
Gratitude is when memory is stored in the heart and not in the mind. Lionel Hampton
I was standing over a bed strewn with ribbon, tape, scissors and wrapping paper when I felt overcome with gratitude for knowing how to wrap gifts. Dad used to stand for hours during Christmastime over the bed in an extra room upstairs and meticulously wrap every gift, adding matching ribbon and bow. He also wrapped during the holiday season at our family’s dress store.
I watched him tape the gift so it wouldn’t shift about, fold the edges of paper to align both sides exactly (there are two different ways to do this), tie a ribbon around the package, and make many of the bows by hand even though we had a bow-making machine.
It’s not the first time I’ve felt this sort of gratitude for Dad. However, it may be the first time I’ve felt this much appreciation alongside opposing thoughts … too many holidays filled with anger and pain. For years, pain tangled up our lives sort of like a string of Christmas lights just retrieved from the attic. Do you ever wonder how they get in such a mess just lying there throughout the year?
Today’s post is about assessments and awakenings, about this year’s Christmas and Christmases past. Today’s post, wrapped neatly in Christmas paper and a matching bow just like Dad’s, is about gratitude in the midst of imperfection.
This day I’m entertained by all Dad gave, like the cartoonish boat captain figurine on our beach house fireplace and the baseball-sized earrings he spray painted gold as a gift when I got my ears pierced – instead of being bothered by what I think I missed in our relationship.
This day I’m enthusiastic about the creativity he passed down to me and to his grandkids, the renovation tips my husband and I learned from him and the love of home improvement stores we’re all fortunate to have inherited – instead of low-spirited about his bad habits that I made my own.
This day I’m indebted that not only can I wrap an attractive gift but I can also tuck the top bed sheet tight enough for military inspection, mow and edge a yard like a landscaper and, if I want to, scrub a bathroom with Comet till it’s sparkling clean. Just like Dad.
WRite wHere I’m supposed to be – This Christmas season, my memories are wrapped in gratitude. I hope yours are also.