The Front Porch Swing

Love the egg!! You guys are so far ahead of me with trees and such. Ma's Charlie Brown tree will go up this weekend -Evan and Katie will decorate it again this year. No clue when the big tree will go up yet - right now Scout's living in the tree's corner. If you'll remind me I'll post the story of Ma's tree when we get home from Cody.
 
The view this time is a little different. I want to tell you a story - a story of a mother and a father and a lesson gently and indelibly learned. Allow me to first introduce the cast of characters.

They were total opposites. She stood only 4’11”, and he was 6’4”. She came from a dysfunctional, alcoholic, abusive family. She was married at 16 and a widow with two little girls by 19. She remarried a few years later.

He came from a family of love, church and respect. He married the first and only love of his life and loved her children as much as he did the three more they were to have together.

While he was hale and healthy and active, she was one of the first women in the country to have triple bypass surgery. That was in the early 70’s and she had the second bypass, a quadruple, in the late 80’s. Living that long after the first surgery defied all the odds at that time and being able to tolerate a second bypass and an aortic valve replacement made her somewhat of a medical miracle. She endured tortuous pain in her feet from peripheral neuropathy but she never lost her warmth and her smile.

Her health problems slowly changed this outgoing, fun loving woman into a woman who couldn't make herself leave the house. Agoraphobia took hold of her until it required an inordinate amount of courage and preparation just to attend a supper or a celebration in one of her own children’s homes. Her visits were rare and treasured. She welcomed one and all into her home. The coffee pot was always on and no one was allowed to leave her house hungry! Yet the thought of going to anyone else’s home or even to a store terrified her.

Despite their differences, Ma could play Dad like a fiddle. She did it with an impish smile and a twinkle in her bright blue eyes. With her good humor and a lot of love she was the perfect counterpoint to Dad‘s gruffness and lack of sentimentality.

Ma loved Christmas. Dad tolerated it. No example could be better than the year the last of their five children moved out to start life on her own.

Dad always came home for lunch, partly because he was hungry but mostly to check on her. When he arrived home on this special day Ma asked him when he was going to go out and get a Christmas tree.

Dad scowled down at her and said, “LaVonne, for crying out loud! I ain’t going out and spending money on a Christmas tree when we don’t have any kids at home. We’re all going to be at Linda’s for Christmas anyway, so there ain’t no point.”

She didn’t argue, whine or complain. She got busy. After he went back to work she slipped on his spare pair of huge overshoes. Despite the pain in her feet and the bitterness of a South Dakota winter day, she hobbled out to the back yard and searched in the snow until she found a tree branch that suited her purposes. She spent the rest of the afternoon getting that scrawny branch to stand up in a coffee can. She made her way upstairs and managed to get back down with a small box of ornaments. Patiently she decorated that spindly tree with a grin on her face and her Bing Crosby Christmas record on the old stereo. Her tree leaned precariously against one wall of its corner, and a little bird doo-doo was overlooked, but Ma was satisfied. Typical of Ma, she found a way to let Dad know how important a tree was to her without anger or ugly words.

When Dad got home that night, he spotted her tree first thing. “LaVonne! What in the hell is THAT?”

Ma‘s blue eyes sparkled with pride and just a little orneriness. Looking up at Dad she sweetly told him, “That is my Charlie Brown Christmas tree, and I think it’s beautiful.”

Dad never said another word. He put on his coat, boots, hat and gloves and left the house, returning later with the biggest, fullest, most beautiful tree he could find. He dragged down the rest of the ornaments and lights and they spent the evening after supper decorating that tree. They laughed and talked and remembered Christmases past. In the corner, overseeing the impromptu party, was Ma’s Charlie Brown tree.

Every Christmas from that day on, Ma had two trees. Without a cross word being exchanged, she had, in her own way, let Dad know how much the tradition of a tree meant to her. She did it with determination and humor and love. Dad responded by recognizing that the hopes and dreams of someone you love should never be dismissed just because you don’t understand their reasons.

A few Decembers later Ma was hospitalized for the last time. We buried my mother on Christmas Eve, 1991. After her funeral we all quietly noticed that in the corner at Dad’s house was a Charlie Brown tree. Dad had gone out while she was in the hospital and made sure that when she came home her tree would be waiting. She never came home. She was only 58 years old.

All over the country, Charlie Brown trees are still waiting for Ma. They can be found in the homes of each one of her children, and we, in turn, have passed the tradition and the story on to our children and grandchildren. In our house Ma’s tree has been a tumbleweed, a bit cut off our big tree when we were attempting to make it fit, or currently a scruffy, sad looking miniature artificial tree. One year my oldest daughter’s Charlie Brown tree was simply garland taped to her living room wall in the shape of a tree. One of my nieces puts a pine cone with glittery painted tips in a candle holder.

What the tree is made of doesn't matter. The lesson does. When Ma took those painful steps to provide for herself the tree she so badly wanted, she taught us that making do is often more important than making a fuss. And when Dad recognized how important having a Christmas tree was to her and responded with kindness, humility, and generosity, we learned that giving with love expands that love.

May there always be a Charlie Brown tree in your heart, and a gentle spirit guiding your deeds.


The Big Tree and the Charlie Brown Tree. The poinsettias in the Big Tree are in memory of Ma, the only person I've ever known to keep a poinsettia plant year after year and get it to bloom each Christmas.



Katie LaVonne's first time decorating her great-gramma LaVonne's Charlie Brown Tree. She was 5 years old here.
 
Afternoon everybody, hope your day is well. Mine is going fine. Drizzling outside but still warmish at 50-60 or so. My DD put our tree up this year on yesterday. Each year she buys a different small tree and this year it's a 3' tall purple shiny tree and cute as a button. Matching bags around it to fill with presents when the time comes. She and AJ have asthma so bad that keeping them year to year or fresh ones just don't cut it.
I have a lot of stuff I've bought recently to put out in the storeroom for the chickens. But the only thing is, I was waiting to get the storeroom cleaned out and organized to have shelves available. So Aimee calls my room the hoarder room. It's going outside, I promise. She doesn't believe me.
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But you know, I bought a lot of things pertaining to the chickens and my garden supplies. Hopefully I'll get it out of the house before Spring.

78F yesterday... That's all.
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The view this time is a little different. I want to tell you a story - a story of a mother and a father and a lesson gently and indelibly learned. Allow me to first introduce the cast of characters.

They were total opposites. She stood only 4’11”, and he was 6’4”. She came from a dysfunctional, alcoholic, abusive family. She was married at 16 and a widow with two little girls by 19. She remarried a few years later.

He came from a family of love, church and respect. He married the first and only love of his life and loved her children as much as he did the three more they were to have together.

While he was hale and healthy and active, she was one of the first women in the country to have triple bypass surgery. That was in the early 70’s and she had the second bypass, a quadruple, in the late 80’s. Living that long after the first surgery defied all the odds at that time and being able to tolerate a second bypass and an aortic valve replacement made her somewhat of a medical miracle. She endured tortuous pain in her feet from peripheral neuropathy but she never lost her warmth and her smile.

Her health problems slowly changed this outgoing, fun loving woman into a woman who couldn't make herself leave the house. Agoraphobia took hold of her until it required an inordinate amount of courage and preparation just to attend a supper or a celebration in one of her own children’s homes. Her visits were rare and treasured. She welcomed one and all into her home. The coffee pot was always on and no one was allowed to leave her house hungry! Yet the thought of going to anyone else’s home or even to a store terrified her.

Despite their differences, Ma could play Dad like a fiddle. She did it with an impish smile and a twinkle in her bright blue eyes. With her good humor and a lot of love she was the perfect counterpoint to Dad‘s gruffness and lack of sentimentality.

Ma loved Christmas. Dad tolerated it. No example could be better than the year the last of their five children moved out to start life on her own.

Dad always came home for lunch, partly because he was hungry but mostly to check on her. When he arrived home on this special day Ma asked him when he was going to go out and get a Christmas tree.

Dad scowled down at her and said, “LaVonne, for crying out loud! I ain’t going out and spending money on a Christmas tree when we don’t have any kids at home. We’re all going to be at Linda’s for Christmas anyway, so there ain’t no point.”

She didn’t argue, whine or complain. She got busy. After he went back to work she slipped on his spare pair of huge overshoes. Despite the pain in her feet and the bitterness of a South Dakota winter day, she hobbled out to the back yard and searched in the snow until she found a tree branch that suited her purposes. She spent the rest of the afternoon getting that scrawny branch to stand up in a coffee can. She made her way upstairs and managed to get back down with a small box of ornaments. Patiently she decorated that spindly tree with a grin on her face and her Bing Crosby Christmas record on the old stereo. Her tree leaned precariously against one wall of its corner, and a little bird doo-doo was overlooked, but Ma was satisfied. Typical of Ma, she found a way to let Dad know how important a tree was to her without anger or ugly words.

When Dad got home that night, he spotted her tree first thing. “LaVonne! What in the hell is THAT?”

Ma‘s blue eyes sparkled with pride and just a little orneriness. Looking up at Dad she sweetly told him, “That is my Charlie Brown Christmas tree, and I think it’s beautiful.”

Dad never said another word. He put on his coat, boots, hat and gloves and left the house, returning later with the biggest, fullest, most beautiful tree he could find. He dragged down the rest of the ornaments and lights and they spent the evening after supper decorating that tree. They laughed and talked and remembered Christmases past. In the corner, overseeing the impromptu party, was Ma’s Charlie Brown tree.

Every Christmas from that day on, Ma had two trees. Without a cross word being exchanged, she had, in her own way, let Dad know how much the tradition of a tree meant to her. She did it with determination and humor and love. Dad responded by recognizing that the hopes and dreams of someone you love should never be dismissed just because you don’t understand their reasons.

A few Decembers later Ma was hospitalized for the last time. We buried my mother on Christmas Eve, 1991. After her funeral we all quietly noticed that in the corner at Dad’s house was a Charlie Brown tree. Dad had gone out while she was in the hospital and made sure that when she came home her tree would be waiting. She never came home. She was only 58 years old.

All over the country, Charlie Brown trees are still waiting for Ma. They can be found in the homes of each one of her children, and we, in turn, have passed the tradition and the story on to our children and grandchildren. In our house Ma’s tree has been a tumbleweed, a bit cut off our big tree when we were attempting to make it fit, or currently a scruffy, sad looking miniature artificial tree. One year my oldest daughter’s Charlie Brown tree was simply garland taped to her living room wall in the shape of a tree. One of my nieces puts a pine cone with glittery painted tips in a candle holder.

What the tree is made of doesn't matter. The lesson does. When Ma took those painful steps to provide for herself the tree she so badly wanted, she taught us that making do is often more important than making a fuss. And when Dad recognized how important having a Christmas tree was to her and responded with kindness, humility, and generosity, we learned that giving with love expands that love.

May there always be a Charlie Brown tree in your heart, and a gentle spirit guiding your deeds.


The Big Tree and the Charlie Brown Tree. The poinsettias in the Big Tree are in memory of Ma, the only person I've ever known to keep a poinsettia plant year after year and get it to bloom each Christmas.



Katie LaVonne's first time decorating her great-gramma LaVonne's Charlie Brown Tree. She was 5 years old here.

Oh Blooie!
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As teens we stopped bothering with Christmas. We had no family to come around.. my mom would always go batty trying to have everything perfect. That meant we had to sit on the sofa in our Sunday best all day, staring at the wall, eating more than any us really needed to eat. We'd have a big breakfast, then a spread of crackers, cheeses, meats etc. Snack on chocolates and then a big dinner. Ridiculous really. So we stopped. There was no joy in it, my mom just had this image in her mind of how it should be and she became insufferable about it, so she rather not do it at all
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But, we never could let well enough be.... so the best Christmasses were those where at the last minute we'd get that old tree out of storage... put it up the day before. We'd run to the store and get a $10 gift for eachother... gets some tasty snacks and have impromptu Christmas anyway. Very Charlie Brown... and a heck of a lot better than my mom's stuck up "this is how it's supposed to be" Christmas.

Back when Justin and I both worked we were broke... he was giving his ex-wife every pay check to take care of Johnathan.. We'd say "no gifts" and I'd run to Wal-mart after work (11 pm or so
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) to get him something anyway. And he'd always do the same. He bought me a $40 computer desk one year.. I got him all the old Star Trek movies. The year after that he got me all the Harry Potter movies. Last year I got him a safety razor and old fashioned brush and soap. He got me a silicone baking mat, cookie scoop and cookie cooling rack
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I love impromptu Christmas.
 
Love the egg!! You guys are so far ahead of me with trees and such. Ma's Charlie Brown tree will go up this weekend -Evan and Katie will decorate it again this year. No clue when the big tree will go up yet - right now Scout's living in the tree's corner. If you'll remind me I'll post the story of Ma's tree when we get home from Cody.
I've passed around the site for your egg foam crates on Ebay and everybody is tickled. I ordered one to be shipped to a lady in TX so she can send my eggs in style.
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Thanks a bunch.
 
78F yesterday... That's all. :lol:



Oh Blooie! :love


As teens we stopped bothering with Christmas. We had no family to come around.. my mom would always go batty trying to have everything perfect. That meant we had to sit on the sofa in our Sunday best all day, staring at the wall, eating more than any us really needed to eat. We'd have a big breakfast, then a spread of crackers, cheeses, meats etc. Snack on chocolates and then a big dinner. Ridiculous really. So we stopped. There was no joy in it, my mom just had this image in her mind of how it should be and she became insufferable about it, so she rather not do it at all :rolleyes:


But, we never could let well enough be.... so the best Christmasses were those where at the last minute we'd get that old tree out of storage... put it up the day before. We'd run to the store and get a $10 gift for eachother... gets some tasty snacks and have impromptu Christmas anyway. Very Charlie Brown... and a heck of a lot better than my mom's stuck up "this is how it's supposed to be" Christmas.


Back when Justin and I both worked we were broke... he was giving his ex-wife every pay check to take care of Johnathan.. We'd say "no gifts" and I'd run to Wal-mart after work (11 pm or so :lol: ) to get him something anyway. And he'd always do the same. He bought me a $40 computer desk one year.. I got him all the old Star Trek movies. The year after that he got me all the Harry Potter movies. Last year I got him a safety razor and old fashioned brush and soap. He got me a silicone baking mat, cookie scoop and cookie cooling rack :p


I love impromptu Christmas.

The very best kinds! My grandkids call those special times "Makin' memories!"

 
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TTmom, that's some nice progress.

Lazy, for me the coop build didn't help with loosing weight, but my gosh my T-shirts started to feel tight around my arms during the project. Great substitute for a gym.
Last time I went to the doctor, she asked the same old questions they always ask, one of which was, "do you exercise? Regularly?" I am always perplexed by that question. So, I asked her to clarify... and of course, she said... walking program, go to the gym, etc. I told her that the only exercise I do is "functional exercise". She asked me to clarify: My response: building stone walls, building a coop, shoveling manure, carting stones and lumber from one end of the yard to the other, building a coop... I shake my head and ponder to think how someone can live such a life style that they don't have any real work they have to do, and have to pay for the privilege of raising their heart rate.


I just figured I'd share a few Christmas photos. This is my sons letter to Santa. He said he would just write a V with feathers and Santa would know V was for volaciraptor and that he wanted one with feathers. He also drew a picture of a volaciraptor for Santa.

Him with the letter before running down to the mailbox to mail it.

We brought in and decorated our little tree today.

The rain deer frame he made for his Grammy. I also did one or all the daycare kids to give as Christmas gifts.

And the fireplace all decorated. It gets the most because the daycare kids can't get up there! Haha! I hope everyone is having a wonderful day!
Alice, I so love your decorations, especially your little tree. And your son's drawing... I had to read the caption to see what he had drawn as well! That first pic? HMMM???!!!
 
@Blooie as usual, wonderful story about your ma. I am sitting here with happy
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. The way he understood her need for a tree and you guys all kept it going is priceless.

"The hopes and dreams of someone you love should never be dismissed just because you don’t understand their reasons."
I think this is my new favorite quote, Miss Bloo. I am posting it on @sumi's quote thread.
 

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