Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Holiday Values

Write your thoughts about your family’s holiday values?

Some people might look at the explosion of presents under our tree and think that we value Christmas for the material things the holiday brings.  Each year wrapped boxes extend from one side of the room to the other, all jostling for a coveted place on the tree skirt.  Our tree droops with the weight of all the ornaments that have been hung, each one symbolizing a memory or moment past, all of them special and unique.  For as long as I can remember cards peppered the tree waiting patiently to be opened on Christmas Day.  These weren’t the cards that others sent us, rather the cards we chose especially for each other.  In my younger years, I could barely contain my enthusiasm with the gifts I had selected for my parents.  I longed to have them open their presents and gaze adoringly at each treat that I had found with them in mind.  As an adult, I’m not much better and herein lies the true reason for all those gifts under the tree.  It is not the need to get that drives the insanity every year but rather the pure joy that each of us finds in the giving.  The presents are a physical manifestation of our delight with each other, of our desire to show one another that they are loved, thought of, cared for, important.  Not with mere stuff but with heartfelt gifts and soul-touching words.  A Christmastime and all year long we value each other.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Halloween with the locals

I joined a club last month called the Okinawa International Women’s Club (OIWC).  The group is made up of Japanese and foreign women and they meet each month for a luncheon somewhere around the island. We also break into smaller groups for more specific cultural experiences.  Tonight’s culture group activity was hosted by the foreign side (that’s us) and was a real treat!  :-)  We threw a Halloween party for the Japanese women and their kids and then turned them loose for some good ole’ American trick-or-treating.  It rained through most of the party which made me feel like I was home again.  Oh, the many memories of really wet Pacific Northwest Halloweens.  We used to just incorporate our rain jackets right into our costumes because, well, it’s the NW and it always rains.  I guess that doesn’t need much explaining.  Anyway, imagine a dozen adults and about 2.5 dozen kids squished into a living room doing Halloween crafts.  We painted pumpkins, made ghosts, and acted out different Halloween characters such as mummies, werewolves, witches, etc. It was pure chaos but tons of fun.  At the end of the evening, the the Japanese kids separated their candy just like the American kids.  Cute!

http://picasaweb.google.com/sierrabeaton/20091031OIWCCultureGroup4Halloween?authkey=Gv1sRgCLCSn_3t1vupcg&feat=directlink