• Home
  • About MM
  • Good Books
  • Good Movies
  • Podcast
  • Contact

Moments Mom

Living Moment to Moment

Feeds:
Posts
Comments
« We Have Winners!
Merry Christmas! Happy Holidays! »

How to Decorate a Christmas Tree (rerun)

December 21, 2008 by MomentsMom

Back by popular demand is my post about how to decorate a Christmas tree (or “A Tribute to Mom”).

_____________________________________________________

Originally posted December 6, 2007:

Yes…the holidays are upon us.

Stores blare Christmas music, commuters face nasty holiday traffic, shoppers swagger through crowded shops, busy busier frazzled parents lose patience with tired kids, and families spend hours (or days!) decorating their homes. It’s a time filled with ritual and traditions. And every family has its traditions. Some families go nuts every year on the outside of their homes hanging lights and signs…we don’t get crazy with our property — maybe we’ll put a few strands of white lights here and there, hang a couple of wreaths with bows, that’s about it.

But our Christmas tree inside our house? Ah, now that’s different.

We give heartfelt attention to our trees. My mom loved decorating Christmas trees. She trimmed beautiful trees. So did my grandmother. She had two trees at Christmas time with an elaborate, magical, snowy Christmas village underneath both of them, complete with kings on horses (or were they camels?) pointed toward her fireplace which had a beautiful creche inside. She spent a lot of time putting puffs of cotton underneath cotton batting then sprinkling glitter around to make it look like a shimmery, snowy fantasy land. She had little houses, animals and figurines spread all around and then a lovely little wooden fence on the edge of all of it. When we were old enough, my sisters and I would help her assemble this (what was in our minds massive) world. It was absolutely delightful.

We don’t even try to replicate that magic, but, sort of as a tribute to my family of origin, I put some effort into our tree. I enjoy decorating it. It all starts with the search for the right tree. We go out to a tree farm and my hubby uses a wimpy little saw (provided by the farm) and a whole lot of brawn to chop down a tree.

This year, our son spied a Norwegian Spruce (super prickly but great for holding lots of ornaments). It’s a funky tree, and we actually heard another family rejecting it because its branches were a bit wild and dense. We didn’t mind. So, in a Charlie Brown (well, Linus) kind of way, we decided that was the one for us. With a little TLC, we trimmed it, removed some of the sappy branches (and the twisted weedy thing that was growing up the trunk) and took it home.

Hubby and I put it in the stand without incident and then it was up to me to do the rest. I turned on some Christmas music, got a cup of tea and just sat and looked at it — not because I was feeling contemplative and pondering all my Christmases past, rather because I couldn’t find the box of lights. I had the tree topper, so I climbed up the ladder and set it on top, then I went back through the dozen or so boxes of decorations to search for the lights. I was just about ready to give up when, almost an hour later, I finally remembered that I stowed them in the attic.

Thank you, God! I mean, I needed the lights, because it’s the first step in the system. Yes, I have a decorating system that I’ve developed after years of advice and assistance from Mom. I start with the lights (I used to do a spiral around the tree, now I just zig zag up and around it and place them in spots that will optimize the sparkle factor). Mom always said that the key to making a great tree is to put some of the lights deep into the tree (in toward the trunk) to give it depth and provide maximum twinkle. Can’t skimp on the lights.

tree lights

Ornaments are another place to be generous. I try to find great ornaments each year (preferably after Christmas, to get a good deal on bulbs I wouldn’t otherwise buy) and I have a color scheme to which I am loyal — clear lights with red, gold and white (but very few white) bulbs. So when I see a special red or gold bulb after Christmas, I scoop it up, add it to the collection, and look forward to putting it up the following year.

Mom insisted that the general idea is to hang the largest bulbs around the bottom and the smallest bulbs at the top, but I save a few small bulbs to sprinkle here and there around the middle (where I need more color). The shiniest bulbs go closest to the lights to maximize the sparkle. All of this is probably basic, basic tree trimming knowledge.

So now I’ll share some of my favorite Mom tips. First, how to use very effective little trimmings called sprays.

gold spray

I’m not much of a crafty gal, but this trick is worth a trip to Michael’s (or AC Moore or whatever craft stores you have near you). Mom gave us some red and gold sprays that I carefully place in those bare spots that are otherwise just big, bland sections of green (Mom also used to add feathery birds to her tree, but I chose to omit them).

Another important Mom tip: ocassionally stand back a few steps and look at the whole tree to find the bare spots and fill them in with just the right decoration. I did just that and tweaked until I was satisfied. Then, I gathered up my french ribbon (the kind that has wire on each side — I use red ribbon with gold beads on the sides) and carefully wound it & twisted it around the tree. Finally, I used strings of beads and draped them around the tree, up and down the branches like this:

Christmas tree beads

Then, when I finally finished, I made another cup of tea, got a little plate of cookies and sat and looked at it.For me, it’s the most special part of my ritual. That’s the time when I reflect back on all the past Christmases, back when mom was still alive. I think about my mom and grandmother and silently thank them for all the wisdom they passed on to me. I think about the time in college when my mom took me shopping for Christmas decorations because she wanted to help me set up my very first tree (away from home). I remember marveling at her attention to detail and understanding what a difference it made.

When I spend that special time looking at our tree, I am so grateful for the many warm, loving memories. I feel blessed to have had all those years learning Mom’s tips, decorating with her, buying new decorations, laughing and singing carols. All sorts of feelings start rushing through me. I start to wish she could be sitting there with me, also having a cup of tea and some cookies. I wish I could see her beautiful, sparkling eyes as she gazed approvingly at the tree.

At this time of year, I miss my mom the most. So my ritual often ends with tears. Sometimes I cry, other times I just sit and smile. No matter what, though, just before standing up and going on with the rest of my day, I always say, “This one’s for you, Mom. Thanks.”

BMGmom Tree

2007 Christmas Tree (during the day)

2007 tree at night

2007 Tree at Night

Merry Christmas!

Happy Chanukah.

Happy Eid.

Habari Gani.

Happy Winter Solstice (that one’s for you, Dan!)

Advertisement

Share this:

  • Share
  • Facebook
  • Print
  • Twitter
  • Email
  • StumbleUpon

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Posted in holidays, personal | Tagged Christmas, Christmas trees, how to decorate a Christmas tree, ornaments and lights at Christmas, posts about Christmas | 1 Comment

One Response

  1. on December 28, 2008 at 7:20 pm Missives From Suburbia

    A belated Merry Christmas to your sweet family, m’dear.

    Missives From Suburbias last blog post..Boob Girl



Comments are closed.

  • Come Walk With Me and Let’s Share Some Moments…

    Alltop, all the cool kids (and me)

    BlogWithIntegrity.com

    .

    . . . .

    Contact Nicole:
    momentsmom (at) gmail (dot) com

  • Follow Me on Twitter:

    • RT @gadgetlab: Apple patent shows how eye tracking, positioning, sensor data, and lighting could be used for a 3D experience http://t.co ... 13 hours ago
    • RT @WeGiveBooks: MT @aasl: Feb 14, @WeGiveBooks to give 150K books to public elementary schools across the US during #ReadforMySchool: h ... 14 hours ago
    • Motorola: Some refurbished tablets weren't wiped. http://t.co/sHd38pzx 4 days ago
    • EU probes new Google privacy policy. http://t.co/RJplIgJv 4 days ago
    • RT @SelfishMom: The @GoDaddy commercials always make me embarrassed that I use GoDaddy. 4 days ago
  • Subscribe Here – Free!

    RSS Feed RSS - Posts

    RSS Feed RSS - Comments

  • Topics:

  • A Little More About Moments…

    • About MM
    • Contact
    • Good Books
    • Good Movies
    • Podcast
  • Other Places You’ll Find Nicole:

    Follow me on Twitter:

    The Influential Moms Network - Member

    .

    .

  • Recent Comments

    • Melisa with one S on Use Your Handwriting as Your Font!
    • Renee on The Moment I Discovered the Starbucks’ Secret Menu
    • Deb on Whole Hearted People and Vulnerability
    • jeanne ringe on Whole Hearted People and Vulnerability
    • Renee Pendergrass on Your Own Personal Teleprompter (?!)
  • Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 3 other followers

  • Topics of Interest

    Apple books children culture design education entertainment family Food and Drink fun gadgets games holidays life movies music My Podcasts Nintendo parenting personal photography photos politics reviews sports technology teens thoughts travel video games
  • Archives

  • Recent Posts

    • Rest in Peace, Steve.
    • A Double Edged Sword
    • We Love Music! And American Pie…
    • Passion in Engineering
    • Use Your Handwriting as Your Font!
  • my read shelf:
    MomentsMom's book recommendations, favorite quotes, book clubs, book trivia, book lists (read shelf)

    Blogtrepreneur

    Mom Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory
    BlogCatalog


    Site Meter


    Site Meter

  •  

    December 2008
    M T W T F S S
    « Nov   Jan »
    1234567
    891011121314
    15161718192021
    22232425262728
    293031  
  • Pages

    • About MM
    • Good Books
    • Good Movies
    • Podcast
    • Contact
  • Copyright ©2008-2011 MomentsMom - All Rights Reserved

    ___________________________________________

    Just to tell you? Except as otherwise noted, I don't get paid a single red cent for any content on this blog. I do this because I enjoy creating it (and hope you enjoy reading it).

  • Meta

    • Register
    • Log in
    • Entries RSS
    • Comments RSS
    • WordPress.com

Blog at WordPress.com. Fonts on this blog.

Theme: MistyLook by Sadish.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Powered by WordPress.com
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.