Traditionally Speaking

October 25, 2007 at 2:32 am | In Ideas | 3 Comments
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Recently, I have become obsessed with family traditions. Ever since I got married, everything I do seems so much more significant. Suddenly, instead of being a random person just bopping around, minding my own business, I have a sense of legacy. Even a simple trip to the supermarket has new weight for me, as if in sixty years I’ll be sitting around the fireplace like, “Back in 2007, your Granddad and I were at the Stop & Shop when…”, and this story may determine the trajectory of my entire line of ancestors for all eternity. This actually doesn’t scare me, as I may have thought it would in the past. I am really kind of excited to have that kind of potential impact on the future.

I am eager to start some new traditions in my marriage now, that can then get passed on to our kids, and future generations of the Andrews family. I had a few things my family did every year, like getting new pajamas on Christmas Eve (my mom was still doing this one as of Christmas ‘06); decorating the Christmas tree while dancing to holiday albums by Michael Bolton, Mariah Carey, and Hanson; visiting Six Flags every summer with my cousins; and eating Chinese food while playing Trivial Pursuit on New Year’s Eve. Mr. Andrews had one or two, like getting a balloon and a chocolate chip cookie cake on his birthday. I like these (especially the pj’s!), but I want more. I’ve been trying to think up some new ones on my own.

Since I love and adore Christmas and we have no ornaments for a tree of our own, I have started buying them when we visit places – one on our Honeymoon, one on a random trip to New Hampshire, one in New York City if I ever remember to get one while we are there! – and I think I want a tradition where we always buy a Christmas ornament souvenir on vacation. Then we can have a fully decorated tree and be merry all year long!

Roadblocked for anything other than this one and only creation, though, I searched “family traditions” on Amazon, and bought the most comprehensive-looking book: The Book of New Family Traditions by Meg Cox. It was a good choice, let me tell you – I could be awash in a different traditions whenever I felt like having one (there’s even an idea to celebrate A.A. Milne’s birthday is in there). Most of the suggestions are for families with children – and there are many I will be using! – but there are a few I think we can implement as just husband and wife and not feel too cheesy. A Thanksgiving box, for example, used to store your lists of what your are thankful for, seems doable for adults, and even Halloween Gloom dolls, where you stuff the head of a homemade rag doll with paper containing your bad feelings and complaints, and then throw it into the fireplace, seem intriguing and kind of theraputic (what can I say? I’m morbid).

So now I have a very good start on this family tradition thing. Now I just need a bigger family!

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  1. Will and I are big fans of collecting ornaments as we travel. Even better is if you have a theme for your tree because it’s more challenging and you are more selective. We love birds so we only get bird ornaments and love having a Christmas tree full of birds from all over the world. It’s fun searching for new ones.

    We do the magnet thing too but our fridge is getting full so we only buy ones we really like.

  2. Wow, that’s a really good idea! I like the concept of a themed tree, and it seems like it would be a little less overwhelming choosing from the hundreds of ornaments if I know what I’m looking for ahead of time.

  3. [...] my quest for a somewhat memorable Halloween, and to get the Family Traditions rolling, Mr. Andrews and I took a trip to the pumpkin patch at Terhune Orchards in Princeton, New [...]


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