This is a guest-post from my cousin, Tammy. I first posted this in 2006. Tammy has also shared information on how to raise a family on one income (part two). This story is set ten years after my aunt’s six-dollar Christmas and involves the same family.
It was the year 1968. That year was an exceptionally hard year in every way. Pop was laid off due to too much snow in the woods. He was a logger. Roads were impassable and snow lay thick in the mountains. We knew there would be no Christmas. Mom had told us there simply was no money. Times were tough. We didn’t have money even for our very basic needs.
That was the year the guy from the fire department brought my sick baby brother some medicine in his four wheel drive. That was the year the snow piled up relentlessly night and day. The wind blew it under the window sills. We slept each night downstairs by the fireplace trying to stay warm. The entire house was closed off by blankets in doorways and masking tape on all the windows. Rugs were shoved under loose fitting doors so not a breath of cold air could get in.
That was also the year that food was scarce for man and beast. Earlier in the fall, the cold and scarcity of food drove the bear into our orchard to eat any remaining plums and apples that we hadn’t canned or processed in some way. We trapped those bears, tanned their hides to use for rugs, and ate the meat to fill our bellies. Christmas dinner that year was going to be Bear Roast. There were nine of us kids, and food was scarce.
The fires were kept burning night and day. My baby brothers were set on the lids to the warming ovens above the kitchen stove and held there while they dangled there feet over the old Home Comfort. Its cheery warmth not only heated our kitchen, but it also kept their tiny toes warm.
That was also the winter that mom ran out of formula for the baby. Not knowing what to do, we prayed that God would send our baby formula. He was allergic to milk and too young to eat food. That day a man handed mom an envelope of gospel tracts. There hidden in the tracts was a five dollar bill. God had answered our prayers. The baby would now get his formula.
I had only one wish that Christmas. I had seen a beautiful doll bed in the department store window. I wanted it so badly, but I knew it was way too much to ask. I could dream though, and dream I did. Mom knew how badly I yearned for a doll bed, so one day shortly before Christmas she set about to make me that coveted gift. Taking two cardboard boxes she turned the one upside down and set the other on top. She fastened them to each other then lined them with fabric and made a little pleated skirt to cover the cardboard box underneath. She knew that on Christmas morning I would be the happiest child for miles around.
The air was filled with secrecy that Christmas, as we all tried to make each other gifts. Buttons were strung onto strings, small jars were filled with filberts to rattle at the babies, nuts piled high behind the stove in gunny sacks were cracked and sugared for treats. Once again Bear meat was on the dinner menu. But once again God had other plans.
The day before Christmas a big red truck lumbered down the lane to our house. It was the Fire Chief! Whatever was happening? Why had they come? They had chained up the vehicle to get up the snowy roads. Maybe they were bringing medicine. One year the fire department brought aspirin to all the babies on the mountain because families couldn’t get into town. But no! Wait! There were other men with him. We watched as the firemen jumped down and began unloading gifts from the truck. They piled them on to the front porch while we watched from the window. There were lots of boxes. The excitement was more than we could bear. Beautifully wrapped gifts with sparkly bows were lined up on the porch.
Mom opened the front door to ask what this was all about. A fireman filled her arms with a box overflowing with food. “Merry Christmas,” he called over his shoulder as he stomped back through the snow for more things. My sisters and I were squealing and excitedly running from window to window in the hopes of seeing better. The babies peeked out from behind mom’s skirt.
Finally the last box was unloaded and our porch was filled with food and gifts. Everything we needed for a complete Christmas dinner was brought by that fire department. Mom was crying as she thanked the men. At eight-years-old I didn’t see what there was to cry about. I mean one minute there was no Christmas, the next we all had gifts and a Christmas dinner! At the time I knew nothing of what lies in a mother’s heart when God so completely and wonderfully answers her prayers for Christmas for her babies.
But the firemen weren’t done. They had gone back to the truck, and now they were pulling out a huge box with a candy cane striped swing-set inside. Our joy was beyond imagination. We had spent many hours swinging in homemade swings in the apple trees, but we had never seen or dreamed of anything as lovely as this red and white swing set. Our little hearts could hold no more.
That year was the best Christmas we ever had. The turkey from the fire department filled the place with mouthwatering smells. Gifts were opened and nowhere was there greater joy than that which was found in the old farmhouse that day.
That night, as the snow continued to blow across the dark hills, nine children lay tucked in their beds on the dining room floor. The fire gave the room a soft glow. Over in the old green chair mama rocked the baby and fed him warm formula while Pop made his bedtime rounds, stoking the fire and checking windows and doors for any loose masking tape that would let the cold east wind inside.
That was the night that the firemen brought Christmas to little children on a cold mountain. That was the night a new doll, brought from the fire department, slept all snuggly warm in its cardboard box beside a little girl who had prayed for a Christmas.
That was the night the heavens bent low.
That was the night the angels sang.
I will forever be grateful to the men who sacrificed their time that cold Christmas Eve. I have never forgotten their labor of love and the joy they brought to our hearts. Thank you so much for bringing Christmas to our house that year. You will never know what that meant to all of us! May God bless you all!
You know those Christmas-time toy drives? Those “sponsor-a-family” charity funds? They really do help those less fortunate. If you have everything you need, remember to spread the joy, to help out those whose situations are more desperate.
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Beautiful! Thank You!
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Amen
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Thank you for sharing that story. Merry Christmas!
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What a beautiful story! Merry Christmas.
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Thank you for this story! It brought tears to my eyes.
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Heart touching. Things go bad and things go good in life. Someone can bring cheers when the things are completely bleak and someone can bring a ray of hope when it is completel black. The point is that when this happens, it is equally important to appreciate and remember that to try to light a small lamp when we see the darkness surrounding someone else.
A merry Christmas to everyone!
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such a beautiful story, thank you JD.
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It makes me so happy that I adopted two families this year. I’ve always been so blessed at Christmas and I think it’s my duty to pass it forward.
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Great article. Thank you for sharing somethign so personal.
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Amazing story. Sometimes we contribute on one side not knowing what a difference it makes on the other.
Thank you for sharing.
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Yes, there’s a lot to be said for a “do it yourself” attitude when it comes to finances. But there’s always a place for graciously accepting the love and kindness of others. Most of us have been in that situation of needing help and it’s a joy to be able to help others.
Daisy
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Thank you, JD. This will be my Christmas morning e-gift to my friends. We are looking for a family to adopt and this may be our best inspiration.
Your cousin’s story is beautiful, and beautifully told. — Carolyn
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Heart touching story. At work we collect and sponsor local families on Christmas and thanksgiving. We never experience their joy first hand. At least I can feel it now after reading this.
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That was so beautiful.
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The first thing I thought after reading this beautiful piece was the quote ” there but for the grace of God, go I.”The origin of this is attributed to John Bradford.
Any one of us could someday find ourselves in a desperate position. Helpless, without enough food to feed our families or ourselves, unable to provide adequate shelter, we would do everything possible to maintain health and life.
Imagine how we would feel, receiving a magical visit from strangers bringing us supplies and hope.
Life is a great unknown. We never know when the opportunity to help will occur. Reading this piece urges us to prepare.
Lori Blatzheim
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Thank you for a beautiful story! It made me cry. It’s also such a testament to the importance of giving to others, especially to those in need. You never know what a difference your contribution can make in someone’s life.
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What an important message within this heartfelt recollection. I am so grateful that you shared this with us all. Sometimes we don’t understand just how comfortable and well-provided for we actually are. This story makes me contemplate the deeper meaning of Christmas and examine my conscious and my actions towards others.
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I hate when people make overly dramatic and consumer-dependent statements about any holiday such as “We knew there would be no Christmas,” which was made in this posting. Ridiculous. NO holiday is dependent on money or having certain foods around or having any other consumerist item around. Any holiday can be special with just time with family. And for people who are religious, the real meaning of the holiday should have nothing to do with fancy meals and presents.
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Yes. I found it odd that “we knew there would be no Christmas” was emphasized in bold, but followed by a lovely description of a mother doing her best to make sure there her daughter got the gift she wanted so badly. Because that’s what it’s about, isn’t it: giving the best we can to the people we love? That is not about money, or things.
Having said that, I can only imagine the relief that mom must have felt when the family went from scarcity to abundance. A timely reminder, thank you.
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Sounds like the firefighters are far more to thank than magic supernatural forces! No magic there, just generous, warm-hearted people doing wonderful things.
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Thank you; this was a wonderful story. I bought clothes and toys for two little girls who were on an angel tree this year, and your story reminds me that we really can never tell how much we might be helping someone else when we give. And, most importantly, your story illustrates that God really does care about our needs – like baby formula – and our dreams.
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Six Dollar Christmas link correction:
http://www.getrichslowly.org/blog/2008/12/24/december-24-1958-a-six-dollar-christmas/
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Truly this is a touching story. When I read it earlier the last comment was the criticism about there being no Christmas. It made me think. It made me think a LOT actually. I’ve been reading Your Money or Your Life – mostly to see if it would help a friend of mine in need of some financial guidance but it’s helping me too. What I have found myself pondering in regards to this post is decisions, and consious spending. It seems, based on JD’s intro that this was not the first time this family had a difficult winter. To some extent the parents chose this life for their children. They chose to have as many children as they did, and they chose to have the mother stay home and not work. The father chose to have a job that was unreliable employment in the winter (you can argue that some people have no choice – but at the end of the day somone has to be responsible for the life you live). Personally I think it was a heartwarming story. I think if it moves people to give generously of their time and money – that’s a very powerful thing. But when I examine it in the light of the consisous spending mantra of this blog I am a little confused. They lived so close to edge. I don’t really have any answers, or even opinions really, it just made me think a lot about the decision I make today, about my responsibility to others, about fishing lessons and those who ‘have not’.
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So now I’m bawling like a baby!
What a wonderful story, thank you for sharing it.
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You made me cry. Sniffle.
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