Christmas is for Kids
Bill Abernathy
smiled as he watched his great-grandson, Ethan, swing his new baseball bat in
the backyard. It was a beautiful Florida
Christmas Day, with a blue sky dotted by fluffy white clouds, “fair weather
clouds,” as the natives said. The
temperature hovered around 70, a perfect day to be outside. Let others dream of a white Christmas. He’d take Florida any time.
“Do you like the bat, Ethan? Is that the one you wanted?”
“Sure, thanks, Great-Granddad.”
Bill grinned at
the boy. “So what fun thing did you get
for me?”
“Ah, Mom got you a
jacket. Grown-ups don’t get fun things,
you know that. Christmas is for kids.”
“Hey, Ethan,”
yelled Jake. “Are you coming in or
what? Let’s get started!”
Ethan glanced at
Bill. “Scuse me, but Jake said I could play Battle Cry IV with him.” He sprinted into the house and left the bat
on the patio.
Kids! Nowadays, the promise of a video
game excited them more than a baseball bat.
Bill wasn’t too
old to remember his own childhood. There
had been four boys in his family. They
were all gone now, except him. Life
dealt them some rough blows, but when they were innocent children, they had a wonderful
time. He could still see them.
During the Great
Depression, their father was a supervising guard at the old county prison farm
off Commonwealth Avenue . Summer days they swiped tomatoes off the
numerous plants in the fields or cut off chunks of sugar cane to chew.
Occasionally they
would pick a watermelon off the vine, drop it and say, “It’s broken! We’d
better eat it quick, before it goes bad.”
Usually Joe was the culprit, the biggest prankster in the family.
The best times of
all were the Christmas Days when their grandpa took them out to his fish camp
at Plummer’s Cove. They fished and cooked
their catch for dinner. They were so happy,
not caring what their future would bring.
Their last Christmas Day together was in 1941. The next year all four
brothers went to war. Mark enlisted in
the Navy. Rick enlisted in the Army Airborne units. Bill enlisted in the Army Air Corps. Joe was
drafted and went to the Infantry.
Bill would give
anything to have his brothers still with him.
Everybody said he was lucky to live to be ninety. But he was a lost, lonely man. His wife was gone, Rick’s wife, too. There was nobody left of his generation, nobody
else to understand or remember.
Recollections sharp and clear to him were musty old relics to his
children only to be tolerated.
He walked into the
house. The boys sat spellbound in front
of the small TV screen as they shot at vicious-looking, animated enemy
warriors.
“Hey, Jake, I got
one!”
“Good going,
little bro!”
The voices of the
women drifted in from the kitchen. The rest
of the men were in the other room watching the NBA on the big screen television. He sat in the recliner and watched the boys.
Ethan reminded Bill
so much of his own brother Joe at that age.
They had the same shaggy black hair, the same enthusiasm for pranks and
fun.
Joe had loved
Christmas, too. Bill’s eyes filled with
unexpected tears. Joe died on Christmas day in 1944, lying on the snow in the
Ardennes at the Battle
of the Bulge. Joe always loved long days at the beach when he could play in the
sun. Yet he died in that lonely place on
a frigid day with no one there to comfort him.
Mark died earlier,
in June of 1942, when the Yorktown sank at the
Battle of Midway. His body was never
found. At least Joe got a decent burial,
even if it was overseas.
Rick came back
from the war a different man. He had parachuted
into France
behind the lines on D-Day. He never talked
about it. His wife whispered of his
frequent nightmares.
Bill flew fifty missions
in the south Pacific. He still felt the
anguish of watching his buddies shot down in planes that exploded or
disappeared into the ocean. His best
friend was a baseball player, a shortstop with the promise of a minor league
contract. Dear God, they shot him as he parachuted from his burning plane!
Bill jumped at the sound of amplified gunfire from the video
game. He didn’t like loud
noises. They filled his nightmares. Shaking his head to clear the images, he observed
the boys and the game. It was a bloody battle
in which the object was to kill the enemy before they could kill you.
“Okay, everybody,”
his granddaughter, Sheila, called from the kitchen. “Dinner’s ready. Boys go wash up and come to the table.”
“Aw, Mom,” Jake
said. “We were just getting to the next
level.”
“Yeah, Mom,” Ethan
echoed his older brother. He dragged his
feet as he walked toward the bathroom.
Bill caught him
for a hug as he passed. “Be happy today,
Ethan. You’ve got your family with
you. That’s the best day of all.”
The little boy
returned his hug. “Christmas Day is the very
best day!”
Bill ruffled Ethan’s
shaggy hair. “You better hurry. Jake might
get both drumsticks!”
As the family
clasped hands around the table for the blessing, Bill prayed his own silent
benediction.
On this most holy day as we celebrate the birth
of the Prince of Peace, our young still die in combat across the world. I pray for both Ethan and Jake. May a video
game be the only war they ever have to fight.
Christmas is best appreciated by the pure of
heart, without painful memories of losing the ones they love. On this day, healing memories are made to
sustain us after innocence is lost.
Enjoy your Christmas Day, boys, make your
finest memories. We will watch you and
recall our own carefree days so long ago.
You’re right, Ethan.
Christmas is for kids.

Christmas is for everyone, but not everyone has pleasant memories. Perhaps that's why we say the day is for kids - most of them haven't lived long enough to have things to haunt them on just a joyous day. My brother spent Christmas Eve 1968 sleeping on a dike in a rice paddy in Vietnam with his head on his helmet and his rifle on his chest to keep them dry. Christmas Eve still haunts him to this day.
ReplyDeleteDad has some memories that are with him still from his wartime experiences. For me, Christmas is my mother's holiday. It isn't the same without her. The holiday season always makes me sad for that reason.
ReplyDelete