abouTfamily
CREATING
HOLIDAY
TRADITIONS
By
DEBBIE PETERSON

In
the hustle and bustle of shopping, cooking, traveling, decorating,
and all the rest of the preparations that must be done to prepare for the holidays,
December can go by in a blur of activity. How can families reduce the stress of
this time of year and enjoy more family time? The answer is to focus on family
traditions.
Making time for traditions helps a family prioritize the most important activities
and eliminate the unnecessary ones, resulting in less stress and more meaningful
time together. Traditions bond family members closer together and allow one generation
to pass down values, beliefs, and culture to the next. And best of all, traditions
are a lot of fun and create great memories.
The ones that are most affected by traditions are children. “Children love
rituals,” says Martin V. Cohen, Ph.D., in an article on www.FamilyLife.com.
“Children find a certain security and solace in something that gives a sense
of belonging and comfort.”
Take some time early in December to plan family traditions. Involve every member
of the family and ask what activities he or she especially enjoys and has good
memories of doing in the past. As a family changes, such as children growing older
or new members added, traditions may need to change as well. Here are some traditions
local families enjoy that might spark some new ideas for you to try with your
family.
DECORATING
Carole Jolly, Senior Account Executive for AbouTown Press says decorating is one
of her favorite family traditions. “Each year we all get together and put
up the tree and decorate the house. If one of us can’t be there, we wait.”
She also loves to enjoy other people’s Christmas decorations, saying that
she likes to “grab my boys, put our sweats on, get hot chocolate and pile
in the car and go look at lights. We spend several hours going through Bryan and
College Station looking at the parks and neighborhoods admiring all the beautiful
lights and decorations.
Longtime Bryan teacher Gaye Kay has a special memory of a decoration in her family.
She shared, “my family has always used an old Celluloid donkey that belonged
to my dad to put in our Christmas tree. Dad had had this donkey ever since he
was a little boy. It was a very dear custom to put this donkey in the tree in
a very special place so it could be seen by all. Every grandchild was told the
story of the donkey and that it used to belong to Papaw.”
COUNTDOWN
Children enjoy counting down the days until the holidays. Bryan Mom Jenny Adams
said that she makes a countdown calendar. “I put the number of days until
Christmas on the front, and I write the special events of the day on the back:
last day of school, church party, dinner out---things like that. The kids take
turns pulling one piece of paper down every morning.”
Adams has another tradition that helps gets her kids from the last day of school
to Christmas. “I make little slips of paper with fun holiday activities
on them and put them in a basket. I make some of them food related, like have
a piece of holiday candy, others kindness related, like write a card for someone.
Some are creative, like draw a picture or make an ornament. Some are music or
TV related, like watch a Christmas video, sing a carol. Other stuff is just to
keep us busy like find a new Christmas game online, help with a chore, make a
popcorn chain, etc. The more creative the better!”
Tammy Dowell, mother of eight, has another tradition that keeps kids busy over
the holidays. “We would always buy a special puzzle for the holidays. We
would set up the card table and leave it out and work on it as time allowed over
our holiday break. Sometimes all of us would work at the same time. It was so
fun to work on something together and see it take shape until we completed it.
I have begun doing this with my family and my kids love it.”
FOOD
Food is an important part of many family traditions. It can be a special treat,
like the cinnamon rolls my mother always made for our Christmas breakfast, or
the sugar cookies and gingerbread men I like to decorate with my kids.
Chris Peterson, AbouTown Press publisher, enjoys the tradition his family had
of serving a Christmas Eve dinner made up of many different kinds of appetizers
and light foods. Peterson is part Swedish, so he thinks of it as a kind of smorgasbord
with cold cut meats, little breads and crackers, smoked salmon, and cheeses, and
now he carries that tradition on with his own family before they head out to a
Christmas Eve church service.
PRESENTS
Even the way your family opens presents can be according to your own special traditions.
AbouTown Press Publisher Rodney Walline says “On my mother’s side
of the family, we open gifts the night of Christmas Day after a big family dinner,
readings from the Bible about the birth of Jesus by whoever is the head of that
household, and a family prayer where anyone is encouraged to add to the prayer.
Then we assign a ‘Santa’ who delivers one gift at a time allowing
others to enjoy the gifts everyone gets. We also assign one ‘Elf’
to manage the trash wrappings. My own family has established an additional tradition
of opening one gift late Christmas Eve after a reading of the Christmas story...
the one with Rudolf.”
GIVING BACK
There are many ways families can give back together during the holiday season
and make it a tradition. College Station Mom Jorja Kimball remembers “When
I was young my mother would always make a point of stopping to put money in the
Salvation Army bell ringers tin and tell us how helpful they had been when her
brothers were in the war and overseas in the military. She was one of eight kids,
and two brothers served in the military. So I told this story to my daughter and
she now volunteers to be a bell ringer for the Salvation Army. We do it together
to honor both my mom and her brothers. And of course we can’t go by the
bell ringers without dropping something in. Once you have stood for 3-4 hours
in the freezing cold as a bell ringer, you just can’t pass one by!”
RELIGIOUS
Peterson says one of his favorite traditions is a family advent wreath. For the
four Sundays leading up to Christmas and on Christmas Eve, his family lights one
more candle on the wreath and reads Bible verses that tell a part of the story
of Christmas. “It helps us to focus on the meaning of Christmas for our
family. It’s a way to tell the Christmas story to our kids in a visual way
and reinforces what we do at church at home. The kids really look forward to it
every year.”
Whatever your family does this year for the holidays, take time out from the hustle
and bustle for those special family traditions and maybe even think about adding
something new.