Video Message from Santa!

Showing posts with label christmas day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christmas day. Show all posts

Monday, December 22, 2008

Christmas Day Games


Just because the gifts are opened and the paper is strewn about the living room doesn't mean the fun of Christmas has to be over. You can add some fun party games to Christmas Day to extend the fun of Christmas.

If you have a large gathering on Christmas Day, have fun with the hat game. When they arrive, give everyone a Santa hat. These are inexpensive and can be purchased at the dollar store, or in bulk, if you plan ahead. As everyone goes about their business of getting food and chatting with others, the room will look very festive with everyone wearing their Santa hats.

However, the object of this game is to not have your hat on. As people forget about the hats, the object is to get rid of your hat and not be the last one wearing a Santa hat. Inevitably there will be one person so wrapped up in a conversation or the buffet table, they forget to take off their hat and will be left the game's loser. This is a game that can be played again and again as you head forward with the day's festivities.

One fun memory game that kids particularly like is to make everyone pay careful attention to all the gifts that are opened on Christmas day. After the gifts are removed from the room (or you remove yourselves from the gift room) have everyone try and remember every single gift everyone received. Include stockings and any food gifts. Tell people they only have to remember the items that were opened that day, not any gifts they received and opened prior to Christmas day. This can be a fun game that's particularly popular with kids because they love to relive the gift magic. If they were so immersed with their own gifts they didn't notice anyone else's, this is a good chance for them to educate themselves about what everyone got that day.

If you need a game to keep everyone busy before dinner, try the "guess me" game. Buy some large heavy socks that are thick and come at least to the calf. Put several items in the socks. Make sure the items in each sock are identical. The items should all be related to Christmas in some way. You might include a small ornament, scotch tape, a pinecone, a Hershey's kiss, and so on. Have each person feel the socks (having two socks just makes the game go faster, but you can play with just one sock), and write down their guesses about what's in the socks. Be sure to tell everyone how many items are in each sock. The winner gets, you guessed it, one of the socks!

If you have a bunch of performers in your group on Christmas day, how about playing a little game of "Christmas Idol?" Set up a small table for the "judges" and have teams of 2 people (or individuals, if they want) sing a Christmas carol. Tell them to have a lot of fun with the song, and even add a Santa hat or other dress-up items if they wish. The winners can take home a CD of Christmas music. This game is particularly fun if only the children want to perform and be judged by the adults, or if, conversely, the adults perform and are judged by the children.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

What Makes Christmas Magical?

Christmas is a special time of the year for the joy and intangible magic that fills the season. It comes through in the delightful decorations, glorious get-togethers with family and friends, and the sheer feeling of joy one gets from giving and receiving gifts.

Although the commercialization of Christmas is often decried, shopping is an important and central activity to some of the intangible magic of Christmas. It is at the malls or downtown stores that some of the favorite sights, sounds, and scents of Christmas can be experienced.

The decorations at malls and retail establishments are usually very fanciful and eye-catching, especially to children, with the many colorful and twinkling lights. It's also a wonder, for both adults and children alike, to look at the numerous tinsels, baubles, and figurines such as fairies and angels that adorn the main Christmas Tree in the center of shopping malls and department stores. These trees are usually extremely well embellished with decorations that are arranged in a very professional way that most shoppers can't replicate in their own homes. It is, therefore, a delight for them to stare at such trees in wonder and amazement.

Along with the wide variety of decorations in retail establishments, there is also the sound of music playing, bells ringing, and the laughter and wishes of Merry Christmas from shoppers, which also create a special atmosphere and add to the magic of Christmas. Even the sound of cash registers in the background adds something to the special feeling shoppers have at Christmas time.

Of course, there's always a Santa Claus that children can meet, tell what they want for Christmas, and also have their picture taken with. Sometimes Santa Claus may distribute Christmas gifts to children, telling them that because they have been very, very good they are getting an extra special early Christmas present.

The ability to delight children by telling them stories about Santa Claus, as well as making them see and talk to the jolly old fellow, puts a lot of magic and excitement into Christmas. Once the tradition is started, or from the first time that children have been told the story, it becomes something that they look forward to every year during the Christmas season.

There is also the sound of music from choirs or school groups, who often give open performances singing Christmas carols and songs in malls and downtown areas. Families, and others who are out and about, will pause to listen, or to sing along with these groups.

Shopping is undoubtedly an enjoyable activity for most people during Christmas, but merrier and more memorable times are enjoyed when time is spent with family, friends, and colleagues during the season. Before Christmas Day arrives, there are usually parties at home and at work, evenings out with friends, and other occasions to get together and share the spirit of Christmas. The presence of special Christmas music and people dressed in holiday attire provide a different atmosphere and contribute to the magical feeling of the season.

Another thing that is different at Christmas is the scent from a fresh Christmas Tree, of gingerbread and other cookies baking, and other food preparations that are specially done at Christmas time. Most people who select a real Christmas Tree, instead of an artificial one, for their homes do so because of the wonderful scent it provides. For many people, that scent from a Christmas Tree is what puts Christmas into everything else.

Another popular scent at Christmas comes from the popular Christmas song “Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire.” The actual roasting of chestnuts during the Christmas season may be a rare occurrence these days, but it is occasionally done in some downtown areas, and in bakeries and confectioneries that make fresh products everyday.

All of these events, activities, happenings, sights, sounds, and scents of Christmas create special and unforgettable memories. Who can deny that a pleasant memory is always something that is truly magical?

Monday, September 08, 2008

Christmas Day

The Christmas season, and all its activities, are geared to the big day, December 25, which is Christmas Day. The word “Christmas” is derived from the Middle English “Christemasse” and the Old English “Cristes maesse,” both of which mean “Christ's Mass.” The day is celebrated by Christians as the day that Jesus Christ was born, although the true date of Jesus' birth isn't really known.

Given the religious significance of Christmas Day, it therefore follows that attending church is a big tradition on that day. It is seen as mandatory for devout Christians and for others who are concerned about retaining the sacred meaning of the day. Many people fear that the sacred aspects of Christmas are being lost and overshadowed amid the bustle of commercial activity now associated with the entire season.

Church services often take place early on Christmas morning. Attending these services is the first official activity that many people do on Christmas Day. Unlike the Midnight Mass and other earlier church services on Christmas Eve, Christmas Day services do not usually include the dramatization of the birth of Jesus. They may be more subdued with a sermon that recounts the birth of Jesus and his purpose to save mankind. The congregation is then exalted to be as giving as Jesus and to help out those who are in need.

Consequently, many people will take some time on Christmas Day to volunteer in a charitable activity, such as serving dinner to the poor and hungry at a church, charitable organization, or other social services center. Others will work with charitable organizations to distribute toys to needy children at shelters, hospitals, and other places. As part of the religious aspect of Christmas Day, groups that sing Christmas carols will also be out very early on Christmas morning.

Although Christmas Dinner is the most significant meal of the day, a large breakfast will also be served in most households that will be shared by all family members. The occasion of all family members having a meal together is a disappearing tradition in many American households and so Christmas is seen as a perfect time to return to the tradition. Christmas Day, after all, is all about family, sharing and togetherness.

Throughout the day, greetings of “Merry Christmas” will be exchanged by telephone calls with family, friends, acquaintances, and loved ones who are located elsewhere in the country and overseas. It is a common occurrence for so many people to be trying to make international calls to loved ones and friends on Christmas Day that telephone communication systems to some countries often are overwhelmed. The availability of technology and the Internet eases that problem somewhat nowadays, however, as e-mails and instant messaging can also be used as other communication channels to exchange greetings on Christmas Day.

Christmas Dinner is undoubtedly the central activity of the day. Family and friends gathered for dinner take pleasure in enjoying and sharing a delicious meal, and also are mindful and thankful for the opportunity to be able to share the meal, to have each other, and for the material things that make their lives comfortable and give them happiness.

Some of those material things are then shared in absolute delight as everyone gathers around the Christmas Tree after dinner to exchange and open Christmas presents. It's an activity that is relished and which is filled with much laughter, happy chatter, and merriment, especially by children who are usually very delighted to get a toy that they had wished for.

After dinner and the exchange of presents, adults may have light conversations, play games, or even watch a movie. Children are often taken up with experimenting or playing with their new toys. It has also become a tradition on Christmas Day for members of some families, such as teenagers and young adults, to end Christmas Day by attending the movie theater on Christmas Evening or Christmas Night to see a recently released film.

Friday, August 15, 2008

Interesting Facts and Notes about Christmas

It is an accepted fact that the Christmas Tree tradition is one that was brought to the shores of America by German immigrants, who continued a practice that was popular in their former homeland. Today, a Christmas Tree, even a miniature one, is present in just about every home at Christmas. It is therefore interesting to note some little-known facts about the Christmas Tree and other traditions related to Christmas.

The first interesting fact is the source of real Christmas Trees for some Americans. These can be bought at a Christmas Tree Farm, or at many local stores and other places of business, in just about every town and city across the country around Christmas time. But, according to the National Christmas Tree Association, Americans buy about 330,000 Christmas trees (that are real) through e-commerce, or from a catalogue, and have them shipped by mail-order.

The scent of real Christmas Trees is the reason they are so popular; but as they stand silently in their decorative wonder, they are also providing another benefit. The Christmas Tree Association says the amount of oxygen produced on a daily basis by one acre of Christmas Trees is enough to provide oxygen for 18 people. During the first week, a Christmas Tree at home will use up to one quart of water each day to help retain its longevity for the many days of Christmas.

Since Christmas celebrations have gained popularity in America, the Christmas Tree has always been a big tradition. During the 1950s, however, artificial Christmas trees were not always green. It was very popular during those times to have artificial trees with other colors such as silver, pink, and aqua. The appeal in having these colored Christmas trees may have been due to the fact that they looked shiny and bright and appeared like tinsel instead of green foliage.

An important ceremony related to the Christmas Tree, which gains national attention during the Christmas season, is the lighting of the National Christmas Tree at the White House. This tradition can be credited to President Calvin Coolidge, who lit the first decorated Christmas Tree outside the White House in 1923.

The lighting of the National Christmas Tree has also been used to convey some symbolic meaning not related to Christmas. In 1963, it was not lighted until December 22 because of a national mourning period of 30 days after the assassination of President Kennedy. While Teddy Roosevelt was President, he gave an order that banned the Christmas Tree from the White House, not for the assassination of President McKinley in 1901, which caused him to become President, but for reasons related to the environment. Also of note, is that when the National Christmas Tree was lighted on December 13 in 1984, temperatures were in the 70s during an unusually warm December.

Christmas has been celebrated in the United States since the 1600s, although it wasn't always very popular. It took more than two centuries, into the mid to late 1860s for Christmas to become a popular holiday season all across America. So, maybe the rest of the country owes the holiday of Christmas Day to the state of Alabama, which in 1836, became the first state to declare December 25 a legal holiday.

It is interesting to note that, on Christmas Day of 1789, Congress was in session. To show how far ahead of the game Alabama was, it wasn't until June 26, 1870, that the federal government declared Christmas a federal holiday.

Although Christmas is based on the Christian religion, not all Christian groups celebrate the season. Among the Christian groups who do not celebrate Christmas, and related traditions such as sending greeting cards, are Jehovah Witnesses. Jehovah Witnesses, and other non-participating Christian groups, say Christmas isn't specifically mentioned in the Bible as a time or reason to celebrate, and since they strictly adhere to the word of the Bible, they refuse to celebrate Christmas.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Fancy Tales Related to Christmas

A lot of what is widely regarded as true about Christmas, or held as a tradition, cannot be, or has not been, verified, or has changed throughout the years. Even Christmas Day itself, December 25, has been questioned as to whether that is the exact day on which Jesus was born.

Skeptics have asked, “Why would shepherds be out in the cold watching their flocks by night during the winter?” Those skeptics have put forward the thought that Jesus may really have been born in the spring instead. It is, therefore, little wonder that there are many fancy stories and tales that are told about Christmas and the Christmas season.

The most common fancy tale that everyone tells, particularly to children, is about Santa Claus, also called St. Nicholas. But even if it were accepted that Santa Claus existed, where does he live, and how is he able to get to all of the houses of good boys and girls on Christmas Eve?

In the United States, Santa Claus is said to have two homes. There is a home in Torrington, Connecticut, which is used as a distribution point for Santa and his many helpers, who are elves, to hand out gifts. And then, a second home is said to be located in Wilmington, New York, and that is where Santa Claus and his delivery reindeer crew are located.

But Santa can be visited in Cyberspace at anytime, and what about the widely held belief that Santa Claus really lives in a village at the North Pole? The people of Finland also claim that their country is the official residence of Santa Claus. That's because in Finland, you can actually visit a village anytime during the year. There you can see Santa's workshop, and observe Santa and his elves hard at work, as they prepare for their very important Christmas gift delivery job on Christmas Eve. The only day when Santa's workshop is closed to visitors is, of course, on Christmas Eve.

Maybe a very smart visitor could visit Santa's workshop on the day before Christmas Eve to see if there are any clues as to how Santa and his reindeer plan to make their trip the next day. As the tale goes in Finland, Santa Claus and his reindeer do not reach their destinations around the globe by flying.

Finland welcomes visitors to Santa's workshop, but there is nothing said about whether visitors actually have any chance of having a word with the man himself. While the chances of doing so are believed to be non-existent, among the questions that inquiring minds could ask Santa is whether Rudolph is the son of Donner (and to confirm the spelling - Donner or Donder), or whether Santa spotted him in a different reindeer village, one foggy Christmas Eve, after he had already started on his Christmas toy delivery mission.

If mere mortals got a chance to question Santa, then he also would likely have some questions for us humans. He may want to know whose idea it was to have Christmas trees and for the gifts to be placed under them.

The tradition of Christmas trees, as it exists today, comes from Germany, by way of immigrants; but it isn't clear how the tradition really gained a foothold in Germany. One story is that Christians in Germany, during the 16th century, started to bring trees that were decorated into their homes. Some of those Christians would build pyramids for Christmas. The pyramids were made of wood and would be decorated with evergreens and candles, if wood was in short supply.

It is however Martin Luther, a Protestant reformer, who is said to have been the first to add lighted candles as decoration to a tree, based on his inspiration from the brilliant light of twinkling stars that shone through the evergreen trees as he walked home one winter evening.

As the legend goes, Martin Luther placed a tree in a primary room of his house and placed wires with small, lighted candles around the branches of the tree. That is how, as the tale goes, the Christmas tree, as known today, was started.