Not only two posts within a week of each other, but three posts in a month.
Shocking, I know.
It is, however, Christmastide after all .... something that is rarely observed in recent decades and all but forgotten.
Recent generations rush to get Christmas decorations up before Thanksgiving and, in many cases, rush to pack them up the day after Christmas.
But, in my world, Christmas Day is just the beginning...the beginning of Christmastide.
Christmastide (also known as Christide or Twelvetide) is the 12-day period beginning December 25th and ending January 5th. (Start singing - in your head please - The Twelve Days of Christmas.)
While it is, technically, a season of the liturgical year in most Christian churches, it was also, historically, a period of hospitality and celebration with Christmas Day being Day One.
There were religious services, yes, but it was also a secular matter as well with parties and feasts, gift-giving and general merry-making.
Perhaps due to my father's strong evangelical Lutheran background, our family followed the old ways growing up.
Our tree was not put up until Christmas Eve (or Christmas "Adam" - the day before Christmas Eve) and gifts were opened on Christmas Eve after the evening Christmas Eve service.
Christmas Day was a morning church service and then a more formal dinner.
And then...then the round robins began.
We would visit my great grandmother and great aunts on my father's side, then all the aunts and uncles on my mother's side, and a few close family friends - and they, in turn, would come to visit us.
Each day saw a new visit or new visitors.
Those days are long gone, but I still think of Christmas as a season rather than a day and I (stubbornly) refuse to give in to the notion that Christmas is over and done with on the 25th.
My decorations and lights will stay up for several weeks yet and, yes, on occasion, I will listen to Christmas music or indulge in a favorite Christmas movie.
I also continue with a few Christmas projects.
This year, I finally pinned and laced "Merry Olde Christmas," a design by Lori Brechlin of Notforgotten Farm which I stitched two years ago.
Jury's still out on whether it will stay there but, for now, I'm calling it done.
This is called "November Ornament" (I think?) and is a free design from Birgit Tolman of The Wishing Thorn.
I had wanted to do a Santa for it but haven't settled on a design that will work well with the dimensions of the clock case.
I also finished hooking my Stag rug - a pattern by Lori Rippey of Primitives by Lori.
It took me a ridiculous amount of time to finish hooking it, and I am not thrilled with my color plan/wool choices. I suspect Mummy D. was expecting a photo of the completely finished rug but it has been commandeered by Liza Bean and has not even made it through the steaming process.
This book was outside of my typical genres but a fellow blogger (who no longer blogs unfortunately) recommended it to me.
Her recommendation turned out to be a beautiful gift.
Ms. Silva imaginatively recreates the inspiration behind Dickens' beloved A Christmas Carol. Although fiction, Silva seems to channel Dickens himself and uncannily recreates 19th-century London and the streets Dickens perambulated during the six-week period of the writing of his famous tale. (Well, not that I would actually know what 19th-century London or the streets of London looked like but, in my head I think I do. 😉).
Whimsical and charming - and utterly believable...I definitely recommend for a heart-warming holiday read.
And, finally, for "Sissy"...because you asked.
I hope 2025 brings renewal, sees your hopes fulfilled, and makes your heart glad.