We are working out our traditions, and somewhat constrained by a 2 year old.
Solstice: I fast on the Solstice, Jon tries to keep L from disrupting me too bad. It's my way of resetting the stress of the season, and in many ways the start of the simple joy for me. I try to find it before that, but I need the day to stop and meditate to really take hold.
Tree: The tree\decorations go up the weekend after Thanksgiving (in theory). This started because when we travelled for Christmas my parents came to visit us the first weekend of December and I wanted them to see the house decorated. We also used to have friends over to help decorate the tree but that has gotten awkward as families have grown, so that's faded out. Given L didn't nap today, the tree may go up next weekend. My parents no longer come the first weekend, and everyone comes to us for Christmas, so right after Thanksgiving is likely to slip. I do like it up most of December. Since we had real trees growing up (and would like to have one now) that limits how long the tree can be up. This year we'll do artificial again.
As soon as we don't have to blockade the tree we will be back to 2 trees. One in the public living room, and one in the more private den. The smaller one has my Father Christmas ornament collection on it. Also, I can't decide which room I like the tree in and I'm sad if it's not in both, so putting up two fixed a lot of issues in one swoop. Just..for now..we only have a fence to go around one, and it blocks off a corner, so the tree currently goes up in the corner of the den.
Tree comes down New Year's Day. It's nice to have a designated ending date, so it doesn't just stay up "one more day" and we're off work so we can do it.
Gifts:
Immediately after we decorate the tree Jon puts a couple Lego presents he made under the tree. A tree with no wrapped gifts under it makes me sad. So we put two fake ones under--and it works (I don't claim to understand my brain, I've just learned a few things). It also means they stay there until we take it down, so I don't get sad after. It was something easily fixed in a fun manner, and those gifts are stored in the decoration box so I guess they're a tradition now.
Santa writes in curly-que script. We don't yet leave out milk & cookies but I think it will come. Santa's gifts come Christmas Eve after everyone is asleep. (though since we celebrate more than one Christmas he somehow comes twice...) This still happens, even before L came...but it became the gifts no one really wanted credit for. :) He also brings the unwrapped gifts.
Gifts from us go under the tree as soon as we get them wrapped. My family used paper on only one gift (yes, we had a LOT of rolls), but that's only half-heartedly enforced. As long as there is no distinct consistency, it's all good. LOTS of color. LOTS of different paper. At least for anything related to my family--Jon is known to use only a few types on his folk's gifts. :)
We...are trying to get a handle on gifts. Both our families put out a lot of gifts under the tree, but we're a bit overloaded with stuff and L has more than he really needs as well. We're trying to convince grandparents to give fewer, higher quality (though they don't give junk) stuff. My problem is most of what I want are things to be done, not things to be wrapped, and it's impractical for most of the people to do what I want. So I'm just trying to convince them to just give me a couple. It's working, somewhat--though I think somewhat because of time! I do like having everyone have something they can DO after the gifts are open. A toy, and game, maybe a book. One year I realized I couldn't DO anything with my gifts, and that was a rather boring Christmas afternoon, so I try to avoid it.
Open Gifts:
We open gifts one at a time. Yeah, it takes a while, but really, we have all day. It's fun, it lets you see what people got, and celebrate with them. When Jon's folks are here it's a bit more their method--of lining it up in front of each person and they open while trying to also watch.
Stockings: We're still working on the stockings. I can see the benefit of the stocking being what you can open before your parents get up. But...I grew up with the week before Christmas the elves came and left one thing in the stocking each night (nothing on Christmas itself), and I remember running to the stocking and bouncing there until my dad took it down (I couldn't reach). It always had nuts one night, an orange/apple one night, usually some chocolate another, a small toy, and something else that varied. I'm hoping to start that with L this year. It's unusual and I like the tradition, and was very sad when I quit getting a stocking (mostly due to not being home a week before Christmas). :)
Family:
Our hope, and it worked one year really well and has had out-of-our-hands issues since, but we kinda make it work, is to have one set of parents a few days before Christmas, Christmas and one day next to it to ourselves for a very quiet time, then the other parents come. It was very nice, and I hope as life settles down (in this case it might), we can go back to that.
no subject
Solstice: I fast on the Solstice, Jon tries to keep L from disrupting me too bad. It's my way of resetting the stress of the season, and in many ways the start of the simple joy for me. I try to find it before that, but I need the day to stop and meditate to really take hold.
Tree:
The tree\decorations go up the weekend after Thanksgiving (in theory). This started because when we travelled for Christmas my parents came to visit us the first weekend of December and I wanted them to see the house decorated. We also used to have friends over to help decorate the tree but that has gotten awkward as families have grown, so that's faded out. Given L didn't nap today, the tree may go up next weekend. My parents no longer come the first weekend, and everyone comes to us for Christmas, so right after Thanksgiving is likely to slip. I do like it up most of December. Since we had real trees growing up (and would like to have one now) that limits how long the tree can be up. This year we'll do artificial again.
As soon as we don't have to blockade the tree we will be back to 2 trees. One in the public living room, and one in the more private den. The smaller one has my Father Christmas ornament collection on it. Also, I can't decide which room I like the tree in and I'm sad if it's not in both, so putting up two fixed a lot of issues in one swoop. Just..for now..we only have a fence to go around one, and it blocks off a corner, so the tree currently goes up in the corner of the den.
Tree comes down New Year's Day. It's nice to have a designated ending date, so it doesn't just stay up "one more day" and we're off work so we can do it.
Gifts:
Immediately after we decorate the tree Jon puts a couple Lego presents he made under the tree. A tree with no wrapped gifts under it makes me sad. So we put two fake ones under--and it works (I don't claim to understand my brain, I've just learned a few things). It also means they stay there until we take it down, so I don't get sad after. It was something easily fixed in a fun manner, and those gifts are stored in the decoration box so I guess they're a tradition now.
Santa writes in curly-que script. We don't yet leave out milk & cookies but I think it will come. Santa's gifts come Christmas Eve after everyone is asleep. (though since we celebrate more than one Christmas he somehow comes twice...) This still happens, even before L came...but it became the gifts no one really wanted credit for. :) He also brings the unwrapped gifts.
Gifts from us go under the tree as soon as we get them wrapped. My family used paper on only one gift (yes, we had a LOT of rolls), but that's only half-heartedly enforced. As long as there is no distinct consistency, it's all good. LOTS of color. LOTS of different paper. At least for anything related to my family--Jon is known to use only a few types on his folk's gifts. :)
We...are trying to get a handle on gifts. Both our families put out a lot of gifts under the tree, but we're a bit overloaded with stuff and L has more than he really needs as well. We're trying to convince grandparents to give fewer, higher quality (though they don't give junk) stuff. My problem is most of what I want are things to be done, not things to be wrapped, and it's impractical for most of the people to do what I want. So I'm just trying to convince them to just give me a couple. It's working, somewhat--though I think somewhat because of time! I do like having everyone have something they can DO after the gifts are open. A toy, and game, maybe a book. One year I realized I couldn't DO anything with my gifts, and that was a rather boring Christmas afternoon, so I try to avoid it.
Open Gifts:
We open gifts one at a time. Yeah, it takes a while, but really, we have all day. It's fun, it lets you see what people got, and celebrate with them. When Jon's folks are here it's a bit more their method--of lining it up in front of each person and they open while trying to also watch.
Stockings:
We're still working on the stockings. I can see the benefit of the stocking being what you can open before your parents get up. But...I grew up with the week before Christmas the elves came and left one thing in the stocking each night (nothing on Christmas itself), and I remember running to the stocking and bouncing there until my dad took it down (I couldn't reach). It always had nuts one night, an orange/apple one night, usually some chocolate another, a small toy, and something else that varied. I'm hoping to start that with L this year. It's unusual and I like the tradition, and was very sad when I quit getting a stocking (mostly due to not being home a week before Christmas). :)
Family:
Our hope, and it worked one year really well and has had out-of-our-hands issues since, but we kinda make it work, is to have one set of parents a few days before Christmas, Christmas and one day next to it to ourselves for a very quiet time, then the other parents come. It was very nice, and I hope as life settles down (in this case it might), we can go back to that.