Showing posts with label Santa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Santa. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

The Perfect Santa

By Robin Weaver

I know I've posted this a couple times, but it's Christmas...
And this story is about my Gramps--one of my all time favorite people...

The Perfect Santa
 
I hadn’t seen him in almost forty years but there he was, waving at me from the cover of a greeting card.  Perfection.  He bore no hat on his bald head and his beard flowed fat and fluffy.  A magical twinkle glimmered in one eye while the other closed in a saucy wink.  Just the way I remembered him.  I’d been five when I'd first seen him, but I remembered every detail with vivid clarity.
My mother and I moved into my grandfather’s old farmhouse after my parents separated. We displaced my mother's twin sisters when we put our bed in their room.  As a result, the tension in the house hovered like another person in the too full house.  Mother harbored angry feelings toward my father, my aunts routinely expressed anger about having to share a room, and I missed my dad.
Living in a house with three women, I had too many bosses so I spent most of my days outside, trying to hide in an effort to stay out of trouble.  They constantly reminded me that Santa would bring me nothing but a ‘sack full of switches.’ It was only natural that I wouldn’t be looking especially forward to his visit.
That December, the weather roared into our rural area, uncharacteristically cold and bitter.  I felt more excited about wearing my new fur hat than about any visit from Ole St. Nick.  The prior Christmas, I'd found a sweater and a set of paper-dolls under the tree.  Those old presents couldn’t compete with my new fuzzy head-piece with its big shiny sequins.  I loved to skip into the sparkling lights the sun created when it reflected off the sequins.  My father had sent me the hat.  Naturally my mother hated it, but it didn’t matter.
My hat was not my only source of entertainment.  When the house became unbearable, I’d escape to the barn and amuse myself.  I’d become a master chef, creating amazing pies and cakes out of mud and corn kernels; I’d be a major-general, leading my troops to victory against hordes of Nazi soldiers; or, I’d imagine myself a fairy queen, turning dandelions into roses with a single swish of a twiggy wand.  I possessed an active imagination, which I hid carefully because my mother didn’t appreciate my flights of fancy.
I might hide my activities, but I never lied because Gramps said I must always tell the truth.  I idolized my grandfather and followed him to the fields whenever I could.  Not only did he never scold me, Gramps often provided a buffer between the three screeching women and me.  He’d whisk me away just in time to avoid a spanking or he’d show me a new baby calf and let me help with the milking.  Best of all, he told the most wonderful stories.  At least once each week, he’d take a break from the rigors of farm life to sit by the fire and tell me a tale.  I would sit in his lap, mesmerized by his voice and the characters he imitated.  Even my teenage aunts often stopped doing teenaged things to listen.
One night in mid-December, Gramps finished his latest story about a ‘giant toe.’ I’d started to sweat because the fire crackled and I still wore my new hat.  Gramps just sat there instead of going to bed like he usually did.  My aunts, who were still in high school, went to their small room to do homework and my mother hadn’t come home from her second-shift job at the factory.  Just Gramps and me.
“So, Teensie, what do you want Santa to bring you?”
I took off my hat and concentrated intensely on a sparkly sequin, trying not to cry.  I wasn't sure how to tell Gramps about the switches.
When I didn’t respond, Gramps asked, “Teensie, what’s wrong with you?”
“Santa won’t come to see me, Gramps.  I’ve been bad.”
He started to laugh but stopped abruptly when he looked at my serious face.  I'm sure he feared I might start sobbing.  He put on his straight face and asked, “And just what have you done that’s so bad?”
“Well, I wrinkled Aunt Judie’s throw rugs and I got finger prints all over the coffee table after Aunt June dusted it.  I got mud on my new shoes and I wore my hat when Mama said I shouldn’t.”  I spewed forth, a litany of my transgressions.
I stopped rambling long enough to wipe my nose on my sleeve. “And, Gramps.  That’s just stuff I did today.  I can’t even ‘member all the stuff I did yesterday.”
He stared at me for a few seconds and I just knew he thought I would get those switches after all.  Maybe he'd feel bad for me and we could have some chocolate milk on Christmas and just forget about ole Santa.
He finally said, “By-the-By,” That was one of his favorite expressions but I had no idea what it meant.  “Teensie, you must try to mind your Mama and your aunts, but you must also remember, Santa looks at your heart, child.  He only cares that your intentions are good.”
I looked up in wonder.  “You mean?”
“Yep.  Santa doesn’t care about throw rugs and coffee tables.  He wants you to have a good heart and do your best.  Have you done that?”
“Oh, yes.”  I began to feel pretty good.
“And have you told any lies?”
“Not a one!”  Then, I felt really good.
“Then I’m sure Santa will bring you something nice.”
I hugged Gramps and went happily to bed.  I didn’t sleep though. I sat up under my covers and tried to imagine what Santa might bring.  If I stayed away from the rugs and coffee table, maybe my aunts would help me make some chocolate oatmeal cookies for him.
I tried to imagine Santa eating that cookie, but I didn’t know exactly what he looked like.  I knew he had a beard, wore fancy red clothes, and came down the chimney, but additional details were sketchy.  I finally fell asleep trying to remember to remind Gramps that we must put the fire out on Christmas Eve.
On December twenty-fourth, my aunts and I sat around our Christmas tree eating chocolate and biscuits.  Mama and Gramps had already gone to their rooms and Jingle Bell Rock played on the old radio.  I hummed along, cutting paper dolls from an old catalog.  Aunt June looked up from her photo album and asked. “Shouldn’t you be going to bed?” 
“I’m not sleepy.  Besides, I have to make sure the fire goes out.”  Both aunts snickered. 
June went back to her album and Judie stuck her head back in her magazine that had a picture of a man and a woman kissing on the cover.  I was cutting out another dress for my paper-doll when something in the window caught my eye.  There he was.  Santa!
His bald head shown in the darkness and I wondered if I should loan him my new hat.  He had rosy cheeks, a long glittering beard, and the brightest red coat I’d ever seen.  I quickly looked at my aunts to see if they’d seen him, but they were still absorbed in their photographs and magazines.  I looked back at the window.  Santa held his finger to his lips and winked at me. Then, just like that, he was gone.  I checked again to see if my aunts had noticed but they were still doing teenage things.  After a quick check of the fireplace to make sure there were only coals, I ran to bed and pulled the covers over my head.  Christmas would be wonderful.  I had seen Santa.
As years passed, memories of that Christmas Eve faded.  The greeting card brought them all
back.  I purchased the card and thought about Gramps as I drove home.  We moved away when my mother re-married and my aunts got jobs in the big city after they graduated.  I’d been sixteen when Gramps died, all alone in the old farmhouse.  I’d gotten my driver’s license the day before but never had a chance to tell him.  There were a lot of things I didn’t get to tell him.
I stood by his grave and tried to tell him how much I'd miss him, but I couldn't speak.  I knew Gramps understood.  He always understood, and his understanding made me believe in myself.  I whispered a prayer of thanks.
As I addressed Christmas cards, I took a break and called my Aunt June.  After we talked about the kids and the weather, I asked her about that Christmas, “When I was five, was that Gramps who dressed up as Santa?”
“What are you talking about?”
“That Christmas when I was five, there was a Santa at the window.  Was that Gramps?”
My aunt was silent for a few seconds.  “No one ever dressed up as Santa.  Even if we could have afforded to rent or buy a Santa Claus suit, your mother would never have allowed it.  You know that.”
“Are you sure?”  I persisted.  “I’m sure I saw a Santa outside the window.”
“I promise you.  While we lived in the farmhouse, there was never a Santa.”
Oh, but there was!  After I hung up, I looked out the window.  It had started to snow and once again, I believed.    ----------------------------


As promised, my 12 Days tree...
Happy Holidays, Everyone!
R

Saturday, November 25, 2017

Steamy Christmases in Australia

I’m dreaming of a white Christmas…


Well, one day I might see a white Christmas if I travel to the other side of the planet during the holiday season. But as an Aussie, my experience of Christmas is quite different to many of my American and European friends and readers.

I’ve been thinking about Christmas in Australia lately, since I’ve just written and released a Christmas-themed novella set in my home city of Melbourne, Australia. There’s shopping and mayhem, plus a little romance. Also, steamy weather changing from thunderstorms with lightning to hot sunny days over 35 degrees C (95 degrees F), maximum strength sunscreen and hat required. This is Christmas to me!

As I write, we’re experiencing a spring heatwave with temperatures over 30 degrees C already. I can tell you I don’t feel like doing any Christmas shopping. Or writing. I must admit my brain turns to mush in the heat, so it's just as well the holidays are coming.

Christmas as an Aussie kid

Leading up to Christmas, we often made our own paper chains and Advent calendars at school and then decorated our lounge room with them. My favourite decoration was the pretty angel doll that went on the top of the tree. It was always exciting to decorate our Christmas tree in December. When I was younger we had a massive pine tree in our backyard, so Mum and Dad would cut off a good sized branch to be our tree. The whole house would be filled with the scent of fresh pine.

Our family usually went to Catholic Mass on Christmas Eve. I’ll admit it wasn’t much fun – too hot, too crowded and too many hymns and long-winded readings were boring to a child. But some years we went to the children’s service when kids would dress up as Bible characters like shepherds and angels, and that was fun.

As a kid, we’d often have a barbeque lunch for Christmas dinner or Boxing Day, when we’d see a few more members of our extended family. Lots of sausages (snags) in bread, hamburgers and salads, seafood platters and cold ham.


My favourite Christmas desserts were always Pavlova (fruit and cream-topped meringue dessert) and cheesecake, maybe ice-cream too. I never did care for hot Christmas pudding or fruit cake.


Despite being from England, my mother doesn’t like the traditional English hot dinner in the Australian heat. I don’t blame her – I wouldn’t want to cook roast beef and Yorkshire pudding in stifling hot weather with no air-conditioning either. My cousins and I would sometimes play a backyard cricket match after lunch. None of us were very good players but it was still fun.

Later, after Christmas dinner, we’d relax and eat leftovers, play with our new toys and then go to the beach over the next few days. I loved when we’d go to our family holiday house on the Mornington Peninsula, a gorgeous spot close to the ocean beach. Since it was also school holidays, we’d sometimes stay there for a week or two.

Christmas Eve – making our own traditions

As an adult, my boyfriend (now husband) and I started our own tradition of hosting Christmas Eve parties at home. We have lots of food and wine, catch up with old friends and family and the kids run around outside until late. The Christmas Carols in the Domain (a Melbourne live concert) is usually playing on TV. We do a Kris Kringle exchange of presents for all the kids. Last year we gave everyone water pistols, so they all got soaked but it was hot weather and good fun.


My two little boys love laying out their Christmas pillowcases ready for Santa Claus to come after our party winds down. We also leave out a few snacks for Santa and his reindeer near our Christmas tree. We’ve found Santa likes red wine and chocolate cake, while Rudolph prefers a carrot.

Last year my boys received BMX style bikes (still with training wheels at the time). This year it might be skateboards as well as Lego and other fun bigger kid things. Exciting! I'm sure we'll be riding and skating at the local park on Christmas day.

Getting ready for summer holidays

The kids will be on summer holidays for six long weeks from the end of December, so it will probably mean a slow-down in my writing. It will probably also be hideously hot and sticky, so I’m hoping to take off to the beach somewhere for a while.


I won’t be travelling anywhere white or snowy this year, but I’ll watch a couple of Northern Hemisphere Christmas movies and live vicariously through them…while I sip white wine or eat gelati by a beach somewhere!

What are your Christmas traditions and favourite holiday treats? I'd love to hear from you all.

Christmas novella - Heart Note

My new release is titled Heart Note: A Christmas romcom novella. It's out now at all major ebook retail sites and already has some wonderful reviews. The story is about Lily, a perfume counter manager at a major Australian department store. In the lead-up to Christmas, it's all about gift sets, keeping the grumpy customers happy and maybe...finding romance and catching some criminals!


Blurb

A funny, romantic comedy Christmas novella, perfect for fans of Love Actually . . . from the award-winning author of Girl on a Plane.

Love is like a fine perfume. The top note draws you in, an instant attraction, but the Heart Note is the true essence. Like true love – a great perfume should be a woman’s perfect match.

At least, that’s what perfume counter manager, Lily Lucas, tells her customers in one of Australia’s largest department stores. 

It’s almost Christmas, the store is bedecked with baubles and Lily has about eleventy billion gifts to wrap and sell. She and her team of spritzer chicks are glamorous, professional and hoping they don’t have to wear the hideous red onesies and reindeer antlers the store manager has in mind.

The high point of Lily’s work life is Christos Cyriakos, ex-cop, security guard, possible Greek god. He's a mystery box she’d love to unwrap. But can she trust him?

All Lily wants for Christmas is to kiss Christos (and more), catch a band of thieves running amok in the store, and live happily ever after. Is that too much to wish for?

Buy links - books2read.com/HeartNote 

About Cassandra O'Leary


Winner of the global We Heart New Talent contest. Nominated for Best New Author in the 2016 AusRomToday Reader's Choice Awards for excellence in Australian romance fiction. 

Cassandra O'Leary is a romance and women's fiction author from Melbourne, Australia. You'll find her drinking coffee, dreaming of Italy and Spain, and raising two mini ninjas with her superhero husband. 

Cassandra loves romantic comedies and is having fun writing her own romcom books. Heart Note: A Christmas romcom novella, was released in November 2017. Her debut novel, Girl on a Plane, was released in July 2016. It's also being translated into Czech!

In 2015, Cassandra won the global We Heart New Talent contest run by Avon Books/HarperCollins UK. She was also a 2015 finalist in the Lone Star contest, Northwest Houston Romance Writers of America, and a 2014 finalist, First Kiss contest, Romance Writers of Australia. 

Read more or sign-up for Cassandra's newsletter at cassandraolearyauthor.com

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Seeing Santa - Redux

Seeing Santa
By Robin Weaver

Hi Everyone,
I wanted to re-post one of my favorite--and earliest--holiday memories. Hope you enjoy the read.
Happy Holidays to All!


I hadn’t seen him in almost forty years but there he was, waving at me from the cover of a greeting card. One eye twinkled, while the other closed in a saucy wink. Just the way I remembered him.

My parents separated the year I turned five so Mom and I moved in with my grandfather and my teenage aunts. Three women meant three bosses, so I did the only thing possible, I hid. Even with my stealth, I couldn’t escape the daily reminder: Santa will bring you a sack full of switches if you don’t shape up. I wasn’t especially looking forward to Mr. Claus’s visit.

The weather turned uncharacteristically cold and I refused to take off the fur hat my father had mailed to me. The previous Christmas, I'd found a set of paper-dolls under the tree, so a visit from Ole St. Nick couldn’t compete with my new fuzzy head-piece and its big shiny sequins.

When the house became unbearable, I’d take my hat and escape to the yard. I was a great pretender, becoming a master chef who created amazing pies out of mud and corn kernels. Or maybe I’d be a major-general, leading troops to victory against hordes of Nazi soldiers or a fairy queen who turned dandelions into roses with a single swish of my twiggy wand. But my greatest joy was listening to Gramps tell his marvelous stories.

One night, Gramps finished a story about a giant toe. I’d started to sweat because I sat too close to the fireplace and still wore my new hat. When he finished the story, he asked, "So, Teensie, what do you want Santa to bring you?"

I took off the hat, concentrating intensely on a sparkly sequin while I tried to stifle my sniffles. I couldn't tell Gramps about the switches.

"Teensie, what’s wrong with you?" he cajoled.

"Santa won’t come to see me, Gramps. I’ve been bad."

"And just what have you done that’s so bad?"

"Well, I got mud on Aunt Judie’s new rug and my fingerprints are all over the coffee table. I scuffed my new shoes and I wore this hat when Mama said I shouldn’t." I stopped rambling long enough to wipe my nose on my sleeve. "And, that’s just stuff I did today. I can’t even ‘member the stuff I did yesterday."

Gramps stared for a few seconds without speaking. I was sure he thought I’d get those switches after all. He finally spoke, "You must try to mind your Mama and your aunts, but Santa expects you to be good, not perfect."

I looked up in wonder. "You mean?"

"Yep. Santa doesn’t care about throw rugs and coffee tables. He wants you to do your best. Have you done that?"

"Yes." I was feeling pretty good.

"And have you told any lies?"

"Not a one!" I felt really good.

"Then I’m sure Santa will bring you something good."

On December twenty-fourth, my aunts and I sat around our Christmas tree eating chocolate and biscuits. Mama and Gramps had already gone to their rooms and Jingle Bell Rock played on the old radio. I hummed as I cut paper-dolls from an old catalog.

Aunt June asked, "Shouldn’t you be going to bed?"

"I can't go to sleep until the fire goes out." Both aunts snickered.

June went back to her album and Judie stuck her head back into the magazine with a picture of a man and a woman kissing on the cover. I grabbed my scissors when something in the window caught my eye. There he was.

Santa!

He had neither hat nor hair on his head. I wondered if I should loan him my new hat. I glanced at my aunts to see if they saw him too, but they were reading. I looked back and Santa held his finger to his lips. He winked and the, just like that, he was gone.

I checked again to see if my aunts saw him,but they kept doing their teenage things. After a quick check of the fireplace to make sure only coals remained, I raced to bed and pulled the cover over my head.

Memories of that Christmas Eve had faded, but the perfect likeness on the greeting card brought the past back. I purchased the card.

Later that night, I called Aunt June. "When I was five, was that Gramps who dressed up as Santa?"

"What are you talking about?"

"There was a Santa at the window. Was that Gramps?"



My aunt remained silent for a moment. "No one ever dressed up as Santa. Even if we could have afforded a Santa Claus suit, your mother would never have allowed it."

"Are you sure?" I persisted. "I saw a Santa outside the window."

"I promise you. While we lived in the farmhouse, there was never a Santa."

Oh but there was. I hung up, perplexed. I still don't know who or what I saw outside that window, but in my mind, Santa will always live.
Copyright © 2011 by Robin Weaver

Now Available! The newest novella in the Merryvale series.
Full Contact Decorating

 Christmas Tree Wars
Christmas Tree Wars

Saturday, November 17, 2012

NO MISTLETOE REQUIRED: Guest Harlequin Author Jeannette Murray




Jeanette Murray
This year for Christmas, we aren’t spending it in my hometown, or with my husband’s parents. For once, we’re taking a vacation for the holidays. Our daughter (whom I affectionately refer to as Tot) is three and a half now, and we felt it was time for her to experience Disney World. So we made the colossal mistake to hit up Walt Disney World over Christmas. Everyone will be home with their families, right? Plus, it’ll be cold. People want to do the parks in the hot weather. We’ll be fine. Yeah?

It was only after plans were made that we discovered that the park will be busy. Super busy. As in, Christmas day is the single busiest day of the year for Disney World.

Whoops. But fear not. We have myself and my husband, my parents, my sister and her boyfriend all going. And only one toddler in the mix. Six adults, one three year old. No problem, right? I mean, what can go wrong?

Let’s see…

Twelve worthless souvenirs
Eleven princess sightings
Ten hours in line
Nine dirty looks from strangers
Eight aborted rides
Seven potty breaks in an hour
Six emotionally broken adults
Fiiiiiiiiive days of “fuuuuuuun”
Four letter words
Three-year-old tantrums
Two sobbing parents
On the most populated day of the yeaaaaaaaar!

Are you picturing me singing? You shouldn’t, it’s not pretty. Hey, it might be painful but we are determined to try something new for the holiday season, and give our daughter a fantastic Christmas, come hell or high water. Frankly, either hell or high water might come. But we’ll battle through it and make Christmas rock. Pushing our boundaries is what will make it great.

In No Mistletoe Required, Anna Smith is determined to give the children at the Children’s Hospital a great holiday too. She’s heading up the Santa’s Workshop, providing a small oasis of holiday joy in the hospital’s perpetual doom and gloom.
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Dan Beckins hates Christmas. His plan for the holidays usually involves getting the hell outta Dodge, via a vacation to some tropical location where the most Christmas joy he sees is the obligatory eggnog at the resort bar. His friend, however, has roped him in unexpectedly into constructing Santa’s Workshop. Not his first choice…or second, or third…but he won’t back out. It’s an issue of pride now.

This brand new experience—and the sexy woman running the show—are going to bring Dan a whole new meaning of the word joy.

 
Author Bio:

Jeanette (or Kat!) spends her days surrounded by hunky alpha men…at least in her imagination. In real life, she’s a wife and a mother, keeping tabs on her husband of six years, her three year old daughter and the family dog, a lovable (but completely stupid) Goldendoodle. Hang around long enough and you’re guaranteed to hear at least one or two stories about these three..
What’s with the two names? Great question. Kat (or Jeanette) writes for a few different publishers. And due to the timing of some releases, two names just seemed like the right option. But Jeanette (or Kat!) can assure you, no matter which pen name you’re reading, you’re going to get sexy contemporary love..

For more of what Jeanette is up to, visit her website at: www.kat-murray.com Or follow her on twitter at @JeanetteMurray. Or Like her on Facebook at facebook.com/jeanettemurraybooks