skirmish between three kids sneaking around from 4 or 5 am on, and two parents trying to sleep.

The tree always stayed up until after new year's day. We never understood how neighbors could have trees out at the curb for collection before the new year. What was wrong with those people?

Years later, my family moved to Georgia, just north of Atlanta, and my wife and I would always drive down there, usually on xmas eve. For about 25 years, our xmas day tradition was a buying expedition to the big Oxford Books store in downtown Atlanta, which was always open.

When my present wife and I got together in 1990, her work schedule dictated that she take her main vacation over the xmas and new year holidays, so we started traveling to Europe and the Caribbean for two weeks each year. Several times we bought BMWs, picked them up a few days before xmas at the factory in Munich, and put a couple thousand miles on them traveling around and visiting friends, before dropping them off for shipment home.

Over the last 25 years, we've had some magical xmas experiences travelling -- native steel drum bands in the Caribbean wearing stocking caps and playing xmas songs on the beach; a magical snowy xmas eve service in the Lutheran cathedral in Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Germany, when we were one of only three foreign couples in town, two American and one Japanese; and an absolutely other-worldly New Year's Eve in Rennes, Brittany, crammed into the city square so tight you couldn't move, with black-caped Breton dancers performing in what looked like a boxing ring surrounded by vertical jets of fire timed to the music. (Xmas Eve and Easter are the two times each year I will go to church with my wife if she wants me to.)

In recent years since my parents died, we've done our travelling a little earlier, leaving in early December and usually returning just before or on, xmas day (still a great day to travel). We get together with my brother and his wife, who live three miles away, here in Florida. This year, we're playing tennis on xmas morning, and then going to their house for dinner.

And as we do every year when we're at home, we have a quiet dinner out on New Year's Eve, and then host an all afternoon and evening New Year's Day brunch for 50-60 of our best friends. We go through at least two cases of American champagne (yes, I know the rules), always Gruet Blanc de Noirs from New Mexico (!), and I make at least 200 assorted savory and sweet crepes on that day. We finish up the champagne and a wee bit of Scotch with the stragglers around the fire pit on our lanai -- it's a great day. It's work, but it's worth it.

We don't do xmas presents as such, but when we travel, we always have an eye out for something special for each other. This year, we're doing something different -- taking our first ever cruise, 11 days down the Caribbean island chain, in mid-January. It remains to be seen whether we'll love it or hate it.

Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, Happy Festivus, and may His Noodly Appendages bring you joy -- assuming you can get over all the crappy xmas music that's been playing everywhere since the first week of November.
:cool:
 
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.... We watched our four favorite Christmas movies (Love Actually, Christmas Vacation, Charlie Brown Christmas, and the Jim Carey version of the Grinch) in our pajamas and then took a nice long walk with our favorite 4-legged mutt. Then we made a fancy dinner (by our standards) together with Christmas music blasting. Mushroom and gorgonzola stuffed beef tenderloin with a currant and merlot sauce, brussel sprouts cooked w/ bacon, and garlic smashed potatoes. And a couple bottles of nice wine (in links_strong glasses, obv

The only thing I would suggest to improve that day would be to add Scrooged to the movie list. What would xmas be without Carol Kane? :p
 
My wife started waking the kids up at like 5am, she is more exited then them.. We pray and sing happy Birthday to Jesus and then open gifts. After we play a little we drive over to my inlaws house and have sweetish pancakes with other great breakfast stuff, then in the evening we go to my mom's house...

This will be the 10th year of this tradition.
 
My wife started waking the kids up at like 5am, she is more exited then them

When the kids were little I'd do the same thing. I would be up two hours before they would even crawl out of bed. Gave the wife and I time to have a cup or two of java before the celebration started.
 
Heard a funny one that's not mine.

Friends of ours spend every Christmas/New Year's Eve in North Carolina, but they like to drive overnight on Xmas Eve because traffic is nonexistent. My wife asked them how they do Christmas morning - do they just bring all the gifts with them or what? They said they just tell the kids Dec. 23 is Christmas Eve and they celebrate Christmas on Dec. 24 and the kids never even know the difference.
 
Our Christmas tradition is to rent a party bus - load up the family and friends and drive around looking at lights. We drink, eat cookies and sing Christmas songs. It's a family favorite loved by the kids and the adults alike. My tradition is also to make my house look as festive as possible.

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Our Christmas tradition is to rent a party bus - load up the family and friends and drive around looking at lights. We drink, eat cookies and sing Christmas songs

your party bus is a lot different than the party bus we took to Busty's Bar back in N.Y. :)
 
Our Christmas tradition is to rent a party bus - load up the family and friends and drive around looking at lights. We drink, eat cookies and sing Christmas songs. It's a family favorite loved by the kids and the adults alike. My tradition is also to make my house look as festive as possible.

View attachment 26503

FML Dallas at Christmas looks like springtime in New Jersey.

I'll also never forget the first "party bus" I saw. It was one night decades ago we're on the interstate in Atlanta in a packed car on the way to concert. The car was naturally getting the full Cheech and Chong treatment when I hear someone in the back seat say, "Oh shit..." Everyone tensed up until the guy continued, "...it's the ATLANTA PARTY BUS."

Then the bus pulls by us with topless chicks and guys holding beer bongs and actual bongs all hanging out of the windows. And we were sitting in my Nissan worried about getting busted.
 
My mother is a Christmas junkie. My grandmother, who was probably the most Catholic woman in the world, always stayed with us on Christmas Eve. We'd have a big meal around 7:00 or so, then watch Leo Buscaglia's "Stories of Christmas Love" ... I think my mother always wished she grew up in an Italian family.


Video quality is meh, but it actually is pretty good, if a bit dated.

After watching that, we'd lounge around a bit more, then we'd head to midnight mass. I remember waiting in the car for my father for 10 minutes every year, and it never occurred to me that my father never held us up any other day of the year.

After dozing off through midnight mass, we'd get back home around 1:30 a.m., and low and behold, Santa had made his visit while we were at church. We were so excited that of course we weren't going to bed. We'd open up our presents and eventually crash at about 3 a.m.

I was the youngest in my family, and when I was about 7 years old and clearly the only one still excited about Santa, my father saved a hoof from a deer that he'd shot that fall and had a high school neighbor leave tracks all over the yard while we were gone. And when we got home, she was hiding under the porch ringing jingle bells. I swear to you I saw Santa's sleigh that night.

I'm not sure we'll ever be able to match that for my kids, but we do give them new PJs and watch a Christmas movie every year on Christmas Eve to make the night before something special. Then we tear apart presents the next morning -- my wife is usually the first person up.
 
My family's tradition was that each gift had a clue. You were required to guess before you could open. Ideally, guess until you were close, which could mean more hints. One that sticks out in my mind was the year I could tell my older brother gave me a cassette (before CDs and all that). The clue said "Music for listening feet". Sadly, I had not heard of the Talking Heads and never guessed right. My poor brother was aghast that I hadn't heard of them. As I recall, that was also the year we got snowed in. I played that tape over and over and over and over while working on puzzles. :)

Now days, since we don't have kids, PZ kindly works Christmas for one of the other fire fighters who has kids. That means my new tradition is to sleep in, drink coffee, skype my siblings, read, play computer games (usually Civilization), and snack/eat as necessary.
 
My uncle used to claim any present without a tag on it. One year he was under the tree on Christmas Eve ripping off all the name tags. I was distraught because he ripped off one with my name that I knew was a SNES. :(
 
We used to watch Nightmare Before Christmas on Xmas eve each year but we've conked out in recent years on account of the kids.

This year we made marshmallow snowmen

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Dexter arrived to take some snaps. I think we might be up for a prize
 
My only tradition, which started while I was married, is that I have to have 2-3 shots of Ice Cold Vodka during Christmas Eve meal. One served right before we start eating, as an aperitive.

I plan to continue this in my next relationship.

This year I skipped the Christmas Eve's meal totally because of my diet.
 
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