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The Christmas Tree
It seems only appropriate for the season that my first blog post on Samhain should be a Christmas story. Brace yourselves. This story includes mass anarchy, bloodshed and tears.
Greg and I were newly married and poor as proverbial church mice. Those were lean times, and we were as skinny as our wallets, living from hand to mouth for the first few months of married life.
So when Christmas rolled around, there was very little hope for anything more than a meager holiday meal. Still, I had been saving for weeks and had socked away enough to buy a little tree.
It was a horrible indulgence for two people struggling to make ends meet, but it was Christmas, and I was anxious to start our own family traditions. This would be our first Christmas on our own. Our families were 1200 miles away and we were all alone in Texas.
Greg, a jolly fellow —even if he was underweight, agreed that we should spend our last twenty dollars on Christmas.
We made a pilgrimage to the land of fir and holly, otherwise known as the local grocery store. The store was packed with frenzied shoppers and the lines stretched into the aisles. They were so busy they pulled the only guy they had manning the Christmas tree lot to help inside the store.
In the chaos, we finally found the store manager and he told us to go ahead and pick out our tree and he’d send a clerk to ring us up.
I picked out a thick and sturdy ten dollar tree. To this day I still remember how fresh it smelled. We steered it in the general direction of our little MGB, maiming Greg in the process. I zigged. He zagged. But only the tree came out of it unscathed. As Greg sucked on his bleeding finger, we waited for the clerk to show up.
And waited, and waited.
Twice, each of us went back to find the manager and he kept promising to send someone out there. Twenty minutes later we were still waiting. I went back one more time and the manager met me halfway.
“Has anyone come out yet?” he asked.
I shook my head.
He looked back toward the store, the lines as long as ever and then at us, two skinny kids, wide-eyed and anxious to be on our way.
“You picked out a nice tree,” he said, pointing at a tree that buried most of our little car.
I showed him the color-coded price tag on the tree, then handed him our only twenty dollar bill. “Can you break the twenty for me?”
“Afraid not,” he said. “I guess you’ll have to take it home.”
I stared at him dumbfounded, not understanding what he meant. By this time, Greg had joined us and asked if we could pay him instead.
“Nope,” the older man said. He shook Greg’s hand and wished us, Merry Christmas.
I must have had tears in my eyes because everything went blurry all at once. I looked up at the store manager and thanked him. “This is our first Christmas on our own,” I said.
He smiled. “And I’ll bet it’s one you’ll always remember too.”
More than thirty years later I realize now…he was right.
May all your holiday memories be just as warm and kind.
Merry Christmas, everyone!
Maria Zannini
*****
Drop by. http://mariazannini.blogspot.com/
You’re always welcome.

Okay, that made me weepy.
There are nice people out there. What a wonderful memory! And what a kindhearted man. :-)
The one absolute you can count on is that there are good people everywhere.
What a great post, Maria. Thank you for sharing that, it’s a great example of true Christmas spirit.
Thanks for inviting me.
OK, now I’m all teary-eyed. That’s a great story, Maria. Thanks for sharing.
That’s lovely, Maria. I have similar memories of scraping by that first year. We lived in a one-room apartment and the heat was defective. We didn’t even care. Newlyweds. :-)
Those early memories are still my favorites. :o)
Thanks for stopping by.
Maria, Great story. The only Christmas story I have to relate is essentially destructive and this doesn’t really seem the time or place. Now on to your My Space. Hell’s bells, you’ve been busy! Mike
This is what happens when I’m not supervised. :o)
I run amok.
What a beautiful story, Maria. Sometimes the toughest years make the most lasting memories.
Hugs
NJ
Isn’t that the truth.
Thanks for stopping by, NJ!
Hi Maria,
Thanks for posting this, Maria.
I have to think of this lady who always presses some money into my hand whenever she sees me. For the boys, she says…or…go spoil yourself. It never fails to move me. I know that feeling of not having family anywhere near during christmastime. Angels do still exist on earth, don’t they?
And good friends, too, Rochita. I hope you had a wonderful Christmas!