Christmas Traditions
Oldest Daughter was three, and Crown Prince was two months old
when Husband instructed me, “Atha, I want
there to be several gifts under the Christmas tree for each child every year.”
I correctly interpreted this to mean he wanted me to buy and
wrap those several presents.
“How many is several?”
I asked.
“Oh, 20-25 each ought to
do it.”
“How many?” I
gasped.
“Mom used to make
certain we four kids had that many presents each, and I want to continue the
tradition with my kids.”
I bit my lip to keep from telling him to start shopping.
Instead I asked, “What kind of gifts? Did
she really spend that much money?”
Knowing that Father-in-law could be tight with money, I didn’t
expect she spent hundreds of dollars on presents in the 1950’s.
“Oh, she might wrap one
colorful pencil. Sometime she wrapped socks for us boys or nail polish for the
girls, but she made sure we had several packages to unwrap. You know – hats,
gloves, shirts, candy, and bubble bath, things like that.”
“Did you go around the
room and open them one at a time, like Grandma Lutz taught us to do?”
“Yes. The fun for Mother
was wrapping packages in front of us and going shopping with money she really
didn’t have. She might wrap a package and hand it to me. Then she would say:
‘Go put a name tag on this.’ I would ask her
which name. ‘Well, yours,’ she would
say, ‘Didn’t you see me wrap it?’ “
For some strange reason, at the time, I thought this was
funny. Now, I see the ADHD way of thinking, and it seems a bit farcical.
Whether it was or not, I did as Husband requested, and every
year I began going to garage sales in September to find bargains on toys and
play items. I kept a hidden list that helped me keep track of the number of
gifts for each child. It had to be an identical amount.
You notice we kept Husband’s family tradition, and you also
notice I am the one who did all the work.
Husband knew how to cut himself a great deal of slack during
those holidays. He might assemble a toy I bought, or carry a box of goodies I
baked. He knew how to keep one tradition alive, the one tradition that had his
name on it in a manner of speaking. Where I was influenced by the traditions
thrown at me from commercials and marketers, the one tradition he considered important
came from his Mother’s ability to think outside the box (no pun intended).
Persons with ADHD and their family members can take a lesson
from this: not all holiday traditions have your name on them. Husband wisely
chose one that held a treasure of memories for him, and that is where he put
his focus. Even today, he never allows the season to become overstimulating or
overwhelming for himself. I recommend you keep your traditions simple. Don’t
develop to-do lists filled with items you likely will not even look at.
For additional resources and help with ADHD, contact McNay
& Voth Coaching Services at www.coachADHD.com
or 316-771-7557.
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