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Tuesday, December 24, 2019

The Christmas Stocking Caper

Longtime Readers may have read this before.

Christmas always has been a time for reflection of times long ago. I remember my childhood with such fondness for the way things were growing up in the 1950s in a suburb west of Denver.  

My parents were barely out of their teens when my sister was born in 1930.  Five years later my big brother was born. My family lived in Omaha, Chicago, Ohio, Oklahoma, and Dallas during Depression and the War years - wherever my dad could find work. They made their way to Denver where I was born in 1947. My parents saved enough money to buy a house in the suburbs two years later. I grew up with kids whose families had also gone through the war years and who were experiencing the rebirth of America after the war. It was a very good time in our collective history.

I remember the cookies, fudge and divinity my mother made - the sprinkles and gum drops and hot chocolate too. Homemade food was the norm then. The treats were good and plentiful. Christmas trees were sold by the foot. My mother bought a Christmas tree not much taller than I was and placed it on top of our coffee table to make it appear taller. There is an old photo in a box somewhere of little me looking up at that special tree. I remember that tree so damned well because one night I pulled on an ornament and down the tree fell. My mother screamed at wee me and I thought bloody hell, I'm done for.

Our house was furnished with 1950's modern blond wood furniture the coffee and end tables and blond drop leaf dining set. On Christmas Eve day a few years after pulling over the tree incident I was helping my mother clean out the refrigerator to make room for our Christmas feast. I placed every single item from the refrigerator on top of the dining room table with one leaf fully extended.

Shortly before Christmas my dad discovered a new super-concentrated liquid coffee sold in a 24 ounce tin can. The concept was simple: add a jigger of the concentrated coffee into a cup into hot water  and whamo you have intensely rich coffee. Back then tin cans had holes punched on tops to let the contents pour. Resealable tops had not yet been invented. The last item I placed on the drop leaf table was my dad's opened quart can of concentrated liquid coffee. At first the table leaf teetered. Then it tottered. The table tilted and fell onto our brand new wall to wall carpet. My mother screamed the same way as she did when I pulled down the Christmas tree years earlier. Bloody hell - again! I thought for sure I would die on this day. I raced to the phone and called my dad begging him to come home immediately. Our uncooked Christmas dinner was all over the floor. The coffee stain remained on the dining room carpet until the day we moved away from that house.

My parents got divorced in 1959. My mother said there would be no Santa Claus that year. She said I was too big. For several years my big brother told there was no Santa. I chose not to believe him. However, I figured out something was amok the year earlier when I went shopping on Christmas Eve day with my mother and grandmother. I found the same Ave Marie 45 RPM record in my Christmas stocking that was in the shopping cart the day earlier. I reluctantly admitted to myself that my treacherous brother hadn't made this stuff up. Well, he was still being mean. I figured he had missed out on Christmases growing up without the things I had. He wanted to spoil Christmas for me. Not so fast, you big dick.  I'll teach you one last trick.

So on Christmas Eve day in 1959 I went Christmas shopping at Woolworth's where I bought some candy, small toys and a few pieces for my Lionel train set. I went back home and put candy and toys inside one of my mother's old nylon hose which I then hid in the garage.

Our house did not have a fireplace. I would always hang one of my mother's old nylons on the floor lamp in the living room and leave the front door unlocked for Santa. On Christmas Eve 1959 I made a point of going into my mother's bedroom to get one of her old nylon stockings which I then hung on the floor lamp. My mother said what I did and repeated that there would be no use. She knew not of my soon to be ruse. I went to bed, my trap had been set, now it was time to take my Christmas nap. Later that night while my mother and brother were asleep, I crept through house not to making one peep. I went to the garage, grabbed the nylon hose which I then hung on the floor lamp in the living room and went back to bed.
For every Christmas morning I could remember, I would spring from my bed by dawn's early light to see what Santa had left me that prior night. I remember one time getting out of bed and heading into the living room. My mother's bedroom door was ajar. She yelled go back to bed! On Christmas morning 1959 I stayed in bed until my mother and brother were up. I heard my mother ask by brother if he had filled the stocking. No he said, had she? How could it be, did Santa exist after all? I finally got up and headed straight to the floor lamp to retrieve my Christmas haul. Oh I got other presents but the Santa stocking was the best of all.


2 comments:

Anonymous said...

What a great story, Gary. Your brother had power in his hands and he could not handle it; but yet you turned the tables on him for sure.

I completely relate to having such knowledge and power at my fingertips as a child. As a boychik, the only Jew growing up in a gentile neighborhood, Christmas was always a confusing time for me. As a young child, my mother would fill up a stocking and tell us that Santa stopped by our house to say hello anyway. After all, Santa loves all the good boys and girls, right? Wink. Wink.

As I got older, however, I knew the real story about Santa Claus... long before the other kids my age knew the true story behind Santa. It was a tremendous responsibility to be the only boy in the neighborhood that knew the truth about Santa. You would hear your friends talk about Santa and know something they did not know. Do you know how tempting it was to let the cat out of the bag? Also, suppose you got in a fight with one of our good friends and he said something really mean to you... but yet you held the ultimate trump card... the knowledge of Santa, that if revealed would absolutely ruin your friend’s whole world. That’s a lot of power to hold in ones hands as a small boy. After all, with knowledge comes power and with power comes extremes responsibility... not to mention, when your friends were playing with their new toys on Christmas because they were very good boys, you were at the movies with your parents (the only business open on Christmas) and eating Chinese food (the only restaurant open on Christmas).

These are my Christmas childhood memories as a young boychik...

— The Rabbi Moshe Pippik

Gary Thomas said...

Rabbi, The Chinese restaurant reference reminds me of Ralphie and his family's Christmas dinner after the dogs ate their turkey.

I am so happy you are my Rabbi.

Gary

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