I watched the lighting of the Rockefeller
Center Christmas tree the other night on TV. It brought back memories of
Christmas in New York where I lived the first 50 years of my life.
Every year I looked forward to our
annual Christmas trip to Manhattan. As a teen I went with my school friends,
then with my boyfriend and eventually with my husband.
When my children got old enough to enjoy it, I took them
every year. A week or two before Christmas, we took the train to 34th
St. From there we walked up 5th Ave. and admired the displays in
store windows. Some had animated toys, Santa and elves, electric trains passing
through a miniature village with windows aglow. Tiny ice skaters twirled like
ballerinas on a miniature mirrored lake. A Jack in the Box jumped out and
sneered its clown face at the startled children peering through the
glass.
We made our way to Rockefeller Center to admire the giant
tree festooned with thousands of lights. We strolled the Rockefeller Gardens
and Promenade lined with pine trees and illuminated white angels blowing
through long golden trumpets. Vendors, selling roasted chestnuts or big crusty
pretzels sprinkled with crystals of kosher salt, kept their wares warm in
portable ovens on pushcarts. We usually bought the pretzels and held them with
paper napkins in our gloved hands. Easier to eat, they didn’t require peeling
like the chestnuts. The steam from the warm pretzels mingled with our breath to
smoke its way into the frigid New York air. We stopped to watch the ice
skaters, on the rink below the bronze sculpture of Prometheus. They displayed
their abilities for the blasé New Yorkers who showed their appreciation with
hoots and hollers. Applause by gloved hands would get lost into the
muffled sounds of traffic.
We ended our tour with a
visit to St. Patrick’s Cathedral. Hundreds of poinsettia plants graced
all the side altars as well as the main altar. We sat in a pew and drank in the
peace and aromas of the church. A Nativity scene sat to the right of the main
altar. Statues of the Holy Family along with shepherds, sheep, angels, camels
and Wise Men spread out across the marble floor of the Cathedral. When we
warmed up enough to venture back out into the cold, we made our way to the
train that took us home, full of Good Will toward all.
Beautiful, Mary. Thank you.
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