Diane Stringam Tolley's Blog: On the Border, page 139
December 29, 2017
Rabbit Duck Turtle

Published on December 29, 2017 08:29
December 28, 2017
Bunked

Published on December 28, 2017 08:02
December 25, 2017
The Year That Santa Retired

He sank into his easy chair, he closed his eyes and sighed,He placed his feet upon a stool and very nearly cried.“The miles and miles of snow up here are quite a sight to see,But now I think that Florida should be the place for me.”
His wife brought in hot chocolate as he finished this remark.“You silly man.” She chuckled. “You’ll be eaten by a shark!”She looked into his troubled eyes and smoothed his soft, white hair.“Now what’s the real problem, Dear? You know how much I care!”
He lifted up his chocolate cup and slowly took a sip,Then in a thoughtful way, he pulled upon his lower lip.He looked into her loving eyes, then down into the fire.“The elves brought in a foreman elf they wanted me to hire.”
“With someone else to run the show, they won’t need me at all,They said they could replace me with a schedule on the wall.And someone kind of young would want to tackle greater things.I feel the changes in the air this foreman’s presence brings.”
“He says he has a dozen plans to make our business grow,He’s going to pay the elves much more and keep their hours low.He says they’ll work much faster if they get more rest each day,And all will go much better if I simply go away.”
“On his schedule all is listed from the dawn to setting sun,And if he’s right, by June the first, the toys will all be done.The elves will then have time for play and do what they like best,Or simply lie down in the sun and take a good long rest.”
He turned to look at her and wiped a tear from off his cheek.“I’d time to think, they said, and gave me nearly half a week.I said I’d answer right away, they didn’t need to wait,I told them you and I would leave tomorrow night at eight.”
So Santa packed his things and sadly climbed into his sleigh,
And he and Mrs. Santa very slowly flew away.In Florida, they found themselves a house down by the sea,And soon they had a garden full of carrots, corn and peas.
They swam and fished and talked and laughed and lay out in the sun,And no knew that Santa wasn’t really having fun,For though they had so much to do—were always on the go,He never could forget the snow. And work that he loved so.
One day while they were on the beach just lying in the sun,They noticed someone coming toward their beach house on the run.“It’s Ralph,” Said Mrs. Santa as they scrambled to their feet.Ralph Elf was the last person that they thought they’d ever meet!
“You must come back!” Ralph panted as he sank into a chair,“The schedule simply doesn’t work. We need someone who cares!Eight months, we’ve worked for Foreman and, by rights, we should be done,But to tell the truth, my friend, the work has barely been begun!”
“Come with me now, I beg you, for there is so much to do,We tried hard to do without you for we thought that you were through.We thought you were too old to really help us anymore,But now we know it’s love, not age, that really writes the score!”
“We need you so the children won’t be sad on Christmas day,And the elves all say they’ll work for you without a speck of pay.Come with me, please. We need you. Could you try forgiveness now?If you can’t forgive, just help us help the children anyhow.”
Santa’s eyes were dimmed with tears as he looked at Mrs. Claus,He smiled at Ralph. “We’ll get our things.” Then suddenly, he paused. “My friend,” he said as he looked at Ralph, “Do the elves all want me too?“Or do they just want someone who will work as hard as you?”
Ralph smiled and said, “Dear Santa, we have found it’s you we love,We couldn’t work for someone else for all the stars above!”We are a team, or better yet, a father, girls and boys,Most families have a hobby. And ours is making toys.”
“We work so well together and together, we should be,We’ll make the toys for everyone for all eternity.Come with me now. We need you so. We each would like to sayIf you’re with us, we’ll have more fun with each and every day!”
So Santa went with Ralph that day and started with a will,By Christmas Eve the work was done and every packaged filled.They worked so hard throughout those weeks, that on that happy day,The children never knew how Santa had been sent away.
So now on Christmas morning when you see that he’s been there,Remember that it’s love that brings your presents through the air.And if we work together, loving as a family,
Love can accomplish anything that’s good. Take it from me!

Published on December 25, 2017 06:57
December 24, 2017
The Other Side
By Christmas Eve request, My Women's Night Before Christmas. With apologies to Clement Clarke Moore . . .
On the night before Christmas, long hours ahead
The toddler awake, I’d just got her to bed.
The stockings were hung in a haphazard row,
While Mama assembled new toys just below.
The kids were asleep. Well, except for the last,
Just waiting for morning to get downstairs fast.
I toiled on alone, ‘cause there wasn’t a dad.
I had broken a nail and my language was bad.
Then out on the lawn rose a terrible noise,A talent that only my oldest employs.
I flew to the window, and thought as I ran,‘What's he doing out there, my nine-year-old man?!’
It was bright (as can only the moon on snow be),
And I narrowed my eyes to be able to see.
And what did I glimpse, coming over the way?
But some deer, all in harness, and a stout little sleigh.
With someone in a coat that looked comfy and soft,
And clearly some magic to keep them aloft.
They flew like a Michael Schumacher on course,
While the driver attempted some will to enforce.
"Now Baby! Now, Jazzi! Now, Frolic and Jolly!
On, Cherub! On, Angel! On, Kitten and Folly!
I need you to get to the rooftop this time!
And a fine, gentle landing would be so sublime!"
To say that they flew like some leaves past the attic,
Would be perfectly true, it was quite that erratic.
I was holding my breath as they shot toward the sky,
And prayed that my windows and roof would survive.
Then finally (thankfully) up on the roof,
The unmistakable sound of twenty-four hoofs.
Then some noise in the chimney I’d not heard before,
And someone emerged, on their knees, on the floor.
The figure was dressed in a warm, sooty coat,
With some Uggs on their feet and scarf round their throat.
With toys, books and clothes in a gi-normous sack,
Which they dropped to the floor with the words, “Oh, my back!”.
And then sparkling eyes were directed at me!From under a hat that was worn with esprit.
I surprisingly saw, not a man, but a miss,
With no beard (though a tweezer would not go amiss).
In white teeth, she had clutched a short pencil end,
And a notebook, she held in one mittened hand.
Her round, wrinkled face shone with laughter and fun,
And I don’t think her happy laugh could be outdone!
She was joyful and glad, and just a bit plump,
Her smile made me smile, and her laugh made me jump!
She gave me a grin and then winked an eye,
All my fears passed away and I waved them goodbye.
She didn’t say much, simply nodded my way,
And I watched as she worked – like a pudgy ballet.
She finished her job, made a note in her book,
Then nodded and smiled and her exit she took!
I heard her footsteps as she ran to her sleigh,
Heard her call to her team as they all flew away.
Then this sweet woman shouted, as she flew o’er the town,
"Happy Christmas to all, don’t let life get you down!"
Merry Christmas, my friends! And a very Happy New Year!

On the night before Christmas, long hours ahead
The toddler awake, I’d just got her to bed.
The stockings were hung in a haphazard row,
While Mama assembled new toys just below.
The kids were asleep. Well, except for the last,
Just waiting for morning to get downstairs fast.
I toiled on alone, ‘cause there wasn’t a dad.
I had broken a nail and my language was bad.
Then out on the lawn rose a terrible noise,A talent that only my oldest employs.
I flew to the window, and thought as I ran,‘What's he doing out there, my nine-year-old man?!’
It was bright (as can only the moon on snow be),
And I narrowed my eyes to be able to see.
And what did I glimpse, coming over the way?
But some deer, all in harness, and a stout little sleigh.
With someone in a coat that looked comfy and soft,
And clearly some magic to keep them aloft.
They flew like a Michael Schumacher on course,
While the driver attempted some will to enforce.
"Now Baby! Now, Jazzi! Now, Frolic and Jolly!
On, Cherub! On, Angel! On, Kitten and Folly!
I need you to get to the rooftop this time!
And a fine, gentle landing would be so sublime!"
To say that they flew like some leaves past the attic,
Would be perfectly true, it was quite that erratic.
I was holding my breath as they shot toward the sky,
And prayed that my windows and roof would survive.
Then finally (thankfully) up on the roof,
The unmistakable sound of twenty-four hoofs.
Then some noise in the chimney I’d not heard before,
And someone emerged, on their knees, on the floor.
The figure was dressed in a warm, sooty coat,
With some Uggs on their feet and scarf round their throat.
With toys, books and clothes in a gi-normous sack,
Which they dropped to the floor with the words, “Oh, my back!”.
And then sparkling eyes were directed at me!From under a hat that was worn with esprit.
I surprisingly saw, not a man, but a miss,
With no beard (though a tweezer would not go amiss).
In white teeth, she had clutched a short pencil end,
And a notebook, she held in one mittened hand.
Her round, wrinkled face shone with laughter and fun,
And I don’t think her happy laugh could be outdone!
She was joyful and glad, and just a bit plump,
Her smile made me smile, and her laugh made me jump!
She gave me a grin and then winked an eye,
All my fears passed away and I waved them goodbye.
She didn’t say much, simply nodded my way,
And I watched as she worked – like a pudgy ballet.
She finished her job, made a note in her book,
Then nodded and smiled and her exit she took!
I heard her footsteps as she ran to her sleigh,
Heard her call to her team as they all flew away.
Then this sweet woman shouted, as she flew o’er the town,
"Happy Christmas to all, don’t let life get you down!"
Merry Christmas, my friends! And a very Happy New Year!
Published on December 24, 2017 07:00
December 23, 2017
Daddy's Footsteps
Today and Tomorrow, I'm reprising some of my most popular posts.
Some you may remember.
All are true! :)
My HeroDecember. My four-year-old mind was a haze,I’d been locked in the house as it snowed for three days.Then quite suddenly, magically, sunlight appeared,And my Daddy was pulling on snow boots. And gear.
I just couldn’t stand the house one minute more.I had to get out. I’d help Dad with the chores!So I zippered and buttoned and pulled on and tied,Then stood by my Daddy with little-girl pride.
“I’m ready,” I shouted. “Let’s go milk the cows!”I was set for adventure, quite done with the house.He smiled and then, turning, stepped into the snow.And I walked alongside. It seemed quite apropos.
At first the bright sparkles and crisp winter airMade our walking, adventure, and senses aware.But then I discovered as most children do,That snow, though quite pretty, was hard to get through.
I struggled and grunted, broke into a sweat,Then looked for the barn that we hadn’t reached yet.My Daddy smiled down at my efforts inept,“It’d be easier if you tried to step where I step.”
So I did. And my progress was much better then,Soon we two reached the barn, and the cozy cow pens.I sat perched on a stool and watched Daddy do chores,Then followed him home, just like I’d done before.
I learned something that day, as we walked through the yard,If I stayed in his footsteps, then things weren’t as hard.His skill and experience, and his guidance, too,Would make everything easier my whole life through.
Now, to my own kids, when there’s woe to be hadI give bits of advice that I learned from my Dad.When Life dishes out dollops of good or of ill,I find that I’m walking in Dad’s footsteps still.
Some you may remember.
All are true! :)

I just couldn’t stand the house one minute more.I had to get out. I’d help Dad with the chores!So I zippered and buttoned and pulled on and tied,Then stood by my Daddy with little-girl pride.
“I’m ready,” I shouted. “Let’s go milk the cows!”I was set for adventure, quite done with the house.He smiled and then, turning, stepped into the snow.And I walked alongside. It seemed quite apropos.
At first the bright sparkles and crisp winter airMade our walking, adventure, and senses aware.But then I discovered as most children do,That snow, though quite pretty, was hard to get through.
I struggled and grunted, broke into a sweat,Then looked for the barn that we hadn’t reached yet.My Daddy smiled down at my efforts inept,“It’d be easier if you tried to step where I step.”
So I did. And my progress was much better then,Soon we two reached the barn, and the cozy cow pens.I sat perched on a stool and watched Daddy do chores,Then followed him home, just like I’d done before.
I learned something that day, as we walked through the yard,If I stayed in his footsteps, then things weren’t as hard.His skill and experience, and his guidance, too,Would make everything easier my whole life through.
Now, to my own kids, when there’s woe to be hadI give bits of advice that I learned from my Dad.When Life dishes out dollops of good or of ill,I find that I’m walking in Dad’s footsteps still.

Published on December 23, 2017 09:52
December 22, 2017
Meat Mystery

Some funny.
Some weird.
Our family has several that fit into this last category.
One is Christmas stockings.
Okay, yes, I know that many, many families enjoy the custom of stuffing a stocking for each family member.
It's what goes into said stockings that sets our family apart.
Maybe I should explain . . .
On Christmas, after the kids have been shuttled off to bed, Mom and Dad (Spoiler Alert: Alias Santa) bring out the loot.
Erm . . . gifts.
Each stocking is laid out and stuffed full.
I look after the common, everyday, run-of-the-mill gifts:
1.Toothbrushes.
2. Socks.
3. Underwear.
4. The orange in the toe.
My Husby looks after the strange and bizarre:
1. Various styles of catapults.
2. Magnets.
3. Quirky -- ie. strange – books, puzzles and games.
4. Expanding T-shirts. Just add water.
5. And little tins of meat.
I know what you're thinking.
Why on earth would someone give his kids catapults?
You weren't?
My mistake.
Sooo . . . tinned meats.
Every year, each of our children finds a tin of . . . something . . . stuffed into the inner reaches of his or her stocking.
And I'm not talking tuna fish here.
These are tins of something fancifully called: Vienna sausage.
In various flavours.
All neatly and brightly and attractively packaged.
And yes, I realize that there may be people around the world who love Vienna sausage.
My kids were raised on the prairie.
And served beef three meals a day.
With the occasional foray into the world of chicken or pork.
If the animal didn't originally bellow, oink or cluck, they regarded it with deep suspicion.
Or outright revulsion.
Okay, the ingredients listed on the Vienna sausage tins said: beef and/or chicken and/or pork and/or meat.
But it was mechanically de-boned and mixed with . . . other stuff.
So in the words of my kids, mystery meat.
Need I say that my Husby's gifts weren't received with gladness?
Probably not.
Oh, they tried it.
The very first year.
It . . . wasn't popular.
No tin was every willingly opened again.
And when the detritus had been cleared from the front room after the all-important opening of the gifts, the only things remaining were several tins of meat.
Left where they had been dropped upon being discovered.
Husby immediately scooped them up and stowed them carefully away.
Only to bring them out and drop them into another stocking the next year.
One particular tin of sausage re-appeared six years in a row. The last a few years ago. In Argentina (where our youngest son was living at the time).
His roommate ate it.
Something we didn't think was possible.
One of our kids asked their father why he kept putting those little tins of -to them- inedible meat in the stockings.
His answer surprised all of us. “Because I want you to appreciate that we live in a place where we have plenty. That tiny tins of mystery meat can be laughed over and disregarded. We are very blessed.”
We truly are.
Over the next few days, I'm reprising my Favourite stories of Christmas. Some you may remember. All are true! :)
Published on December 22, 2017 08:03
December 21, 2017
Holding the Reindeer

Published on December 21, 2017 07:00
December 20, 2017
TeeTOTALed

Published on December 20, 2017 07:00
December 19, 2017
Santa's Fourth Report Card
Santa and I are in the midst of 'Santa and Mrs.' season.
So I've decided to re-share Santa's reports from past years. Just because these experiences are soooo precious! Last year...Santa's Report Card: 2016Guest Post by Santa Claus (aka: Kris Kringle)
Kris and Rebecca Kringle
Photo by: Kimberley Laaksa Photography.As has become our tradition, Mrs. Santa and I would like to share with you the joys and delights we receive from visiting the world when it is at its cheeriest and most positive. There truly is a wonderful Spirit which accompanies the Christmas season.My Beloved and I have been recreating Santa and Mrs. Rebecca Claus (there – you heard her first name here first!) for some years now, and each year it is a special treat. We sincerely hope it also is for the people with whom we have the pleasure of visiting.This year, for about the last five or six weeks, we have visited some 25 organized events and several spontaneous ones (disorganized events?), and they have each and every one been special to us. We have sat over 1000 little ones on our collective knees this year, over 200 not-so-little ones, and we have had the great pleasure of visiting with some 450 seniors, some of whom were not able to sit on our knees, so we bent ours to them. As it should be. And our knees are still working! That in itself is a great Christmas blessing!We were privileged to visit a Seniors Lodge to which we have been invited for several years. My failing memory notwithstanding (as my Beloved would say, ‘ooh, good word!) many faces are familiar – though I still struggle to put a name to most faces. I enjoy the smiles elicited when I flatter the ladies with the thought that they have seen what, now? 29 or 30 Christmases?? And the men always seem to enjoy my un-pretended envy of their beautiful white hair (mine still takes a little dye and paint to remove the last of the colour). After visiting with these dear folks for a moment or two, we ask them not what they would like for Christmas but rather “what is your Christmas wish – for you, for your loved ones, or for the world?”Many—having endured the ravages of war themselves—many wish for the proverbial Peace on Earth; the Christmas-time phrase that many of us toss off without really thinking about its meaning. These folks are sincere. In their age and disability and declining health caused by a lifetime of caring and struggle, they truly are burdened with the weight of war and strife in the world. We assure them we will do what we can to end the strife. We assure them that the secret to doing so is in working with the children of our little corner of the world. Chidlren who will need to know joy in their life, that they may be armed to stand up to the evils they will inevitably encounter.Amongst the senior crowd this year was a dear little old woman, 93 years old, assisted by a wheelchair due to an aged, bent body that could no longer keep up with her sharp mind. I knelt down to greet her, took her hand in mine and asked, “What would you wish for this Christmas, Estelle? (We love the beautiful ‘old-fashioned’ names that we encounter!). Estelle looked up at me as best she could, caught my eye and said: “A kiss from Santa Claus”.I know that I hesitated, noticeably, with this request, as the possible implications of fulfilling her request ran through my mind. I must add here that I am most grateful to have Mrs. Santa at my side, who does a magnificent job of monitoring ‘players’ of all ages, even the 93-year-old ones. (A tangent to follow, if you will indulge me for a moment: I have, over the years, received some, shall we say, ‘interesting requests’ to intervene in the love-lives of teens and twenty-somethings. The most interesting and strident one this year was a request from Jackie, who asked me to stop off at Dave’s house in San Diego to let him know that Jackie was expecting him to bring back a ring – ‘a big one’ -- this Christmas. “Have you taken this up with Dave yet, or will this be a surprise when I tell him?” “Oh, Santa,” said Jackie, “He knows who he is! And he knows alllllllabout the rock I want!” I assured Jackie that I would deliver a reminder to Dave. ‘Nuff said. Merry Christmas to Jackie and best wishes to Dave!)Estelle was still waiting for her kiss from Santa, and while my mind was still on pause with the request I asked her “Why would you want a kiss from this whiskered old face?” Estelle paused a moment also, and with a tear forming in the corner of her eye she breathed quietly, “I have not had a kiss from anyone for over 25 years . . . . “. Estelle’s grip on my gloved hand tightened, but this was not the cause of a tear welling in my own eye. As I returned the firmness of the hand grip, Santa and Mrs. Santa both granted a Christmas wish that, in the grand scheme of things, was easily granted and that cost nothing but a bit of the ‘milk of human kindness’, as Dickens so succinctly summarized it in the words of Jacob Marley. While delighted to grant so simple and meaningful a request, we were saddened by the tale of neglect that had sparked Estelle’s Christmas wish.I will end this 2016 Report Card with the story of Isabella, a gangly and quiet-spoken 10-year-old who had been on Santa’s knee, in turn with some 30 other children at a lively community-league Christmas event. Once all of the children had had their turn and had gone off to unwrap their gifts, two young ladies hovered nearby. One was a delightful 5-year-old who, with the full approval of her mother, had suspended a dozen or so candy canes in the neck of her crimson Christmas dress, delivering them to various and sundry at will. Mrs. Santa and I were the grateful recipients of, I think, more than half of her deliveries. Isabella hovered nearby until the candy deliveries were mostly completed, and until I noticed her there, again. I waved my hand for her to ‘come over’, which she did, slowly. “Would you like to sit on my knee again, Isabella?” (I actually remembered her name this time!). She nodded, and I hoisted her up onto my lap, feeling that maybe she had forgotten to tell me something during her first visit. I tried to strike up a conversation with her.“What grade are you in at school, Isabella?”“Five.”“Do you like school?”“Yeah.”“What’s your favourite subject?”A shrug of the shoulders.“Do you like sports?”“No.”“Do you like to draw, make art?”“Yeah.”With each question, Isabella had snuggled closer and more closely into Santa’s warm furry suit. After several more attempts at eliciting some information, I finally figured out that Isabella was sending me the only message that she needed to hear back from me.“Would you like Santa to be quiet now?”She snuggled right in close and leaned her head on my shoulder. “Yeah.”I wrapped my arms around her and granted two wishes, one of which was unspoken. I realized that Santa’s blathering on, trying to learn something about this lovely little lady, was masking the unspoken request she was making, which was simply to be loved.Isabella spent some twenty minutes on my lap that night, encircled by my arms. A priceless moment in time we shall never forget and shall always cherish.My Christmas wish for 2017? That each and every one of you will experience the milk of human kindness in the coming weeks and months and years. God bless, and Merry Christmas to all!With our love to you at Christmas 2016,Santa and Rebecca Claus
So I've decided to re-share Santa's reports from past years. Just because these experiences are soooo precious! Last year...Santa's Report Card: 2016Guest Post by Santa Claus (aka: Kris Kringle)

Photo by: Kimberley Laaksa Photography.As has become our tradition, Mrs. Santa and I would like to share with you the joys and delights we receive from visiting the world when it is at its cheeriest and most positive. There truly is a wonderful Spirit which accompanies the Christmas season.My Beloved and I have been recreating Santa and Mrs. Rebecca Claus (there – you heard her first name here first!) for some years now, and each year it is a special treat. We sincerely hope it also is for the people with whom we have the pleasure of visiting.This year, for about the last five or six weeks, we have visited some 25 organized events and several spontaneous ones (disorganized events?), and they have each and every one been special to us. We have sat over 1000 little ones on our collective knees this year, over 200 not-so-little ones, and we have had the great pleasure of visiting with some 450 seniors, some of whom were not able to sit on our knees, so we bent ours to them. As it should be. And our knees are still working! That in itself is a great Christmas blessing!We were privileged to visit a Seniors Lodge to which we have been invited for several years. My failing memory notwithstanding (as my Beloved would say, ‘ooh, good word!) many faces are familiar – though I still struggle to put a name to most faces. I enjoy the smiles elicited when I flatter the ladies with the thought that they have seen what, now? 29 or 30 Christmases?? And the men always seem to enjoy my un-pretended envy of their beautiful white hair (mine still takes a little dye and paint to remove the last of the colour). After visiting with these dear folks for a moment or two, we ask them not what they would like for Christmas but rather “what is your Christmas wish – for you, for your loved ones, or for the world?”Many—having endured the ravages of war themselves—many wish for the proverbial Peace on Earth; the Christmas-time phrase that many of us toss off without really thinking about its meaning. These folks are sincere. In their age and disability and declining health caused by a lifetime of caring and struggle, they truly are burdened with the weight of war and strife in the world. We assure them we will do what we can to end the strife. We assure them that the secret to doing so is in working with the children of our little corner of the world. Chidlren who will need to know joy in their life, that they may be armed to stand up to the evils they will inevitably encounter.Amongst the senior crowd this year was a dear little old woman, 93 years old, assisted by a wheelchair due to an aged, bent body that could no longer keep up with her sharp mind. I knelt down to greet her, took her hand in mine and asked, “What would you wish for this Christmas, Estelle? (We love the beautiful ‘old-fashioned’ names that we encounter!). Estelle looked up at me as best she could, caught my eye and said: “A kiss from Santa Claus”.I know that I hesitated, noticeably, with this request, as the possible implications of fulfilling her request ran through my mind. I must add here that I am most grateful to have Mrs. Santa at my side, who does a magnificent job of monitoring ‘players’ of all ages, even the 93-year-old ones. (A tangent to follow, if you will indulge me for a moment: I have, over the years, received some, shall we say, ‘interesting requests’ to intervene in the love-lives of teens and twenty-somethings. The most interesting and strident one this year was a request from Jackie, who asked me to stop off at Dave’s house in San Diego to let him know that Jackie was expecting him to bring back a ring – ‘a big one’ -- this Christmas. “Have you taken this up with Dave yet, or will this be a surprise when I tell him?” “Oh, Santa,” said Jackie, “He knows who he is! And he knows alllllllabout the rock I want!” I assured Jackie that I would deliver a reminder to Dave. ‘Nuff said. Merry Christmas to Jackie and best wishes to Dave!)Estelle was still waiting for her kiss from Santa, and while my mind was still on pause with the request I asked her “Why would you want a kiss from this whiskered old face?” Estelle paused a moment also, and with a tear forming in the corner of her eye she breathed quietly, “I have not had a kiss from anyone for over 25 years . . . . “. Estelle’s grip on my gloved hand tightened, but this was not the cause of a tear welling in my own eye. As I returned the firmness of the hand grip, Santa and Mrs. Santa both granted a Christmas wish that, in the grand scheme of things, was easily granted and that cost nothing but a bit of the ‘milk of human kindness’, as Dickens so succinctly summarized it in the words of Jacob Marley. While delighted to grant so simple and meaningful a request, we were saddened by the tale of neglect that had sparked Estelle’s Christmas wish.I will end this 2016 Report Card with the story of Isabella, a gangly and quiet-spoken 10-year-old who had been on Santa’s knee, in turn with some 30 other children at a lively community-league Christmas event. Once all of the children had had their turn and had gone off to unwrap their gifts, two young ladies hovered nearby. One was a delightful 5-year-old who, with the full approval of her mother, had suspended a dozen or so candy canes in the neck of her crimson Christmas dress, delivering them to various and sundry at will. Mrs. Santa and I were the grateful recipients of, I think, more than half of her deliveries. Isabella hovered nearby until the candy deliveries were mostly completed, and until I noticed her there, again. I waved my hand for her to ‘come over’, which she did, slowly. “Would you like to sit on my knee again, Isabella?” (I actually remembered her name this time!). She nodded, and I hoisted her up onto my lap, feeling that maybe she had forgotten to tell me something during her first visit. I tried to strike up a conversation with her.“What grade are you in at school, Isabella?”“Five.”“Do you like school?”“Yeah.”“What’s your favourite subject?”A shrug of the shoulders.“Do you like sports?”“No.”“Do you like to draw, make art?”“Yeah.”With each question, Isabella had snuggled closer and more closely into Santa’s warm furry suit. After several more attempts at eliciting some information, I finally figured out that Isabella was sending me the only message that she needed to hear back from me.“Would you like Santa to be quiet now?”She snuggled right in close and leaned her head on my shoulder. “Yeah.”I wrapped my arms around her and granted two wishes, one of which was unspoken. I realized that Santa’s blathering on, trying to learn something about this lovely little lady, was masking the unspoken request she was making, which was simply to be loved.Isabella spent some twenty minutes on my lap that night, encircled by my arms. A priceless moment in time we shall never forget and shall always cherish.My Christmas wish for 2017? That each and every one of you will experience the milk of human kindness in the coming weeks and months and years. God bless, and Merry Christmas to all!With our love to you at Christmas 2016,Santa and Rebecca Claus
Published on December 19, 2017 07:00
December 18, 2017
My Shopping Pocket

My brothers and sister had done this before,Gone shopping for Christmas with Mom at the stores.But for four-year-old me, this time was the first,I was way beyond eager, nigh ready to burst.
But when she had parked and I looked from the car,From the ranch to the city was more than just far,I had somehow moved on to a whole other sphere,And I stared at the thousands of folks that were here.
I was used to my world, I’ll admit it. It’s true.I was here, I must shop. What else could I do?All my siblings had spread—in the crowd, disappeared, I slowly climbed out, tried to swallow my fear.
Mother picked up my brother and gave me a grin,As I stood there so anxious on trembling limbs.“Let’s go shop for Christmas, Diane,” to me, said.And I nodded and shivered and wished I was dead.
But then she said something that filled me with hope,As she showed me the pocket attached to her coat,“Now you hold on tight and we’ll wander along,And no one can hurt you and nothing go wrong.”
So I did and I found that my mother was right,Holding tight to her pocket, I let go of my fright.I discovered that shopping for Christmas was fun!If I held Mother’s pocket till the shopping was done.
Years have passed, I forgot ‘pocket shopping’ with Mom,Till one day, with my kids, we had errands to run,And with my arms full with the baby and all,We started our tour of the stores in the mall.
A tug on my coat and I looked down to see,A toddler’s hand clutch my pocket. And me.I knew how she felt—the security. Calm.I’d felt it myself with a pocket. And Mom.
Mondays do get knocked a lot,With poetry, we three besought,To try to make the week begin,With gentle thoughts--perhaps a grin?So Jenny and Delores, we,Now post our poems for you to see.
And when you’ve read what we have brought,Did we help? Or did we not . . .
And next week, from my friends, and me, Our 'Christmas Wish' for all to see!
Published on December 18, 2017 07:00
On the Border
Stories from the Stringam Family ranches from the 1800's through to today.
Stories from the Stringam Family ranches from the 1800's through to today.
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