Nine Christmas Trees [Commonweal]
| By Kealey, Edward J | |
| Proquest LLC |
We always had really tall Christmas trees at home - so tall they usually reached right to the living-room ceiling of our family's house in the
Every Christmas tree needs a Christmas crèche to go with it, and my family's Christmas stable was built up gradually. The effort began the year I had four baby teeth extracted without anesthesia. That year the Sister of Mercy who taught second grade in St. Kevin's grammar school gave each pupil a small limestone statuette of
In later years, whenever our originals chipped, we repainted them ourselves. I have been given other sets over the years, but still, even now, every Christmas I bring out that first set. Each time I see the three-inch shepherd boy, I wonder, was such a lad really at the stable? If so, was he healed in
In 1952 my father suddenly died - on
We boys didn't fully realize it back then, but the postwar years had not been easy for my father. Increasingly,
Six decades later - as a priest who encounters death all the time - I still wonder why my father had to die so young, when we were only children. I have no satisfying answers. What I do know is that Mother and the four of us led very different lives thereafter. Not worse lives, necessarily, though at times they were quite difficult; just different from what we had expected. I did not go to
Each of us in the family became stronger and more selfreliant. We had to. And that brings me back to the Christmas trees. At my father's wake, several people had expressed sympathetic doubt to my mother about the requirement to keep Christmas, which was coming in less than two weeks. "I guess you and the boys will just sit quietly at home," was the message. Little did they know my mother! After the fourth or fifth person offered this well-intentioned advice, she exploded. "We will keep Christmas!" she all but shouted. "My four boys deserve it, and I need it, too!" Christmas wasn't only a happy day for children, she reflected in a quieter tone; it celebrated God becoming a human being. "I need to celebrate that reality," she said. "It gives me hope that my John shares God's joy forever."
It must have been
Two days later, after our relatives left, Mother said we boys should go buy a Christmas tree. She was not going with us, she said - maybe she thought we should already start acting on our own - but she would have a warm meal ready when we returned. So the four of us tramped up the long block and down
Unlike our German neighbors, it was our custom to open gifts on Christmas morning, not
On
My father's death changed my mother's life in more ways than I will ever know. She remained friendly and outgoing with neighbors as before, but regularly declined all social invitations, preferring to focus on our little family, on her relatives in
Looking back, I marvel at my mother and her courage in those hard years. Where did it come from? She had always been an independent person. As a younger woman she had been a suffragette and worked on political campaigns in
Some of her spirit may have come from battling her six brothers, or from having managed her family's business in its later days. It may have come from her father's quiet strength, or from the paradoxical example of her mother's endless hard work in raising ten children. My mother understood that honest work never hurt anyone, and can even be spiritually uplifting - but no one should be overloaded, she insisted. She simply would not have put up with all that her mother endured. She herself had been a flapper in the Roaring '20s, and rejoiced at having had a successful career before she married.
My mother did not seek a job after Dad died, though some of her friends urged her to. Donald, she insisted, still needed her at home. Instead, she turned her energies to husbanding our finances. My father's company had no pension plan for survivors. There was a
Christmas 1953, while not tragic like the previous year, was extremely hard for our family. My brother Bobby had left in June to become a Christian Brother. It was the same religious order that his grandfather, my father's father, had left
And soon Christmas would get even harder. In 1958, Jack was drafted and sent to
And the rosebush still flowered. The number of blossoms declined, but the bush was never bare. Even the fierce December storms could not destroy its blush of red. Mother kept writing. And Jack and his pals kept asking about the plant. As Christmas drew near the great question became, "Will a scarlet rose herald the Lord's birth?" It seemed so unlikely amid the mounting snow. Yet, on Christmas morn there it was - a single bright, spunky flower, defiantly red and full of promise. One could almost hear it proclaim, "Glory to God. Here I am, Lord. I come to do your will."
That flower was the very last one on the bush that year, and in the weeks after Christmas it began to collapse in upon itself, until it became a sad shadow of its former radiance. At one point I suggested plucking it off so that we would remember only the good times and its fair beauty. My mother insisted otherwise. "We should see things through," she said. She was right, of course. After all, we had been privileged witnesses to the bush's ascendant beauty, and now we would be equally faithful witnesses to its decline - another, but different, privilege. And who can say which moments are greater?
There is a lengthy coda to my family's Christmas tree saga. Around 1960, shortly after he began teaching, Bob - Br.
To our astonishment, over the winter, spring, and fall, a new arm rose upright from the chopped-off trunk and re-formed, on a slightly smaller scale, the outline of Bob's magnificent tree. To us, it was an incredible occurrence - to this day, in fact, I have never heard of anything quite like it. So impressive was the total effect that the next Christmas I suggested we cut the new top, as we had its predecessor. Again it was a spectacular tree, much more than just a branch. Outside, meanwhile, another branch gradually rose to recreate the original tree, and that became our next Christmas tree. Each succeeding year a new branch repeated the marvelous feat. In total, we enjoyed eight Christmas tree branches, each one of them a miracle to us.
I think about how our family coped in the early years after our father's death. Bobby went off to the Brothers and a new life. Jack and I were in prep school and working, but my youngest brother, Donald, was at home and growing up without a father. In many ways, Dad's death had proved hardest on Donald. Only decades later would it all come out. Donald was a father himself by then, and watching his own son made him realize that - in some way he himself did not understand - he had always partly blamed Mother for Daddy's death. It was not true, of course, and he knew it, but somewhere in his being he held her responsible. Looking at his own son had healed him ofthat lifelong hurt, giving him peace. He finally understood in his heart, as well as in his mind, that Mother could not have been responsible for Dad's dying - and at her kitchen table over the course of one long afternoon he poured out his heart to her. Mother later described that afternoon conversation as one of the deepest moments of her life.
I am ashamed to think that I had no inkling that Donald was upset in this way, that he ever blamed anyone for our father's death. As a priest I see how young children react to the loss of a parent - how often blame is misplaced, how much reassurance they need, even when they seem to be handling things well. In our family all of us tried to reassure one another, but Donald's special need escaped us entirely.
Years later, at a wonderful Lenten mission in our parish, I gained further insight. One segment was presented by Fr.
My brother's wound had festered even longer, but it too had finally become sacred; he was healed, and his healing had also healed Mother. Every death is a killer who keeps taking a toll, again and again, until grace, the spirit of God, enables us to raise it to a better status, without ever forgetting its ghastly pain. My ignorance of my brother's agony remains deeply unsettling to me. I feel I should have been able to perceive and address it. Yet I cannot control Donald's wound any more than I can control his life. We each stumble on, with God's help, trying to do our best. Surely that is enough; at any rate, it is what we have.
Time plays its music, memory does its dance; and now I am an older priest with scattered hair - older by half than my father was when he died. Some years back, while going through old folders, I came across a yellowed page from the
My mother died in
That winter of 1985, four months after my mother's death, I cut down the annual upright branch from the tree in the backyard and decorated it for Christmas as usual - partly from pure sentiment, partly because Jack and his family were coming up from
In some obscure way, those Christmas tree lights had helped me make the decision; and afterward, on Christmas night, they gave me renewed peace. A glistening fir tree symbolizes ever-renewing life and ever-expanding ideas. And twinkling lights towering above a little crèche produce wondrous effects. One's eye darts back and forth between the Holy Family scene and one's own family mementos, sparking cherished memories.
And so Christmas 1986 found me in the
Seminarians could go home for Christmas. I thought it would be wrong to leave the tree all alone, so I removed the decorations and brought everything back home, where I proceeded to set the tree up all over again. I did so using the same collection of ornaments I still possess today. They are large red, silver, and green ornaments that Mother bought when we first moved into our house. There are also glass ornaments that date to
That Christmas of 1986, a seminarian at home in the house of his late parents, I sat alone for several nights just watching tree lights - reliving old times, wondering about the future, often just sitting and pleasurably thinking of nothing at all. One night I went out into the yard and thanked the faithful tree for all the happiness it had generously given us, both while it was growing up and in its dismembered maturity: top and branches, eight times over. It might seem odd to be standing in the snow, talking out loud to a tree, thanking it for its life's beauty, but the gesture felt right. The pine never raised another limb skyward, and my Fresh Meadows Christmases were over. Remembering them brings immense peace.
Rev.
| Copyright: | (c) 2012 Commonweal Foundation |
| Wordcount: | 4489 |



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