"T'was the day after Christmas and all thru the house, not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse..."
The mouse has awakened, now, to help me finish a hope from a few days ago, in wee morning hours to capture early memories.
When my Dad was small,
some tinsel hanging from the branches of the family tree must have touched the electrical plug and burst into flames. His mother noticed, grabbed, and ran with the torching pine outside to thrust it into the snow. Grandma healed her burns with honey, and Dad kept us safe by choosing to dismantle our tree on Christmas Day or the day after.
When your tree is disassembled, ornaments carefully packed, and radios stop humming songs of the season, what happens next?
In music, when a true chord is struck, tones of each note is heard, but for moments afterward, overtones, octaves higher echo the air. Christmas strikes a real chord. And overtones are memories. So, what is an early or special memory that causes you to wonder or [hold close] these things...in [your] heart?
This year, Elder Bednar challenged each of us to imagine being really there in the events that surrounded Jesus' birth.
I am working on this...But today, I have some treasures to share that might spark memories of yours--in feeling the magic or magesty of Jesus's birthday!





I remember being outside the door of a little bathroom in a tiny student married housing apartment, feeling oh, so nauseated. I did not know that word. But I remember being doubled over and feeling very not well.
Maria and a few other family members are going through such an experience.
I remember Mom reading a story to me read by Paul Harvey about a man trying to save a dying flock of birds, and wondering what he could do to help them want to enter his warm barn. Grandpa Gee listened to this radio orator every day during his lunch with Grandma. I remember being scared of Grandpa when I was little and he was stern. As years passed, my goal in our phone calls was to make him laugh, and boy, could he laugh.
The scriptures explain that because Jesus came, and experienced the aches and pains that He endured, we do not have to go through the same type of suffering that He did, if we repent (experience a change of heart, and let His Spirit point us to choose the right.) I also like Elder Holland's encouragement to understand that because the Savior went through the feelings of being so very much alone, we never need to feel so abandoned or alone.
Another memory is from hearing a copy of the reel-to-reel tape recorder my parents used to capture talks with a red suited, bearded man: When I was two, my father held us close and bellowed "HO, HO, HO, little girl (or little boy) How old are you?" I told him I was six. I had just turned two.
Age four, my mother brought us near an announcer at a radio station who was broadcasting near Santa, who was asking what the little children wanted for Christmas. We had been told from knee high that if we were good, Santa would bring us something nice. If we were not good, he would bring us a piece of coal for our stocking. I decided that the sticks and stones ideas wouldn't be such a bad one, if I had a big brother around. He could take those sticks and stones and build a beautiful play house.
I told this to Santa. Christmas morning came, but to my dismay, Santa had gotten the message, BUT the sticks and stones were NOT the two by four boards with bricks for my imaginary play house.
On the kitchen table, I found a paper sack of sticks and soil that Santa had seemed to have dug from my back yard





So, I am thinking now, that the big brother idea is still a good one. Sometimes we forget what we really want for Christmas is something that lasts and lasts, and yes, we have to be good! A wonderful part of the story is that each of us has Someone who can make something really good out of any of our poor choices, or coal and sticks that sometimes come in our stockings. Is there someone that is making a great house for you? I like that He told John, "In my Father's house are many mansions, I go there to prepare a place for you." Isn't it comforting to understand that there is "Home" waiting...with a welcome sign?
I am pretty sure it was this same Christmas that we were visiting a neighbor, looked at the sky and saw something amazing.
I keep asking my mom to explain how I could have seen something like this. Just like my memories of watching Mary Poppins float mid air in the night from my daddy's shoulders at Disneyland, some things I will have to learn "why" later. It could have been at this same party that we found out that one of my brother's friend's house had burned down or his mother had died, something tragic. My mother held us close. We felt the sadness of this friend and their loss. We did not have a lot of things, but we had each other!
I keep asking my mom to explain how I could have seen something like this. Just like my memories of watching Mary Poppins float mid air in the night from my daddy's shoulders at Disneyland, some things I will have to learn "why" later. It could have been at this same party that we found out that one of my brother's friend's house had burned down or his mother had died, something tragic. My mother held us close. We felt the sadness of this friend and their loss. We did not have a lot of things, but we had each other!

Before the next Christmas, our family moved across the country, over 2,000 miles, to a small town in New England, where the deadline for school was the 31st of December, good luck for me, and for my best friend.
My favorite present was a schoolgirl doll. Again, she could talk, "My name is Susie Smart. One plus one is two. Two plus two is four. C-A-T spells cat. D-O-G spells dog." She had a desk and a chalkboard, and having Susie Smart helped me want to be smart, to learn learn learn, even if part of the school I was going to included taking naps. I still am learning about naps.
I remember getting a ping pong table in the basement of our New Hampshire house,

that had just been refinished to make a bedroom for three boys. The piano also fit downstairs. When I hear La Candeur, Consolation, Arabesque and other songs by Burgmuller, I instantly feel a little space heater and remember reading Little Women, listening to my sister practice. Our practice time was five in the morning, and our mother sent us together to give each other moral support.
I remember receiving two dolls, one larger,

that had just been refinished to make a bedroom for three boys. The piano also fit downstairs. When I hear La Candeur, Consolation, Arabesque and other songs by Burgmuller, I instantly feel a little space heater and remember reading Little Women, listening to my sister practice. Our practice time was five in the morning, and our mother sent us together to give each other moral support.
I remember receiving two dolls, one larger,
one smaller


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In December, we borrowed the nearby Portsmouth chapel-- the water heater did not work but we learned that the Holy Ghost could help us feel warm! |

This is Joann (far left) and her brother with us, selling fire alarms
to earn money to help build the chapel that finally was constructed
in our little city, 7 years later.



and wishing that I could be on the list of recipients. I remember traveling over winding tree-lined roads to a little house in the hills such as this

I remember traveling over the river and through the woods to church on a snowy evening. One night (our Sacrament Meetings were then held in the evening) our family and one youth were the only people there.
I remember driving home from church with snow surrounding us
and seeing a family that had just had a car accident and needed a ride home. The little girl sat in the back seat with us as we delivered her to their destination. Much much later, it seems like years if not months, from the parking lot of my best friend, the same little girl, approached and described how she remembered that we had helped her. It surprised me. I could hardly remember her, or the incident. But when I sing or hear a hymn about the poor wayfaring man or read Matthew 25 I realize that sometimes if we can give something really small, and it is only natural that we do, it might be really big to someone else, and they might remember it far longer than we do!
Another memory I have today, is of my Mom and Dad in New Zealand, calling with Skype on Christmas, dressing up and sharing the Nativity with a baby
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This is 40 years later, the same little house where we met |
and seeing a family that had just had a car accident and needed a ride home. The little girl sat in the back seat with us as we delivered her to their destination. Much much later, it seems like years if not months, from the parking lot of my best friend, the same little girl, approached and described how she remembered that we had helped her. It surprised me. I could hardly remember her, or the incident. But when I sing or hear a hymn about the poor wayfaring man or read Matthew 25 I realize that sometimes if we can give something really small, and it is only natural that we do, it might be really big to someone else, and they might remember it far longer than we do!
Another memory I have today, is of my Mom and Dad in New Zealand, calling with Skype on Christmas, dressing up and sharing the Nativity with a baby
from our wood floored front room.
Hearing my Dad read the words of Luke, Matthew, and 3rd Nephi chapter one, in his baritone voice reminiscent of another narrating voice of his father, my heart was honed to remember that this is what Christmas is all about. The story. Why we chose to come to earth. Why the angels sang, and sing,
and will continue to sing. From the "foundation of the world."
Only this season, we are the one who is far away, watching scarfed Mary and headbanded Joseph prance and dance and Hark the Herald.
And my companion likes being the wise man, traveling from afar!
"This is as good as it gets," I say, as the toddler pounds the bass notes, and an auntie holds her stomach, as she is recovering gradually from the flu. It is what makes enduring the pains and challenges of our physical bodies, mortal challenges, and pains from ours and others' misguided choices. Even our challenges with banking and preparing and penning of pennies are validated as I remember a mother and step father traveling out of their native land to do their part until "the days were accomplished that she should be delivered." While we are awaiting the days to be accomplished, it can be our turn to look to the side of the road to help bring a family home.
A final memory, that came yesterday while sewing was a year that I decided to make a Western styled flannel shirt for my Dad for Christmas. I worked and worked at it. I remember being up late into the night, putting on brads or snaps. And I don't remember Dad wearing the shirt. This Christmas, I resolved to find out first the WOW gift...before working for hours and hours, and then to learn what the pattern required. Then when it is the end of the day, not only will we have learned how to do snaps, but our present will be the best--to live for ever, with those we love. The meaning of TIME less. Timely memories, timeless theme, overtone notes of a true chord.
Another thing I got from sewing. While bordering napkins to decorate a missionary dinner, I talked to grandson William, five, who was being a toad and hiding under every green thing in the house. I told him about the hole in our street in front, how it had gotten bigger and bigger every time it rained, the soil would wash further down until it was getting dangerous.
P.S. We asked our friends here and ask you--
What are traditions of Christmas that you like to keep in your family?
Ours:
Kitchen and treats, stockings
wrapping packages,
reading the story of Jesus
counting blessings
enjoying Beethoven and breakfast
Little Women and plays
blankets and wrapping up,
snowball (or pillow) fights!
family games--rook or variations of the same!
pajamas
--matching or not
finding cousins
visiting family
loving roots
discovering beauty
trying out mistletoe
sending and gathering notes of family, friends
"And it came to pass, as the angels were gone away from the into heaven, the shepherds said one to another, Let us now go even unto Bethlehem...And when they had seen it, they made known abroad..."
So like Mary, what will we keep (and ponder in our heart) share (or hold close) your traditions--with us, or with your loved ones near and far?
Happy overtones of the season-- to all, and to all a good morning!
Mom/Grandma/Sister Laurene Starkey