Christmas card with hot cup of cappuccino,  cinnamon sticks and christmas tree branch isolated,

I am not a sentimental person.  I don’t keep my kid’s report cards or their math test, and I could probably fit all of their art projects into one drawer. The tooth fairy has never seen the need to save their baby teeth and the Kindergarten soccer trophies have long since found their way to the basement. But what I do have is 36 Christmas ornaments, all handpicked and all scripted with my children’s names

It was a tradition started some 40 odd years ago by my Aunt Marie when my oldest brother was born. Each year, we got to open one present on Christmas Eve, and it was always hers. Inside the tiny box was an ornament. She’d spend hours on the phone with my mother asking questions about what fascinated us that year, what new dreams we were chasing, then she’d find just the right ornament to encompass a year’s worth of our lives.

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I have a porcelain ballerina from 1979, a pixie dated 1981, a tiny merry-go-round that plays IT’S A SMALL WORLD dated 1983, and the most atrocious looking car ornament dated 1990.  Every year I hang them, each one bringing back a memory not so long forgotten.

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My Aunt Marie started the same tradition with my kids the day they were born, and I have done the same for the nieces and nephews on my husband side. These ornaments will travel with them as they leave to start their own families, and I hope, as it has done for me, that these tiny, hand-crafted remembrances will be the most cherished of all the holiday decorations they will ever own.

TrishaTrisha Leaver

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Trisha Leaver resides on Cape Cod with her husband, three children, and one rather excitable black lab.  She spent most of her childhood living inside her own mind, creating characters and stories that only a child’s imagination could dream up. She now spends her days breathing life into those characters, writing realistic fiction for young adults. Make sure to look for her upcoming novels, SECRETS SISTERS KEEP, coming winter of 2015 from FSG/ Macmillan and CREED (co-authored YA Psychological Horror) Fall 2014 from Flux.

Categories: Misc

3 Comments

Suzi · December 9, 2013 at 7:24 am

I am a sentimental person, therefore I keep too much of my kids stuff. 🙂

I do the ornament thing too. Try to find something they’re interested in. It’s fun and challenging sometimes and once led to me paying way to much for an ornament cause I couldn’t find what I wanted anywhere. I needed a bmx bike one and could only find one online. After shipping and all, it was $20–which isn’t huge, but to me, for an ornament, is a bit spendy.

Fiona McLaren · December 10, 2013 at 2:52 pm

I think this is a wonderful tradition. We pick a bauble each year for our tree that means something special to us. But I adore the idea of picking out ones for younger members of the family. I’m going to store this idea for next year! How lovely!

Brenda Drake · December 20, 2013 at 10:44 am

Thank you for sharing your Holiday post with us. That is a unique way to capture the lives of your children and have the memories throughout the years. Such a sweet idea!

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