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Monday, December 27, 2021

Journal: Babe of the Manger, Yet Lord of All

 

It’s two days after Christmas, and today is our family get-together.

I sent off my Christmas letter a couple of weeks ago, and have been enjoying the responses we’ve been getting.  Admittedly, I break all the rules when it comes to Christmas letters.  They (whoever ‘they’ are) say a Christmas letter should be no longer than one page, one side only.  Mine was (cringe) 16 pages, front and back.  Of course, it was full of pictures, all the way through, so that used up a lot of those pages.

One year, I started off by stating the above ‘Christmas letter criterion’, and then exculpating myself by informing the worthy readers that this was not a ‘letter’; indeed, it was a ‘book’, and a short one, at that!  One cannot judge a Christmas letter for being long, when it’s not a letter at all, but a book.  Plus, it’s free.  One can only look on a free Christmas book with great gratitude.  Right?

But I can’t go through that same malarkey every time.

I feel like Anne of Green Gables:  “If you only knew how much I wanted to say and didn’t, you’d at least give me credit for that!” 

Indeed, after skimming through all of last year’s letters and grabbing jetsam and flotsam I thought I might like to conglomerate into a Christmas letter, I had – get this – 75 pages!  Once that part is done, I go through it time and again, deleting, deleting, deleting, until I can’t bear to delete one more word.  Then I click Print, and make Hewlett Packard’s ink division rich. 

Actually, I don’t really spend all that much per page, since I keep a membership with HP, and they withdraw a wee bit – maybe $2.99? – from my hide every 3 months or so.  I don’t print a whole lot, except for my Christmas letter.  If I’m doing a lot of pantograph quilting, I do print a few pages of pantos for most quilts.  But that’s about it.

I spent four days last week scanning photos, finishing album #40 and starting on album #53.  (I’m not going in order.)  Here’s Lydia (with Keith and Larry in the background) at Angostura Reservoir, southwest South Dakota, August 09, 1993.  Lydia was 2.  We were on our way to Yellowstone National Park.



Tuesday morning, I filled the bird feeders with black-oil sunflower seeds, even the big one in the front yard that hold 12 pounds of seed – and is tilted on its pole.  Larry keeps threatening to fix it.  😏

This time, I put on a knit headband when I went out, as it was quite windy.  A week ago Saturday, I filled the feeders in 8° weather with a strong wind blowing, and wound up with earaches that didn’t go away for hours.

That afternoon, a friend sent pictures of her newly reorganized shelves of pots and pans.  Since the shelves were open, and all the pots and pans in view, she had polished them all ’til they shone.  “Now I no longer have to get down on hands and knees to find the right pots and pans, as I did when they were in the cupboard under the counter!” she said happily.

I promptly wrote back to tell her, “My pots and pans are stored under the sink in our small kitchen.  But I never have to get down on hands and knees to find one.  All I have to do is open the door, and they fall out on my feet.  Très efficace.”  🤣

So there I was later that afternoon trying to have a small spot o’ relaxin’, sippin’ coffee, checking my Quilt-Talk group, and reading email, the news, the funnies (not necessarily in that order); and all the lovely ladies on Quilt Talk wouldn’t stop talkin’ and natterin’ about laundry:  “My laundry is done”... “I’m doing the sheets”... “Two loads of laundry to do”...

“Okay, okay!” I wrote.  “Laundry.  I roused myself from my perch at the kitchen table, trotted into the laundry room, and started a load of Larry’s work clothes.  Are you happy now?  I have two more loads to do.”

My nice quilting friends then laughed at me.  😅

Here’s Larry with the children at Mt. Rushmore in August of 1993.  From left to right:  Dorcas, Keith, Hannah, Hester, Joseph, Teddy, and Lydia.



I paid a few bills, put three or four more gifts into bags, and got back to scanning photos.

Later that afternoon, I took Loren some food.  I cut the meat up for him, hoping that would make him more likely to eat it.  Also on the menu were mixed vegetables, a banana nut muffin, string cheese, peaches, and apple juice.  His dishes were washed again. 

Jeremy had been there in the morning to cut up the fallen tree in Loren’s yard, and Loren remembered seeing him out there.  Maybe things would continue to improve.  Or maybe not.

After leaving Loren’s house, I stopped at The EyeGlass Place to get both pairs of glasses (by-lines and craft) adjusted. 

Why do the people at that eyewear store invariably argue with me over whether or not my glasses are crooked?!  Plumb aggravatin’, ’tis.  I made matters worse by trying to be friendly and pleasant, and joking about crooked eyebrows. 

“I can’t adjust the glasses to your eyebrows!” the woman exclaimed testily.

“No, I was kidding.”  I looked at her awhile.

She fidgeted, then informed me that since I hadn’t bought the glasses there, she didn’t want to break them.  What, she would’ve wanted to break them, if I had’ve gotten them there??  (Give me credit for not saying that out loud.)

I said, “It’s okay; I won’t blame you if they break.”  And I handed her the glasses.

When you practically stuff things straight into people’s hands, they almost always take them, have you ever noticed that?

She took the glasses and went off to ‘fix’ them.

After a bit, back she came with them.  I tried them on and looked in the mirror. 

They were no different than they had been before.

I made sure to push the side that was down too far even farther down, so she might be able to tell, then turned to her.  “This side is too low,” I said, pointing at it.  “Compare the top edge of the frame to my pupils.”

She looked.  “They look straight to me!” 

They were noticeably not straight.  And even if they were not, didn’t anyone ever teach her that the customer is always right??!

She added, “You should take them back to where you bought them, and have them adjusted there!”

Yeah, well.  That’s 80 miles away.  And The EyeGlass Place advertises ‘Free adjustments to all, no matter where you got the glasses!’  (I am sometimes a paying customer there.)

“Well,” I said, ignoring that last bit and holding out the glasses, “I can see the top edge of the left frame, but not the right.  So just adjust the left side up a bit.”

She wanted to be huffy, but I smiled sooo sweetly, she reluctantly took the glasses and marched off to readjust them.

When she returned, they were better, but not perfect.  I decided to put up with it.

I then handed her the craft glasses, explaining, “I bumped these into a door, and now they’re too loose.”

“I can try to tighten them a little,” she said, scowling at them like they were something the cat drug in.

At least she got these tightened nicely, though she did inform me that it was a lucky thing the edges of the lenses didn’t- get chipped when she did it.

Dorcas, Lydia, & Larry, Chief Joseph Scenic Highway, northwest Wyoming, August 11, 1993.  Larry had fixed up the 1966 Holiday Rambler; it was like new again.  The Suburban used to be my father’s.


I thanked her politely and asked how much I owed, just for the fun of it.


“Nothing,” she said, scowling. 

I expressed my appreciation, but she had already gone storming off to (loudly) ask the lady at the front desk something. 

So I gathered my tightened and still slightly crooked glasses and made my exit without another glance back.

You might think she was snotty because I didn’t have a mask on; a couple of other customers were wearing one.  The sign on the door said they were required, after all.  When I first got inside, I’d fished mine out of my purse – and then noticed that none of the receptionists or assistants were wearing masks.  I shoved the dumb thing back into my purse.  What’s good for the goose is good for the ... other goose.

The customers ahead of me finished their business and departed, so I wasn’t keeping her from anyone.  One more thing:  the lady at the front desk is not deaf; I know this for a fact.  Therefore I assume Mrs. Crabbypants is crabby with everybody, not just me.

Anyway, I’m a little more adjusted than I was before, and I’m out no pennies, so I’m happy.  Especially after writing a whole page of complaint about it, I’m happy.  😁

Home again, I put a load of clothes in the dryer and another in the washer, then upstairs I went to scan more photos.  And whataya know, I turned a page in the album, and there was Lydia in the little red sunglasses I’d mentioned to someone the very night before. 



We hadn’t driven far on this trip when it became clear that Lydia needed sunglasses, as each afternoon found us driving straight into the sun, and the visors were of no use to her in her car seat there between Larry and me.  We stopped at the next convenience store and went in to look for sunglasses – and found a whole rack of them, just for children.  (The other kids got some too, of course.)

I pointed out some cute ones with pink frames and a kitten in the middle.

Nope, those wouldn’t do.  Lydia wanted the red ones with the airplane in the middle!

How about the blue ones with the dolly in the middle?

Nope!  Red with an airplane, those were the ones.

We got her the red-framed sunglasses with the airplane in the middle.  🤣

That evening, the National Weather Service confirmed that there were indeed two tornadoes in Platte County the previous week on Wednesday, December 15.  They were the first in the area since 1998, and the first in town since ever.

The stronger of the two Platte County tornadoes passed through Columbus just after 3:00 p.m.  It took a straight 2.7-mile path through town, starting along Howard Boulevard near West Park Elementary School (that’s where I went to school as a child, and about three blocks from our church and school) and heading northeast for about two minutes until it stopped near the intersection of 18th Avenue and 53rd Street (quite close to Loren’s house).  Rated by the NWS as a 2 on the Enhanced Fujita (EF) scale, the Columbus tornado reached wind speeds of 115 mph.  An EF2 or higher is considered a ‘significant tornado’.

The second Platte County tornado swept into Platte Center, 10 miles to our north, at about the same time as the one in Columbus and reached 105 mph, earning an EF1 rating.

Both tornadoes moved through quickly at about 80 mph, each lasting only a minute or two.  There was a lot of straight-line wind damage, too.

Here’s the ending point of the tornado, and Loren’s house:



After all this excitement, you can imagine that people were less than impressed when we got an emergency alert test on phones and tablets at 11:00 p.m. Tuesday night. 

Did Roger Cooley (name changed to protect the ignorant) accidentally sit on the button?

That’s an old joke.  Years ago, a pompous, not-nice-at-all policeman who somehow got on the local police force (but wasn’t on it for long before he got himself fired) boosted himself up onto a high counter in the control room, where plump, pompous policemen were not supposed to sit.

He sat on the button.

The button that set off all the tornado sirens in town, that is.

He was the butt of many jokes thereafter.

From then on, if any sirens or horns or whistles go off unexpectedly or for no discernible reason, we all say, “Did Roger Cooley sit on the button?”

Early Wednesday morning, the State Patrol, looking a bit unkempt what with all that egg on their respective faces, apologized and announced that the late-night monthly alert was an accident.  The wireless ‘emergency push alert’ was not supposed to go to wireless devices, only to radio and television.

I made Loren some food and took it to him:  Alaskan cod, broccoli, and clam chowder.  I added to it with things we had stocked in his refrigerator:  peaches, applesauce, and cranberry juice.

That night was our Christmas program.  Daddy would be so amazed to see our church now.  Membership is 442.  When he started here, the membership was 26.  Here’s the original church.  The parsonage is on the right, and that’s the family dog Spot.  I have a vague recollection of him; he was already getting old by the time I was born in 1960.



In 1969, we added onto the church; and in 1991 we started our church school (the red brick part of the building, to the left, is the school).



Below is our current church.  The new two-story school is on the other side.



16 of our 25 grandchildren were in the program.  Since Loren was not with us, we sat in the newly-finished balcony for the first time.

We sang a number of Christmas songs... the brass and the strings played... Robert gave a sermon from the wonderful old Christmas story... and then the schoolchildren sang and recited verses.

Afterwards, everyone received bags of nuts, fruit, and candy, and the young people passed out the sacks full of cards for each family.  I love going through all the cards and pictures our friends and family give us.

Thursday, Dorcas sent pictures of Trevor with the sock monkey we sent him.  My late sister-in-law Janice made it; I found two of them in a bin in Loren’s lower level, along with other things she had made and planned to give away.  I bought a couple of books to go with them, Sock Monkey Takes A Bath.  The other monkey and book will go to Ian, who’s just a week older than Trevor.



When Caleb was a young teenager and old enough to stay home now and then when we went on half-day trips, he often said, “Bring me home a monkey!”  So one day we stopped at one of the nicer, and very large, secondhand stores in Omaha – and I hit the jackpot.  Someone had donated what looked like a truckload of stuffed monkeys in every size and variety possible.  They were anywhere from $.50 to $1.50, even the big ones.

I bought the whole works, except for a few odd pink and lavender ones.

That evening, Larry kept Caleb occupied while I snuck those monkeys into the house from the garage, spirited them upstairs to Caleb’s room, and arranged them just so-so all over his room and bed.

Then I went back downstairs and acted innocent.  (That should’ve been the give-away, right?)  Victoria, who at about age eleven was in on the secret, could hardly contain herself.  (But since Victoria could often hardly contain herself, that was no give-away at all. 😂)

A little while later, Caleb headed to his bedroom.

We heard a yelp, and then Caleb’s contagious laugh rippled down the stairs.

Worth every penny, were those monkeys. 😄

Wednesday and Thursday, we could see by the Moultrie camera that Loren kept opening and closing his garage door.  Up, down, up — and then he’d forget and leave it open.  He was opening the door behind the Jeep, not the pickup.  He obviously wanted to go somewhere, and probably couldn’t figure out where on earth he’d left his keys.  Larry stopped by a couple of times as he happened to be driving to a nearby jobsite and closed the door. 

Thursday night, since we know there’s another set of pickup keys somewhere that we haven’t found, Larry sneaked in the garage and unplugged the computer box under the hood of the pickup.  So that thing won’t be going anywhere.  Then he found a stepladder, shinnied up, and unplugged the garage door.  He left the cord in place so it looks like it’s still plugged in.

Loren was obviously feeling better, getting his strength back... and thinking he needed to go somewhere. 

He was sleeping when I got there Thursday afternoon.  Old food from the previous day was on his table, and he hadn’t washed the dishes.  I threw out the food, put the dishes in the sink, and put his fresh food on the table with clean silverware.  I left his bag of Christmas cards from church on the table, and quietly made an exit.

Two electric shavers were on the table.  So he must be trying to shave.  Or at least thinking about it.  He hadn’t shaved since he got sick.

Returning home, I went back to scanning old photos.  Here are Teddy and Joseph, August 11, 1993, mistakenly digging in a tent plot that we thought was a nice big sandbox for kids at a KOA campground north of the Medicine Bow Mts. in Wyoming.  



The campground manager was quite bent out of shape about it, and descended on the boys, instead of one of their parents!  He did not at all gracefully accept our apologies and our promise to fix it (which we did).  Nor did he appreciate my humor when I asked him how tenters could possibly be comfortable atop those boulders. 😅

I quietly told the little boys that men like that should be stuck into the nice hole they’d dug, and covered right up to their necks.  Teddy and Joseph, who had gone all pale and wide-eyed, stopped looking so worried and giggled.  Poor little guys!  They didn’t mean to do anything wrong.

Hester, Dorcas, Lydia, and Hannah


In looking at these old photos, I was reminded of the time my mother-in-law Norma made Hester a German chocolate birthday cake for her third birthday.  Hester took a bite... sighed... and said happily, “My Grandma makes the best German shepherd cakes!”

When I opened the garage door Friday afternoon to go to Loren’s house, I discovered Larry’s motorcycle behind the BMW.  I called him, but he wasn’t answering his phone.

Joseph


I came back inside, wondering what to do.  The Jeep was out front, but it really does sound awful, with something clanking and banging in the motor.  Larry drives it anyway now and then – probably because he can’t hear how bad it really is.

Larry finally called back.  He was in Wichita, Kansas, getting the snowplow he was unable to get last month.  He’d forgotten to move the motorcycle.  He told me to take the Jeep, and assured me it wouldn’t hurt it.  I didn’t believe him, but since there didn’t seem to be a choice, I headed out the front door.  I almost got to the Jeep when Teddy called; he could come move the motorcycle; he’d be here in two minutes.

Lydia and Hester


“We have to go rescue Uncle Loren... you and your family have to come rescue us!” I said to him. 😏

That motorcycle weighs 800 pounds, but Teddy got it backed up and moved around to the front of the house without trouble.

When I got to Loren’s house a few minutes later than usual, he was standing on the porch holding the door open for me, telling me, “I got locked out!”

I looked at him, looked at the wide-open door, and said, “Well, it looks like you’re back in now!”

Hannah


He laughed, and I asked, “How did you get back in?”

He didn’t seem to understand the question.  “I don’t know!” he answered.  “I’ve been locked in for three days!” he said.

Ah.  In or out, that is the question.  (I figured this had something to do with the inoperative garage door, as we know he was both in and out just fine; but I never put words in his mouth, especially if it might open a can o’ worms [not gummy].  If he can’t think how to say it, I have no idea what he’s talking about, right?  Right.)

“Looks like everything is fine now,” I said, walking in.

Dorcas


“Are you going to pack me back to my house?” he asked, following me up the stairs.

“This is your house!” I told him.  “And I’ve brought you some food!”

He then told me he didn’t have his electric razors, and needed to ‘go home’ to get them.

“Your razors are right here on the table,” I told him, pointing them out.  They were right beside his plate. 

(What, don’t you shave at the table?)

“Are you sure?” he asked, looking at them, not recognizing them.

“Yep,” I said, handing him one.

He promptly turned it on and started shaving with it.

“Aaaaaaaaa!” I exclaimed, putting the tin foil back over the chicken.  “You’re getting hair in your food!”

Teddy


He laughed and moved to the other end of the table, muttering something about needing to shave.

“Yes,” I agreed, “You are looking a bit like an old prospector.” 

He chuckled, then winced, exclaiming, “This thing bites!” 

He’s got such a forest growing, those electric razors can hardly plow through it.

He told me multiple times that he’d been alone in that house for three days, and nobody had been there.

“I was here with your food yesterday,” I said, “but you were sound asleep, and I didn’t want to wake you up.”

For some reason, that made him agitated.  “Well, I’m not talking about that!!!”  Then, “Can you pack me back home so I can eat?” he asked.

Aleutia, our funny Siberian husky, eating in our Holiday Rambler camper


“Your food is right here!” I told him, pointing at it.  “Come over here to this end of the table, and you can eat it before it gets cold!”

“Yes, ma’am,” he said in exaggerated tones, putting his palms together and bowing slightly, bobbing up and down. 

I ignored that.  Never have been particularly fond of smart alecs.    “Eat,” I said in my best schoolmarm tone, pointing again at the food.

He sat down obediently and picked up his spoon.

Keith & Joseph; Aleutia in the doorway of our 1966 Holiday Rambler


Then he said, “How did you know to bring my food here, and that you’d find me here?”  He shook his head.  “That’s amazing, that you’d know where to find me.”

“This is your house where I bring you your food each day,” I answered.  “I come here every day.”

He went back and forth from being astonished to unbelieving.  He told me, “I’m very lonely!  I can’t stay here all by myself.  I need to get back to the house where my wife is!”

Looking west from the Big Horn Mts.


After one of the several times he said that, he then changed his mind, saying in a pondering tone, “But I guess I don’t have a wife.  Maybe she passed away.”

However, when he asked me a pointblank question and I agreed, “Yes, your wife has passed away,” he got all riled up and said, “I’m not talking about the dead!  I’m talking about the dead!” 

Huh.  I busied myself in the kitchen, feigning deafness.

Hester and Joseph


Again he asked how I found him there, and how I knew I should bring him some food – “and save my life!”, and again I told him, “This is your house, where you always are, and where I always bring your food.” 

This time, he laughed and said, “Oh, that’s right!  You were probably afraid I was going to steal your house!”  (Sometimes he thinks it’s my house.)

I told him Larry had stayed with him several nights.  He shook his head and held up two fingers.  “Two.  Only two nights.”

“He stayed with you each night for over a week,” I said.  “But he had to get up early for work, so he left you some breakfast each morning.”

“So I didn’t see him!” Loren said triumphantly. 

Obviously, it doesn’t count, if he doesn’t see us.  That’s understandable, I guess.

Since he didn’t seem to see them, and to turn the conversation to another vein, I pointed out the bowl with the green beans.  “There’s green beans in there,” I said.

Loren took the lid off, stared into the bowl distastefully (though other times he’s said green beans were the only vegetable he likes).  “I can’t eat these all by themselves,” he complained. 

Keith


Right there in front of him was his chicken breast filet, which I had cut into bite-sized pieces, cottage cheese, rice pudding, Thompson grapes, applesauce, yogurt, white-cran peach juice...  I pointed at these other things, and said, “Eat them with a little of all these other things!  Everything is better that way anyway.”

He made an exclaiming noise, scowled, and said, “I’d be sicker’n a dog if I did that!!!”

I raised my eyebrows, grinned at him, and said, “What other way to eat is there, then?  I guess you could put the bowl upside down on your head and throw a tantrum.”

Then he laughed and said, yes, maybe he could do that.

 So I quoted the poem from the Winnie-the-Pooh book:  “Whatever’s the matter with Mary Jane?  She’s screaming, and won’t eat her lovely rice pudding again!”

That made him laugh, too.

Hannah at Mammoth Hot Springs


He asked if Larry would be coming before dark, and if it would still be ‘warm enough’.  I said I didn’t know.  Loren said, “I can’t ride that motorcycle after dark, or if it’s too cold.”

“He won’t be taking you anywhere on the motorcycle,” I said, trying for a reassuring tone.

“But how am I going to get home?!” he asked.

“You are home,” I said.  “Where are you wanting to go?”

“I need to get back to ... “ he waved an arm toward the east.  “Our house where Mama and Daddy are!”

“They’ve passed away,” I told him.

Hannah, Hester, and Keith


“Oh, that’s right,” he said, surprised, but not overly so; it was almost like he expected it.  “I forgot Mama had passed away.  But where’s Daddy?”

“Daddy passed away in 1992,” I said.  “Mama passed away in 2003.”

He threw up both arms.  “Well, I can’t remember dates!”

I added, “And this is your home; you don’t have any other one but this one.  This is where you’ve lived for many years.”

At one point (I can never keep these dialogues straight, or remember the order they went in), he laughed and said, “You must think I’m just going around collecting houses everywhere!”

He picked up his spoon again and ate a bite or two of yogurt, then set the spoon down and went to look out the ever-enticing front window.

Teddy; Aleutia in background; Ft. Randall dam


We’d gotten him some toothpaste for sensitive teeth and a new toothbrush.  I reminded him that they were on his bathroom counter, but he informed me, “That thing scares me.” 

I told him I’d gotten myself one just like it, and it hasn’t bitten me once.  He laughed, and said he’d give it a try.

He had washed some dishes and then strewed them on the counter to dry, so I put them away, and threw out some garbage.  I reminded him about the Christmas cards, as he hadn’t finished looking at all of them yet.

“I looked at a lot of pictures,” he said, and agreed with me when I said that was one of my favorite things to do – look at all the pictures friends and family give us at Christmas time.

Siggghhhhh...  I told Teddy, “I think he’s getting well! – he’s back to normal.”  🙄🥴

Since I also told Teddy that Loren was lonely and saying he couldn’t stay there all by himself, Teddy stopped by a little later to give him a package of his favorite Biscoff ‘coffee cookies’, and to visit with him for half an hour or so.

Lydia and Larry


His lights were all out shortly thereafter; he’d gone to bed.

An online quilting friend, upon seeing the picture of our 1966 Holiday Rambler that Larry fixed all up, and which we took to Yellowstone in 1993 and Jasper National Park in 1994, asked, “Where did you all sleep?  Like sardines in a tin?”

Larry and I had the back bedroom, which had its own exterior door.  The table and front couch folded down into a full-sized bed; that was for Hannah and Dorcas.  Keith and Teddy had their bed in the back of the Suburban after we folded down the seats.  We had plenty of thick sleeping bags; they never got cold.  Joseph had a little bed on the floor of the kitchen area.  The older Holiday Ramblers didn’t have slide-outs like new campers do, but they were wider than most campers back then, so there was plenty of room for him.  The little girls, Hester and Lydia, made their bed at the foot of Hannah and Dorcas’ bed.  

One night there was a muffled yelp, I went to see what the trouble was -- and found that Dorcas’ favorite satin blanket had slid right off the bed onto Lydia!  😅  I extracted her, and made sure Dorcas’s blanket was tucked in under the mattress so that wouldn’t happen again.  

Hester


The next year, we had one more child – Caleb.  That year, we pulled the camper with a crewcab pickup, on which was a popup pickup camper, which added more sleeping and eating areas.  That was 1994 – and we went all the way to Jasper, Alberta, Canada, going through eleven National Parks as we went.

At a quarter ’til two late that night, I found an audio clip Levi had sent.  He’d named it, “wish you a merry krissmas”.  Levi is the kid with perfect pitch.  Listening to this ‘tune’, unable to decipher just what that instrument might be that he was torturing, I laughed ’til I cried.

Jackson Lake and the Tetons

I learned from Hannah the next day that the instrument is a French horn.  And Levi had laid his cell phone smack-dab inside the bell to record it.  He made the recording especially for his second cousin Carsen, but he couldn’t waste such a marvy effort, and thus had to send it to his Grandma, too.  😄

I scanned a total of 76 photos that day, not any record-breaker.  Along with a few pictures from 1993, I scanned photos of the grandchildren that we’d gotten in our Christmas cards (well, we didn’t get the grandchildren in our cards; only the photos, you understand), and one of John H. and Lura Kay in a touching card from Lura Kay.  First Christmases after the loss of a husband or wife are difficult, I know.

Teddy, Joseph, Hannah, Hester, Keith, Dorcas, Larry, and Lydia


Ethan is a senior this year; he’s graduating in January. 

At Christmas time in 1993, I got our little manger scene off the shelf where I had stored it.  My late sister-in-law had given it to us the first Christmas we were married, and I treasured it.  The children helped to carefully unwrap the ceramic pieces from the cloths in which I had enveloped them.  They duly admired the pieces, from the majestic kings on their camels to the little lamb that Hester, age 4, placed beside the smallest shepherd boy so it didn’t get ‘losted’.

But the children’s favorite was Baby Jesus.

There was a pause as Teddy, age 10, pulled it from its cloth and they all looked at the Baby’s beautiful face.  The artist who had created the little set had truly done a wonderful job, especially on little Jesus.

Once the figurines were removed from the box, the stable, in which they’d been nestled, could be lifted out and set up.  Keith, the oldest at 13, set it on one of the end tables, and then the children turned to retrieve the small statues from the table upon which they’d laid them.

Hannah, who was 12, put Mary and Joseph against the middle back of the little structure, and Teddy arranged the Wise Men on the right side of it.

“I thought we usually put the shepherds on that side,” objected Dorcas, 11, poised to do so with the three in her hands.

Teddy adjusted one just so and then turned to look at his sister.  “They have to come from the east,” he informed her, and indeed they were coming from the east. 

(Aside to the reader: did you know that the Wise Men didn’t come to see Baby Jesus until He was two years old, and living in Bethlehem in a house with His parents?  Nevertheless, we put the Wise Men in the stable.  One more point:  the word ‘stable’ is not in the Bible’s Christmas story.  It was more like a cave, of sorts.  But let us continue.)

Dorcas gave it a moment’s thought and then nodded seriously.  The shepherds went on the left, and Hester scurried to put the lamb with his master, “before he gets scared and baa-aa-aa-aas,” she said, sounding quite like a little lamb herself.

Joseph, age 8, set the donkey, the cow, and the sheep in their places, and then it was time for the Most Important Piece of all:  Baby Jesus.

Hannah reached for it.

It wasn’t there.

The table was empty; nothing was on it at all.

“Where’s Baby Jesus?” asked Hannah.

Hester turned and looked at the table.  Then, all in an alarmed panic, “Baby Jesus is losted!!!” she howled.

“But we just had it,” breathed Dorcas in distressed horror.

Someone has simply misplaced it, I thought, and looked quickly around the room.

There was Lydia, just 2 ½, sitting in her favorite little wooden chair, the tiny figurine cradled in the crook of one arm while her other hand was wrapped protectively around it.  She was rocking gently back and forth, and we had stopped talking suddenly enough that we all heard her singing sweetly, “ ♫ ♪ Little Baby in the manger, ♪ ♫  I love you! ♫ ♪ “

Then, realizing everything had gotten very quiet, her head popped up, a questioning look on her face.  Her eyes fell on the stable, and then it dawned on her:  Baby Jesus was the only figure missing.

“Oh!” she exclaimed, jumping to her feet, “Here He is, I has Him!”

As we had done for many years, we allowed the youngest able child to place the Baby in the stable.  That was Lydia, since Caleb was only 2 months old.  Her eyes shone with delight as she carefully laid manger and Baby directly in front of Mary and Joseph in the spot saved for Him.

I went to the piano, everyone gathered ’round, and we sang a few Christmas songs.

I love Christmas.

Saturday afternoon, Christmas Day, Teddy took Loren for a little ride, winding up out at his house, where he showed Loren all his animals.  Larry took him some soup shortly after Teddy took him back home.  Loren had already gone to bed when Larry got there at 5:00, but he got up and ate about half of the bowl of soup when Larry warmed it up.

Here’s one of Hannah’s Australian shepherds, Chimera; and below are Teddy’s cow and calf, with his White Lab Molly overseeing things from the top of the hay bale.




Saturday, after a family group chat wherein we all debated and discussed and discoursed and dissected and deliberated and contemplated and contested and considered and reconsidered, we finally set the time for our family get-together for Monday (today), the 27th of December.

Since I had already let everyone know that whatever time they came up with would work fine for Larry and me, since we didn’t have all those pesky in-laws and outlaws to harmonize and compromise with, I let much of the debate go on without me, and busied myself with sweeping, mopping, and vacuuming the floors, and then filling the bird feeders.

The Grand Teton itself


On the Chicago radio station Sunday morning, they were telling of the multitudes of people lined up here and there around the country waiting to take Covid-19 tests.  One brilliant ‘scientist’(?) intoned, all doomsday of timbre and milieu, “It’s very concerning; and of particular concern is that over half of those who tested positive show no symptoms!”

Ooooo.  Run and scream.  Panic in the streets.  No symptoms.  Do these people ever consider their own idiocy?!

That day, we had our usual Sunday School and morning church service, then a Christmas dinner in the Fellowship Hall. 

Lydia, Hannah, and Hester


Bobby’s younger brother Stephen had the Sunday School hour.  He was almost finished when my nephew Kelvin’s son-in-law Mark had a seizure.  He cut his head on something, and it was bleeding rather badly, and he was totally stiff and shaking violently.  His wife, my great-niece Jamie, was in the baby room with their new baby Kelvin right then, their oldest little girl McKenna was in Sunday School, and only their three-year-old, Laura was sitting beside Mark.  The poor little girl started crying, and a cousin’s little boy started crying, too.

Several men rushed to help, but it’s really hard to handle a person who’s having a full-blown seizure.  The ambulance arrived shortly, and by then Mark was able to get up and get onto the stretcher. 

He had another seizure at the hospital, but was soon stabilized. 

He had a seizure a couple of years ago after he and Jamie had Covid-19 (the virus hadn’t even been named yet).  Jamie, too, had a seizure, right while she was in the hospital room with Mark.  Mark had recovered and stopped taking the anti-seizures medicine, and everyone was hopeful that the condition had been temporary.  It’s always such a worry, when it happens again.

He was discharged Sunday afternoon.  We are praying that he will be all right, with the appropriate medication, and be able to go on with life normally.  They are a dear and special young family.

Lydia at the KOA in Wyoming


Loren didn’t feel like going to the dinner.  Larry called him about noon, just as the morning service was ending, and Loren said yep, he was ready.  So Larry drove out to his house, but Loren wasn’t at all ready.  Larry started helping him, but it wasn’t long before Loren sat down on the bed and said he really didn’t feel up to going.

So Larry came back to the dinner, a little late; but at least the food was still warm.

The evening service was moved to 2:00 p.m., so we wouldn’t all have to go home just to turn around and come right back again.

After the second service, we took Loren a dinner from the church.  I no sooner walked inside his house than he informed me, “I’m not eating here!!!  I will only eat at home.”

“This is your home,” I said, heading for the table with some of the food, while Larry brought a couple of other Styrofoam boxes full of food.

Loren went on insisting he needed to go home while I warmed up his food and Larry opened the box with the salad and buttered toast and strawberry jello salad.  Loren launched right into the jello; he goes for anything dessertish first, always.

I brought the box with the warmed food back to the table.  It contained roast beef, mashed potatoes and gravy, green beans, and carrots.  “Here’s the main course,” I said, and moved the other box out of the way, which didn’t exactly suit him.  Dessert first!

He then informed us (while he ate food he’d said he wouldn’t eat) that he’d been left in that house for four days, and all of his vehicles keys are ‘chained up’. 

“You can go look!” he told Larry.

We got him started eating, then told him we needed to go home and change, since we hadn’t been home since 9:30 a.m., and still had our church clothes on. 

“People say that,” he said.

We looked at him. 

“They say half an hour, but it’s an hour and a half!” he ‘explained’.  Then, “Four days is a long time to wait.”

Siggghhhh...

We went home and tried for a peaceful evening, though Larry intended to go back to Loren’s house a little later, if for nothing else than to make sure any food he hadn’t eaten got put into the refrigerator.  Loren used to be such a stickler for keeping everything in the refrigerator.  Not no mo’, no mo’, no mo’.

Then I learned that no one had helped Linda, one of my blind friends, go through her Christmas cards and gifts that she’d received the previous Wednesday night.  I’d sho’ ’nuff be a-wishin’ for a reader and describer, iffen it was me! 

So at a quarter after 6, Larry dropped me off at Linda’s house, and while he went on to Loren’s house, I read through her Christmas cards with her, describing any pictures she got, and adding stories about the families who’d given them to her. 

Years ago, I was surprised to learn that my blind friends enjoyed getting pictures, because, even though they couldn’t see them, they sometimes liked to display them in their houses for visitors to see, and they often carried the photos with them when they traveled back to their hometowns so they could show friends and family.  One of the ladies told me how it intrigued her to hold a small card-sized photo in her hand, and know that there were many faces on it, and people could actually look at that little piece of photo paper, and recognize the people printed thereon!  I felt bad that I hadn’t known or thought of this earlier, and from then on, I never neglected to give my blind friends photos when I doled them out at Christmas time.

Linda has only been here 14 or 15 years, I think; so she doesn’t know some of the history.  The other blind ladies moved here when I was 8 years old.  That’s 53 years ago! – they know almost as much of our history as I do.  😉

I opened the gifts Linda had received, telling her who they were from and all about them, while she typed my descriptions into her Braille Lite.  And thus I spent an enjoyable hour or two with my friend.

Meanwhile, Larry arrived at Loren’s house.  Loren was asleep by the time he got there.  I think he looks out the window, sees that it’s dark, and thinks, Oh, NO!  I’m late for bed!!! and runs for the feathers as fast as he can go.

Amazingly, the table was all cleaned off, and the dishes were all washed.  Loren hadn’t cleaned the table for a while.  Larry looked in the refrigerator.  No Christmas dinner, nor the partial remains of same.  He looked in the living room.  No Christmas dinner.  He looked in the Wrangler (one day last week, he found the chicken I’d given Loren for supper in his Jeep, long after Loren had gone to bed).  He looked in the lower level.  No Christmas dinner.  He looked in the garbage.  He went outside and looked in the big trashcan.  No Christmas dinner.

The only places he didn’t look were in Loren’s bedroom (because he was sleeping), on the deck (he and Janice used to feed stray cats on the deck, so...), and in the freezer.  I hope it’s in the freezer; there was a lot of yummy food in those Styrofoam boxes.  But Loren hasn’t put anything in the freezer for years.

Early this afternoon, I loaded the BMW with as many boxes of gifts as would fit, and took them out to the River View Cabin at the confluence of the Loup and Platte Rivers.  It’s 13 ½ miles from our house to the cabin.

I carried all the boxes inside, put a few gifts around the tall and beautifully-decorated Christmas tree, and headed home again.



I stopped at Hy-Vee on the way back and got a couple of fruit pizzas, two bags of mandarin oranges, two gallons of old-fashioned apple juice, two bags of freshly-baked-in-the-Hy-Vee-bakery tortilla chips, and a cluster of bananas.  Everything but the bananas will go back out to the cabin.

Here’s the view from the back door, looking south at Platte River.



Larry will be home any minute!  Time to gather up camera, purse, and coffee mugs!  Larry will load the last two big boxes of Christmas gifts.



,,,>^..^<,,,          Sarah Lynn          ,,,>^..^<,,,