In keeping with the "Light the World" and service this year.
Everyone in my family is getting a "receipt" in a white envelope this year.
I love that you can buy goats, chickens, sewing machines and all sorts of good stuff in these machines. The best part is that it goes straight to the Charity!
The White Envelope
It’s just a
small, white envelope stuck among the branches of our Christmas tree. No name,
no identification, no inscription. It has peeked through the branches of our
tree for the past ten years or so.
It all began
because my husband Mike hated Christmas–oh, not the true meaning of Christmas,
but the commercial aspects of it–overspending… the frantic running around at
the last minute to get a tie for Uncle Harry and the dusting powder for
Grandma—the gifts given in desperation because you couldn’t think of anything
else.
Knowing he felt
this way, I decided one year to bypass the usual shirts, sweaters, ties and so
forth. I reached for something special just for Mike. The inspiration came in
an unusual way.
Our son Kevin,
who was 12 that year, was wrestling at the junior level at the school he
attended; and shortly before Christmas, there was a non-league match against a
team sponsored by an inner-city church. These youngsters, dressed in sneakers
so ragged that shoestrings seemed to be the only thing holding them together,
presented a sharp contrast to our boys in their spiffy blue and gold uniforms
and sparkling new wrestling shoes.
As the match
began, I was alarmed to see that the other team was wrestling without headgear,
a kind of light helmet designed to protect a wrestler’s ears. It was a
luxury the ragtag team obviously could not afford.
Well, we ended
up walloping them. We took every weight class. And as each of their boys got up
from the mat, he swaggered around in his tatters with false bravado, a kind of
street pride that couldn’t acknowledge defeat.
Mike, seated
beside me, shook his head sadly, “I wish just one of them could have won,” he
said. “They have a lot of potential, but losing like this could take the heart
right out of them.”
Mike loved kids
– all kids – and he knew them, having coached little league football, baseball
and lacrosse. That’s when the idea for his present came. That afternoon, I went
to a local sporting goods store and bought an assortment of wrestling headgear
and shoes and sent them anonymously to the inner-city church.
On Christmas
Eve, I placed the envelope on the tree, the note inside telling Mike what I had
done and that this was his gift from me. His smile was the brightest thing
about Christmas that year and in succeeding years. For each Christmas, I
followed the tradition–one year sending a group of mentally handicapped
youngsters to a hockey game, another year a check to a pair of elderly brothers
whose home had burned to the ground the week before Christmas, and on and on.
The envelope
became the highlight of our Christmas. It was always the last thing opened on
Christmas morning and our children, ignoring their new toys, would stand with
wide-eyed anticipation as their dad lifted the envelope from the tree to reveal
its contents.
As the children
grew, the toys gave way to more practical presents, but the envelope never lost
its allure. The story doesn’t end there.
You see, we
lost Mike last year due to dreaded cancer. When Christmas rolled around, I was
still so wrapped in grief that I barely got the tree up. But Christmas Eve
found me placing an envelope on the tree, and in the morning, it was joined by
three more.
Each of our
children, unbeknownst to the others, had placed an envelope on the tree for
their dad. The tradition has grown and someday will expand even further with
our grandchildren standing to take down the envelope.
Mike’s spirit,
like the Christmas spirit will always be with us.
***
This story was originally published in
the December 14, 1982 issue of Woman’s Day
magazine by Nancy W. Gavin. It was the first place winner
out of thousands of entries in the magazine’s “My Most Moving Holiday
Tradition” contest in which readers were asked to share their favorite holiday
tradition and the story behind it.
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