One Generation Gives Way to the Next

When our sons were small, my husband and I invented our own customs for Christmas, because my parents and his lived hundreds of miles away. Making the holiday special was up to us. We missed our extended families, but we were free to do whatever appealed to us—there was no other schedule or tradition to consider.

A few years ago

We read “The Night Before Christmas,” filled stockings with candy, assembled big toys like the play kitchen, and added batteries to toy guitars and handheld games. We took a bite out of the cookies left for Santa and scribbled “Thanks!” on the notes our sons wrote (Santa has good manners). 

As our boys got older and Santa became a sweet memory instead of an actual visitor, our habits changed. The four of us began cooking elaborate meals together—three days of them. Christmas Eve Eve’s dinner would be whatever the group craved—maybe Southern BBQ or cassoulet. An Italian feast (calzones, fagotch*, and homemade pasta) became a required ritual for either Christmas Eve or Christmas Day, and the third meal might be something fancy like Beef Wellington. Later we welcomed our sons’ girlfriends (now wives) into the kitchen.

When they married, we understood some traditions would have to flex; after all, our daughters-in-law and their families have traditions, too. Changes have already begun. This Christmas the six of us will be together on Christmas Eve. My husband and I will miss our three-day extravaganza, but believe this is the right way forward.

If we have grandchildren, I envision more changes on the horizon. I’ve watched and learned from friends and family who have married children and grandchildren. They’ve all had to adapt and invent new approaches to holiday gatherings. My brother and sister-in-law spend either Thanksgiving or Christmas with their married child and her family, but not both. Other relatives get together after Christmas, because their child’s divorce means accommodating two separate parents and three sets of grandparents. A friend doesn’t see her children and grandchild until New Year’s Day—scheduling the group at Christmas has gotten too complicated.

My friends and family don’t relish being alone on Christmas, but they accept the situation and make the best of it. As grandparents, they are no longer the center of holiday celebrations—their adult children and grandchildren are. It’s their turn now.

I expect changes will continue for my family. As my husband and I age and grandchildren arrive, we’ll adapt again and again. Gracefully, I hope. After all, this is how life is supposed to go. One generation gives way to the next. Inherent in raising children is the assumption they’ll become independent adults, and as a parent, I will be less central. One day, they’ll be responsible for arranging (and cleaning up!) our holiday celebrations, and eventually their children will do the same for them. 

That’s as it should be.

 *The family’s phonetic spelling for a form of focaccia in which ground meat, tomato paste, fennel seed and other spices are spread on bread dough, rolled up, baked, and sliced into pinwheels.

Comments

12 responses to “One Generation Gives Way to the Next”

  1. LuAnne Holder Avatar

    Yes, that is how it should be, Ellen. My husband and I have gotten used to quiet holidays with no family. Our adult children are scattered all over the globe. I admire their independence. So we celebrate togetherness at other times. Like two weeks before Christmas we traveled cross country to visit one daughter and her fiancé and had a great time seeing lights at the botanical gardens near their house because they went to his family’s for Christmas. In a way it dots the whole year with holiday togetherness instead of pouring it all into a couple of days once a year. I hope you had a lovely holiday.

  2. Bev Bachel Avatar
    Bev Bachel

    Your post brought tears to my eyes and warmth to my heart. Thanks for sharing. And happy holidays!

    1. Ellen Shriner Avatar

      Thanks, Bev! I hope you have nice holidays too

  3. Ann Coleman Avatar

    You’re so right, as hard as the changes can be, they are only natural. And they have their good points too (it’s nice not to stay up late on Christmas Eve, assembling toys!) As we age, our children and eventually grandchildren, dictate how our holidays are celebrated. And that’s exactly as it should be.

    1. Ellen Shriner Avatar

      I’m trying to accept the inevitable graciously, but I also believe there will be joy ninth new ways. happy holidays to you and yours!

  4. Luanne Avatar

    Beautiful description of the flexibility of family to create and pass on traditions. We also created our own because we grew up in different religious traditions, so made up our own for our kids. I would love to have grandchildren to see if any of what we created is passed on to them.

    1. Ellen Shriner Avatar

      Thanks for sharing your experience. You’ve raised an interesting idea. What I’ve continued from my parents is not so much the specifics but more the spirit of the holiday. Lots of love, fun, good food.

      1. Luanne Avatar

        Definitely lots of all those ingredients!

  5. Eliza Waters Avatar

    Our boys must be similar ages as Santa gave ours the same FP castle (we still have it in case young ones come to visit… it is a popular toy 😊 ). By high school, snowboarding took precedence over holiday traditions and they fell by the wayside. I still miss the gathering and feasting on holidays, but they are making their own choices now. We must give way.

    1. Ellen Shriner Avatar

      Yes, indeed and there are gifts in each new phase.

  6. Karen Seashore Avatar

    when my mother died, we stopped eating lutefisk which, in her view was essential to keeping us Swedish for the next year. I still love the stories about my childhood rituals, but most of them have shifted by popular demand. It is all good, including the addition of Hannukah…

    1. Ellen Shriner Avatar

      Thanks for reading! I agree—it’s all good.

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