
Tag Twelve Days of Christmas
On the Second Day of Christmas
Happy Day after Christmas, or if you prefer, St. Stephen’s Day or Boxing Day. We don’t think much about the day after Christmas. Usually it’s back to work, start thinking what resolution we’ll be breaking sometime in January, or where did we put those receipts.
There are some who will continue to give presents throughout the twelve days of Christmas or in some fashion commemorate the march of the Wise Men. For many though, the days immediately after Christmas are seen as the end of the season and the more common discussions heard around water coolers, proverbial and literal, are of when will you be taking down the decorations, have you gotten all those toys put together, and did you get what you wanted for Christmas.
Neither of us is so dramatic as to have a tree at the curbside on December 26 although both of us know people who will cart their formerly grandly decorated evergreen to the curb as soon as after Christmas Day’s festivities have ended. No doubt these are the people who had purchased their live trees while so many others were celebrating Black Friday. He of We typically keeps his outdoor decorations up and lit until the Feast of the Epiphany. (If you promise not to tell too many others we are willing to reveal that it started out because it’s usually just too darned cold, snowy, and ice-covered to take them down too soon after Christmas so he figured he might as well look like he knows the story.)
Both of We remember those days when Christmas came partially assembled. No matter how hard we and parents all over the world tried, not everything could get assembled before the holiday. The hope was that the children would be so taken by whatever was assembled they wouldn’t notice the brakeless bike behind the tree. Uh huh. Distractions might buy you that extra day but eventually the tools and assembly guides would be share space at the lunch table with the leftover hams, turkeys, and roasts and we and parents all over the world re-opened Santa’s Workshop, South Division come December 26.
A terrific sentiment for a Christmas card would be “Some friends know the gift of friendship is more important that crass commercialism or material presents. Aren’t you glad I’m one of them?” But honestly a good, heartfelt, well thought gift means a lot also. And we got lots of them. Enough to gloat even! But we won’t. We also got a reminder that for all that we mean to each other, friend is always near the top of that list. About that we will gloat!
So there are ten days to go to complete the proverbial Twelve Days of Christmas. According to PNC Financial Services, this year’s total will run one willing to fulfill all of the wishes of his (or her) true love $24,263.18. Perhaps we’ll just stick with our true love’s friendship. It really is priceless.
Now, that’s what we think. Really. How ‘bout you?