All I Want for Christmas is My Son Back

Written by Susan Dunn, The EQ Coach


The holidays are upon us … and how they churn up our emotions. The expectations …repparttar memories …repparttar 111494 empty chairs … Somewhere there’srepparttar 111495 Norman Rockwell family celebrating, but it was never at my house. Was it at yours?

A client and I have in commonrepparttar 111496 loss of beautiful young men onrepparttar 111497 cusp of adulthood -- my youngest son, who died at 21, 3 years ago; her younger brother, who died at 17, much longer ago than that, and yet it was only yesterday. I share with her my poem saying it isrepparttar 111498 hardest time to lose a child … “andrepparttar 111499 world never knew him at all,” it ends -- and she says she knows what I mean.

My mother used to tell me when I was young and tragedy occurred to others, never to speak of “luck” or “dessert,” but to say, “There but forrepparttar 111500 grace of God, go I,” and my first Thanksgiving after my son’s death, I hopedrepparttar 111501 church-goers would pray for someone who had lackedrepparttar 111502 grace of God.

My client says she is going to have everyone share their gratitude this year and she knows it will be emotional. “There are too many empty chairs,” she says. She lost her older brother as well, and her father.

She says my grief is still “raw,” and she’s right, but hers is too, around Christmas. We agree that all emotions will be welcome atrepparttar 111503 holiday table. We’re working on emotional intelligence together. I’m The EQ Coach.

I tell her that my family is still inrepparttar 111504 early recovery stages – there are conversations my older son and I haven’t had yet aboutrepparttar 111505 death of his younger brother. She says she knows what I mean. We talk aboutrepparttar 111506 importance of ‘saying their name’ –repparttar 111507 names ofrepparttar 111508 ones who are dead. I tell her that my grand-daughter speaks Chester’s name allrepparttar 111509 time She asks me atrepparttar 111510 dinner table if Chettie liked yogurt when he was 5. She catches me onrepparttar 111511 patio at night and tells me that Chettie Chettie Bang Bang is dancing withrepparttar 111512 stars.

“I want you to die when you are very, very old, Nana,” she says to me.

“Yes,” I say, with tears in my eyes. “That’srepparttar 111513 way it’s supposed to be.”

“Your grand-daughter knows,” says my client. We share a silent moment of Empathy.

Some years ago I worked for a church. I ‘worked’repparttar 111514 Christmas Eve service. Other services were filled with loudness, butrepparttar 111515 Christmas Eve service is silent. My job was to meet and greet, to ‘be a presence,’ butrepparttar 111516 holy silence atrepparttar 111517 Christmas Eve service was so palpable, so pregnant with meaning, mostly I just stood there. No one was looking for ‘a presence.’ Every person seemed to have a person sitting on either side of them in memory only. Especiallyrepparttar 111518 old women.

Some of them would hug me with tears in their eyes and say a name … “Paul,” a dead husband … or “Missy”, a lost child … Ghosts from Christmasses past.

Those of us who workedrepparttar 111519 church service held one another together. Meanwhilerepparttar 111520 children ran around screaming, high on sugar and excitement, dressed in their party clothes,repparttar 111521 sound of their laughter and their bright and noisy dress shoes echoing downrepparttar 111522 halls.

Do you have memories of Christmas like I do?

Kids throwing up,repparttar 111523 first one inrepparttar 111524 new home,repparttar 111525 canceled flights,repparttar 111526 gift that pleased or didn’t,repparttar 111527 first Christmas as “the mother-in-law,”repparttar 111528 last one with a loved one,repparttar 111529 first one withrepparttar 111530 new baby, someone drunk, someone newly married, someone away from home forrepparttar 111531 first time,repparttar 111532 first Christmas after my divorce,repparttar 111533 timerepparttar 111534 table caught fire,repparttar 111535 time everyone got along,repparttar 111536 time everyone fought,repparttar 111537 snow,repparttar 111538 heat wave,repparttar 111539 beautiful red satin skirt,repparttar 111540 peace,repparttar 111541 chaos,repparttar 111542 curdled crème Anglais, my dad peeling a tangerine,repparttar 111543 kiss underrepparttar 111544 mistletoe,repparttar 111545 Hallelujah chorus …

I rememberrepparttar 111546 time our kids were with their fathers, hers forrepparttar 111547 first time, and I found my friend crying inrepparttar 111548 church restroom and took her out for dinner, saying, “Come on. I’ll show you how to do this.”

The Truth About Santa Claus

Written by Arleen M. Kaptur


Christmas carols evoke visions of holiday cheer and wonderful, tender family moments. There is "I'm Dreaming of a White Christmas," a classic that has spannedrepparttar time of many generations. There are numerous books and articles written about Christmas, such as "Yes, Virginia, There Is a Santa Claus." A letter written by an 8-year-old New York girl received a national response fromrepparttar 111493 newspaper she sent it to - The Sun.

Many young children struggle withrepparttar 111494 thought of Santa Claus. Some of their friends laugh at them for believing, and some parents go to great lengths to protect and preserve this belief in their small children.

In reality, young and old, would like to believe in a wonderful fantasy of magic and a touch of Holiday cheer. Truth is that with everyday life, adults get to be very skeptical and no longer hold on to childhood visions of sugarplums and jolly fellows coming down a chimney.

The concept of Santa Claus can be analyzed and taken apart - it can be examined, re-examined, and checked out twice again. Madison Avenue executives conceive new ways to promoterepparttar 111495 "magic" ofrepparttar 111496 season to include childhood traditions and beliefs, and stores are filled to overflowing with replicas and manufactured versions. In reality, yes, there really is a Santa Claus. It is a most wondrous feeling of love, generosity, and devotion. Asrepparttar 111497 editor of The Sun so aptly put it, "How dreary would berepparttar 111498 world if there were no Santa Claus. There would be no child-like faith, no poetry, no romance...the light of childhood that fillsrepparttar 111499 world would be extinguished without Santa Claus."

You don't have to "see" Santa to believe in what Santa stands for. As in religious beliefs and doctrines, not seeing and believing, trusting, is where faith abounds. Santa represents faith in a higher power than we will ever be, it is faith in mankind that in hearts throughoutrepparttar 111500 world there is love and tenderness. Small children are to be cherished and adults can hold on to memories and beliefs from their past - knowing full wellrepparttar 111501 scientific research that has proven these concepts as "not probable."

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