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Just Leave the Dishes | “Granny's Notes” | My First 84 Years |
We were living in a tiny two-room apartmen... By Sue Gerard First published in Columbia Daily Tribune on 1995-12-26 We were living in a tiny two-room apartment at the time of our second World
War II Christmas. I was on a year’s leave from Christian College, and Chub was
a Coast Guardsman assigned to teach at the General Motors Institute of
Technology. He taught men from the Army, Navy, Coast Guard and Marines -- and
some officers and civilians, too -- how to operate and repair the gray marine
diesel engine used to power landing craft and other vessels.
He rented the apartment from an elderly couple, the Thorntons, who lived in
the rest of the house. It was a cozy upstairs apartment with a west porch,
nice on summer evenings. I had taught swimming for the Parks and Recreation
Department at outdoor pools in summer and was then employed to teach at the
YWCA in winter.
At Christmastime we put up the same little artificial tree that I had carried
on the bus, the year before, to New York City. Decorating it required about 15
minutes or less. We had been married six years and were quite aware of each
other’s cherished holiday traditions. We Meyerses celebrated on Dec. 24
because of Dad’s schedule for milking the cows. We always had a freshly cut
cedar from our woods because I had sold trees like that from the time I was
about 9 years old until after Chub and I were in college. And we chose native
cedars (and still do) because of they give the home their wonderful fragrance.
The Gerard family saved everything until Christmas morning. Gifts that came in
the mail went unopened and Santa’s presents were in hiding. Chub and his five
sisters were permitted to get up early and peek into the room where Santa had
done his thing but they were not allowed more than that brief encounter before
they had a good nourishing breakfast. Then the fun began.
We knew, in Flint, Mich., that his sister Louise would remember us. She was my
kind of giver -- gave her handmade crafts such as hand-embroidered pillow
cases, towels edged with elaborate tatting and other unique things like that.
After we were in bed one night Chub said, “Louise’s package came today.” I
asked about that because it wasn’t under the tree. “I hid it,” he said.
“We’re not opening it until Christmas.” After a few moments I begged,
“Couldn’t we just put it out to help decorate that sickly little tree?” He
was adamant about saving it till Christmas morning, several days away. “Where
did you hide it?” I asked. “Under this bed.” Then I reminded him of the
time that Mrs. Jap Willingham had mailed us a shoe box full of fresh broccoli
from her garden. It was wrapped in damp paper towels and wax paper and arrived
in perfect condition. The mail delivery was one thing that was on time during
the war.
Finally he agreed that we could take off the brown paper and put the gift out
to liven up the room with the colored wrapping. We got out of bed and opened
the gift. There was no holiday paper! There was a perfectly wonderful freshly
dressed hen!
I won that one. |
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