Finding Christmas Magic

By | December 23, 2024

 

Finding Christmas Magic

It’s the day before Christmas Eve. The Christmas lights glowing in the rain do not look like Christmas lights to me. They look old and hazy and out-of-place and oddly out of time. I feel as though I have suddenly been thrust into the middle of March and people have forgotten to take down their Christmas decorations.

It doesn’t seem much like Christmas this year. In the December rain, the Christmas lights look more forlorn than festive… just another reminder that the magic of Christmas is missing this year for me. I wonder where it went.

The magic memories of Christmas that most of us treasure are unique to each of us. Looking back, things have a way of looking better than they really were. Everything in the present is colored by everything else going on in the present – our daily lives can be busy and complicated. It seems odd that we can’t get a true picture of things until we can stop somewhere in the future and look back.

Then when we do, we still don’t get a true picture. We get memories colored by time – memories that look better than the real ones. We make them look much better than they did when the memories were freshly painted in our minds.

Tonight, though, I’m living in the present and walking through a particularly nasty December rain. It is the kind of night that could chill your soul even in the middle of a hot summer day. If you dare to remember it. Maybe sometime, next summer, I’ll look back on this night and it won’t seem as cold and harsh as bad as it really was.

Memory is such a charming flirt.

The rain is somewhere in between ice, snow, and rain. It’s just cold enough that ice is mixing in but not cold enough to turn to snow and paint the landscape with a lovely Christmas white.

The normally quiet neighborhoods in my little town are even quieter on this night. The only sound is the ice pellets and raindrops pounding on the hood of my not-quite-warm-enough winter jacket.

I walk past the rows of houses decorated for Christmas, but they look odd in the rain and fog. The white, green, red, and blue lights don’t twinkle with their normal festive happiness. Instead, they glower like worried warning beacons. I feel uneasy and restive, but I walk on, cold, and uncomfortable.

I’m miles away from my home and even further away in my thoughts. I walk alone on a bleak and dreary December night. It’s the night before Christmas Eve and as hard as I try, I still cannot find the magic of Christmas anywhere.

How do I find the lost magic of Christmas? Where do I look? Is there anyone who can tell me how to find it? Someone who knows the secret. Is there a “Handbook of Christmas Magic” that I can read that would help me find it? I used to feel the Magic… I know I did.

I feel lost like the scarecrow in “The Wizard of Oz”, on a long, perilous journey to look for something he already had. Memories are strange and fragile things. Like delicate crystals, they can be altered and changed so easily. They can be tearfully beautiful, or they can be dreadfully painful. They can be as good as you want them or as bad as you make them.

The rain is more ice pellets than rain now and the Christmas lights seem almost haunting as I pass them. I’m feeling particularly vulnerable and more than unusually cold tonight.

I walk on despite my discomfort and increasingly dark mood. I think to myself, what a shame it is I can’t feel any of that wonderful Christmas Magic I used to feel.

The Christmas lights and decorations only add to the gloom instead of brightening my spirits as they should. They seem mocking as they try to twinkle in the haze of the icy gloom.

It is a wet and cruel night.

Up ahead, I see a little neighborhood mom-and-pop store appear like a ghost in the night. I have been so lost in thought that I did not realize I had wandered this far from home.

The little store looks invitingly warm and cozy as I (and my shivering soul) approach it. Perhaps I will stop in and buy a newspaper to read when I get home, but I did not fool myself – I want to go in because the store looks inviting, warm, and dry. And because I think a kind “hello” from the clerk inside might help jostle me from my dark and sad mood.

I walk in and the store smells old-fashioned and good. There is some pine-roping hanging from the counter and big, old-fashioned, Christmas lights decorating the coolers and the area behind the counter. It looks like decade-old ornaments and lights had been dragged out of our of some musty attic for a Christmas respite – and then put back in that same place every January.

Nostalgia is such an odd cocktail of feelings.

The coffee smells good and it looks hot. I pour a cup and pretend to look through the magazines and newspapers. I’m standing there trying to decide exactly what I’m feeling when I hear the door jangle and see a young girl about six or seven walk in with her mother. The little girl has long, curly, strawberry-blonde hair, and she’s wearing a bright green coat with a big Santa Claus pin on it. It’s one of those pins that light up when you touch it. She kept touching it and it kept lighting up. Every time she touched it, the Santa pin said “Ho! Ho! Ho! Merry Christmas!” in a tinny, computer-generated voice. I thought how annoying it would be if you had to listen to it all day, every day. But tonight, I find it comforting and happy.

I watch the little girl and her mom while pretending to peruse the periodicals. They came in to buy candy canes for their Christmas tree.  I find it nostalgic and precious that they are going to put real candy canes on their Christmas tree. I’m so sick of the department store-look-designer-trees these days, I find this so refreshing. I wonder if they make popcorn and use it to make a garland with cranberries and thread. I am tempted to ask them but think better of it. You know how paranoid the world is these days.

I pick up a newspaper and pretend to scan the headlines. I can hear the tinny Santa pin on the little girl’s coat “Ho, Ho, Ho-ing” away as the mom picks up several boxes of red and white (that’s the only real kind) candy canes. The little girl’s eyes are wide and full of wonder as only a child’s eyes can be. I melt as I watch. I needed a good melting as cold as I am inside.

Mom pays for the candy canes. The clerk bags them and hands the bag to the little girl. She practically lights up the entire store with her one-tooth-missing smile.

Just for a moment I am back in school and feel an unfamiliar rush of joy. I am walking down the street of my little town holding my grandfather’s hand. We’re going to see Santa Claus. “The real one”, my grandpa reminds me.

I walk up to the counter just as the clerk hands the bag of candy canes to the little girl. I stand behind the little girl and her mom, waiting to pay for the newspaper. As they turned to leave, the little girl looked up at me with her beautiful brown eyes and said, “Merry Christmas” with a smile so big and warm and real it reached in and took hold of my heart. I smile back and say, “Merry Christmas to you too!”. The mom smiled at me, took the little girl’s hand, and disappeared out the door.

I pay for my newspaper, still reeling from the unexpected assault on my emotions, and walk out into the night. The icy mixture of rain and sleet had turned into the most beautiful kind of snow — big, fluffy flakes that take forever to fall from the sky to the ground. A little miracle, I think to myself, as I head home on the suddenly beautiful winter night.

Suddenly I feel the magic of Christmas that has evaded me so long this year. The magic of Christmas has nothing to do with decorations, lights, presents, Christmas trees, or anything so material. It has everything to do with a little girl’s smile and a mom who bought candy canes. I begin to think of Dickens and a favorite passage from “A Christmas Carol”:

“But you were always a good man of business, Jacob,’ faltered Scrooge, who began to apply this to himself. ‘Business!’ cried Marley’s ghost, wringing its hands again. ‘Mankind was my business. The common welfare was my business; charity, mercy, forbearance, and benevolence were, all, my business. The dealings of my trade were but a drop of water in the comprehensive ocean of my business!’ [“A Christmas Carol” – Charles Dickens]

How wonderfully perfect it is that I find my Christmas Magic in the captivating smile of a little girl. Her grace and innocence remind me, once again, that Christmas is more a matter of spirit than of things material. In the love of a mother for her child I found the Christmas Magic that I had lost. And I rediscovered the meaning of Christmas.

Charity, mercy, forbearance, benevolence, and love are all part of the magic of Christmas; but love is the greatest of these. In that little store, I saw the love of a mother and child share – that is the spirit of Christmas.

The big and perfect snowflakes fall gently from the dark winter sky. I pass house after house decorated for Christmas, the lights sparkling and bright and looking exactly as they should. As I pass by, I can feel the love of the families inside, warm, safe, and dry.

A little miracle happened to me tonight. I witnessed memories being made. I saw perfect love in a child’s smile and the spirit of Christmas pass between a mother and her child. In that moment, I found the magic of Christmas in my heart where it has always been – and where it will always be.

The gifts that matter most are the ones that cannot be bought or sold. The greatest gifts we can give are the love we share and the memories we leave behind.

They are the only gifts that last a lifetime.


Merry Christmas!

5 thoughts on “Finding Christmas Magic

  1. Sandra Corbin

    What a beautiful story! And, beautifully written! Thank you so much.

    Sandra

    Reply
  2. Damie Simons

    Thank you for this beautiful story. You never cease to amaze me, Thank you for this Christmas Gift. Merry Christmas to you and your loved ones. And have a blessed Happy New Year..

    Reply
  3. Sandy

    Wonderful story and glad to see you got your Christmas “spirit” back! Merry Christmas!

    Reply

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