The year I turned twelve, my sister Dorothy got married and
my brother Andy entered the Army. That left my parents and me the only
occupants of the family home that Christmas.
“Can I
decorate the tree all by myself this year?” I asked my parents.
“You can’t
put the tree up by yourself,” Mom said.
“Daddy can
put it in the tree stand, but I’ll do all the decorating. I’m old enough. I’ll
be thirteen next year,” I said.
They agreed
and sat back to watch the proceedings.
“Put the
lights on first,” Daddy said.
“I know
that,” I answered, indignant at him for telling me how to do it. After all,
I’ve helped with the decorations for years.
First I
tested the bulbs. The old strands of lights wouldn’t work if they had just one
defective bulb. I tested each in turn until all the lights gleamed with bright
yellow, red, blue and green illumination. I carefully draped the lights from
branch to branch, positioning each so no two of the same color would hang near
each other.
“Put some on
the back,” Mom said.
“The tree
stands in a corner. No one can see the back,” I retorted, annoyed at their
insistence on direction.
I continued
placing the multi-colored glass balls, green holly garlands and silver tinsel
in artistic array, all on the front of the tree.
“You really
should put some on the back to make the weight more even,” Dad said.
“Daddy,” I
said exasperated and rolled my eyes to the ceiling.
From then
on, my parents remained quiet.
I spread a
white sheet under the tree and Mom arranged all the gaily-wrapped presents
around it.
Christmas
morning, Dorothy, and her husband Artie, came to open presents with us before
they went on to her in-laws for dinner.
Mom made hot
chocolate and placed a plate full of home-made cookies on the coffee table.
Christmas music played on the radio and I sat on an ottoman next to my
beautifully decorated tree to have my picture taken.
Suddenly, to
my horror, the tree crashed face first to the floor. I jumped up and ran to my
bedroom, flung myself across the bed and let wracking, gut-wrenching sobs fill
the air.
Always my
comforter and mentor, my sister followed. She sat next to me and let my cry out
my frustration.
“I’ve ruined
Christmas,” I wailed.
“No you
haven’t. It was an accident, not your fault.”
“Yes it is
my fault. Both Mom and Dad told me to put some on the back and I wouldn’t
listen,” I sputtered and a fresh supply of tears flowed unchecked.
After she
soothed my feelings, Dorothy coaxed me back to the living room where the tree
now stood erect in the corner with lights and decorations circling the entire
girth.
I felt
embarrassed, but Mom and Dad acted as if nothing had happened and Christmas
continued as planned.
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