I knew it would be a topsy turvy Christmas Eve: just one church service instead of several, outdoor church with no decorations and no congregational singing. I thought I would make a pot of clam chowder to have after church. I thought I might have a restful day ahead of church, a day of reading and contemplation.
But first, I knew I needed to get to the grocery store, so I decided to go early. As is often the case, I bought more than I anticipated, which meant that the putting away of the groceries took longer than I thought.
I came home to discover that my spouse had finished hanging the pendant lights over the kitchen sink. Is it just us or are home repairs/improvements going at a much slower pace as we age? For example, we knew that we would have pendant lights over the kitchen sink; it was always part of the kitchen remodel. But it took us a long time to decide on the exact lights, to order them, and then to get them hung. Of course, we have more to choose from in terms of the pendants, the design of the light itself.
And can we talk about how impossible the directions were? My spouse needed extra time to figure out exactly how to hang them, and it was hard to tell which wire was which.
And then we washed the windows of the living area.
That sounds like such a simple thing, but our windows aren't, which is why we don't wash them often, which is why they get so dirty, which is why we get overwhelmed and don't do them at all. Yesterday, we finally cut out the wiring from an old alarm system so that we could remove the screens and get to all of the windows. We spent much of the middle part of Christmas Eve day removing screens, washing screens, and scrubbing, scrubbing, scrubbing windows and frames and window sills.
Then we tried to recover. Washing the windows means a lot of stretching and bending--the outside glass of all of our windows are not easy to access--another reason why we don't do this often. I took a handful of ibuprofen, took a shower, and off we went to church.
We arrived to church to find this, which made me gasp with happiness:
My pastor made the call in the early afternoon to move the 5:30 worship inside, which gave him limited time to decorate the stripped down sanctuary that hasn't been used for worship since spring. He said he got the last 3 poinsettias from the grocery store and 2 small pine trees from the Home Depot at 25% off.
He dug the nativity scene out of storage, along with some red balls and pine cones, and voila, a beautiful altar.
I found the service moving, but I am always moved by Christmas Eve, with its nostalgic elements and that message of the good news that God has come to be with us.
We came home to eat the cooked shrimp that I got when I went shopping. Earlier in the day, I decided not to make the chowder, since it wasn't going to be cold outside. We ate the last of the delicious popcorn that arrived earlier this week. I thought about tuning into other services, but in the end, we watched the recording of our own church's service again--my spouse analyzes the music because he's part of the choir, and I control the rudimentary camera, so I'm interested to see how that looks to the people at home.
It was a different Christmas Eve, but I'm not sure I have a regular set of Christmas Eve traditions, the way I have Thanksgiving traditions. Or maybe it would be more accurate to say that every Christmas Eve feels strange, now that I am grown.
But strange doesn't mean bad.
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