I was talking to Kathy this morning about the upcoming holidays and she commented that she’s looking forward to Christmas a little more this year. We pondered that it’s because Reilly is a bit older this year, she’s got two kids now and that sort of thing. I asked if they did the traditional “bake cookies for Santa, leave a carrot out for Rudolph” scenario and of course, they do. It made me think of my own holidays with my family and the memories I have of being really small.
I remember being about 3 or 4, wearing footie pajamas and standing on the precipice to the living room from the hallway, with my hands clasped together in utter delight, marveling at all the stuff that Santa had brought. I don’t recall much of it now — I think there was a drum that I promptly stuck my drumsticks through and I remember there being a cowgirl hat and boots and one of those little horses on wheels. But what I distinctly remember is seeing the plate of cookies we’d set out the night before, missing 3 or 4 bites, the milk half empty and the carrot nibbled just enough.
We’ll just gloss over the fact that one of my earliest Christmas memories revolves around food.
On Christmas Eve, my mom and I made cookies together, cutting them out with cookie cutters, cooling them on racks and eventually frosting and decorating them just so. I remember mom helping me pour Santa’s milk in a smoke-colored highball glass and setting everything out on our rattan coffee table. I remember so clearly my mom leaning in and the way she smelled like sugar cookies and Jergen’s lotion, reminding me that these cookies were for Santa, as a thank you for my Christmas gifts, as a snack on his long journey. And while I really wanted that green-frosted Christmas tree with the little silver balls that later in life cracked one of my molars, I remember looking wide-eyed at her as I tucked my hand away, nodding in agreement. We wouldn’t want Santa or Rudolph to go hungry.
In hindsight, it seems all the other reindeer were left to fend for themselves.
Dad would read ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas, as Rockwell-esque as that seems. It didn’t last forever, perhaps on the first handful of Christmases and a few scattered over the years after that, but I fondly recall him wearing a very red v-neck sweater with a wide-collared shirt underneath, sitting with his leg crossed in a big 70′s velour chair, reading from a thin hard-cover picturebook with little tears in the sleeve. And when it was over, he’d scoop up my little PJ’d self and tuck me in, allowing sugarplums to dance accordingly, while mom was in the kitchen, pouring the grown-ups some Benedictine in snifters.
Of course, eventually I realized that Dad also enjoyed green-frosted Christmas tree cookies with little silver balls on them and that Rudolph was really my mom, but there’s something distinctly tactile and emotional about that memory of seeing the cookies on Christmas morning, half eaten, milk glass half empty. I truly believed that Santa had been there, that he’d brought all these wonderful goodies for me, because I was such a good girl. It was a time that I never questioned anything about myself or my self-worth, about faith or politics or reality. It encompasses all the wonder I think Christmas should be for little children… pure and wonderous and magical. It makes me happy for Reilly and Carter, that they’ll get a chance to experience that.
It would nice if the holidays could still be like that for everyone.

Holy Jesus, your dad looks like the coolest fucking guy on the planet. He could literally smash David Hasselhoff’s face in and take a joyride in KITT without ever breaking a sweat.
You would be absolutely correct, sir.
Totally lovely post, Joelle.
This made me teary!
My family followed my father’s family’s tradition, wherein Santa not only brought presents, but also decorated the tree. We climbed the stairs Christmas Eve out of a boring living room with only a bare tree in it and descended Christmas morning into a wonderland: tree flashing, train running, stockings full, and presents (few, but treasured) waiting to be opened. To this day, describing my childhood Christmases is almost the only reliable trigger of tears for me.
But let’s talk cookies. My family didn’t even cook Christmas dinner. We ate cookies (and candy out of the stockings) for all three meals that day.
What a nice thought… and the photos are a lovely complement to the sentiment of this post. Your parents were so glam! (I agree with the poster on your Flickr photo… Dad’s a DILF!)
Wow-your dad is HOT in that picture!
My daughter is 3 this year and I’m thinking she’ll really buy into the Santa stuff and was planning on setting out the milk and cookies. Thanks for the carrot reminder though-can’t forget poor Rudolph! It is so much fun to plan things like this for little ones.
What a wonderful post about all the warm memories. Thanks for sharing-and bringing back a little of the magick of the season.
I miss having a little one around to keep that going.
I, too, am stuck on what a hottie your dad was.
That pic of your dad definitely deserves to be posted here: http://myparentswereawesome.tumblr.com