Announcement

Collapse

Happy birthday

to Granny Jules!
See more
See less

Tell us about your strangest Christmas

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Tell us about your strangest Christmas

    Christmas 2020 will be 'different' for many of us.

    But what about other Christmases - ones where things went wrong, were different or just best forgotten. Or your best Christmas Day ever.


    My strangest Christmas Day was 1973. OH and I had been invited to spend Christmas with OH's oldest brother and family, who I had never met. The family lived in the Bahamas. Two weeks of sunshine and white sandy beaches - who would refuse. It was quite a hard decision because it meant leaving my widowed mum on her own, although she was invited by various family and friends. She said she'd be ok, just her and the dog.

    So it was all set - we'd fly out on the 20th, and be back two weeks later. But it was the time of the oil crisis, and a week before the Government announced a load of measures to conserve supplies of oil, fuel etc. Our flight was cancelled! We were offered one alternative - a flight from Heathrow on Christmas Day! We lived in the north, so travelled down the previous day, OH, me and our DS1 who was 18 months old. We stayed in a weird hotel - faded grandeur is how I'd describe it. Everybody else in the hotel seemed to be on their own. It seemed simultaneously sad and a bit creepy.

    Heathrow was deserted (like in the current lockdowns, but so unexpected). There were two flights in the day - ours going west and one going east. The cabin staff apologised for the lack of decorations - the cleaners had taken them down thinking they were finished with. But they served a decent Christmas dinner. That was Dinner Number 1. We had a stopover for a couple of hours in Bermuda, then back on the plane for Dinner Number 2. We landed in Nassau to be greeted by BIL and family, and my SIL's first words to me were "We've saved Christmas Dinner till you got here, it's all ready." OH and I had to cover up our groans!




    "Joy is what happens to us when we allow ourselves to recognise how good things really are. "

    (Marianne Williamson)

    #2
    That was certainly a Christmas you won't forget Daisy!

    Nothing too memorable to report here.

    The Christmas Day I remember and wouldn't want to repeat was the one when DD1, aged 15 and I both had a nasty sickness bug. She took to her bed (sensible girl) I felt I should make an appearance at the dinner table at least. I remember slowly sipping water from a beautiful wine glass. That was my Christmas dinner!

    Thankfully my then OH and 13 year old DD didn't go on to catch our bug. 3 year old DD had already had it a few days previously, and had passed it on to me and her adored oldest sister.
    I remember having no appetite until new Year's Eve. One Christmas that I definitely didn't put on any weight!!
    “A grandchild fills a space in your heart that you never knew was empty.” – Unknown

    Comment


      #3
      My memorable Christmas was about 25 years ago ,
      We were going to SIL's parents for Christmas day ,
      They lived in a tiny cottage on a farm in the back of beyond , it was snowing and the farmer had to tow us up the track to the cottage at the top of the hill .

      We were all in our finery , I had a long Black velvet dress on with beading around the hem so very posh

      It had a sitting room then up a step into the kitchen and the downstairs bathroom ,

      Everything was very jolly all chatting then out of the corner of my eye I saw water coming over the step from the kitchen ,

      We all jumped up , James had filled the bath with cold water to keep the Fizz cold as there was no room in the fridge , turned the tap on and forgot about it ,
      The bath had overflowed flooding through the kitchen ,

      SIL had just laid new kitchen flooring two days before and they had a new Freezer ,

      The oven was on dinner cooking , so we all had to muck in and J, SIL, B and our DS had to lift the freezer outside , lift the new flooring and put that outside,

      I had to hitch my Velvet dress up so Myself and DD could sweep water out the back door, Amongst all this D was trying to get the Yorkshire puds out the oven before they burnt and turn the veg off ,

      Took us about a hour to sort it , D was horrified but we couldn't stop laughing it was like a comedy sketch .

      Finally sat down to Christmas dinner about 4pm ,

      About 7 pm we were all ready to come home , the new Lino was in the shed drying out but we got the Freezer back in and everything was calm again when there was a massive rumble and a load of soot came down the chimney as the chimney stack had partially collapsed ,

      Luckily it had slid down the back of roof rather than down the chimney itself ,

      That is a Christmas day we still laugh about , Poor D, I think if we hadn't all been there and laughed about it she would have been in hysterics .
      Im not fat just 6ft too small

      Comment


        #4
        Wow, that sounds like a good comedy sketch Oma.
        What is life if full of care we have no time to stand and stare

        Comment


          #5
          Oh good grief Oma!! A TV special could be made of that for sure

          You all kept smiling though!
          You will never forget that Christmas.
          “A grandchild fills a space in your heart that you never knew was empty.” – Unknown

          Comment


            #6
            Oma, you would be smart "mucking out" in your black velvet dress. Certainly a Christmas to remember.

            When I was young, about 10 I must have been, my eldest brother is 10 years older so he went up to the village pub with his mates, my father told him to leave the car keys at home, which he did, when leaving the pub they fancied going to a dance a few villages away, a neighbour gave them his the keys to his car! Travelling to the village they managed to overturn the car, it was a green Ford Zephyr!! and my brother ended up in the hospital with a broken leg etc. I can remember my mother being so upset. We went visiting to the hospital and he was in a ward with all drink accidents from the Christmas Eve celebrations. There was, still is, an aircraft factory near us, they had been drinking all day, a few got in a mini bus to go back to town and it was in a very bad accident. I can remember 2 0r 3 were killed and the rest were badly injured in the same ward as my brother.

            My brother recovered, he was in the army at the time and I remember the army ambulance coming to take him back to the barracks!

            That was our lost Christmas. Luckily after that they stopped (most of) the drinking in the aircraft factory.

            Comment


              #7
              We never did have another cottage Christmas , they moved back to town that summer , I think it put D off country life

              By the way I still have that dress its beautiful but shows all my lumps and bumps these days
              Last edited by Oma; 22-12-2020, 11:36 AM.
              Im not fat just 6ft too small

              Comment


                #8
                Not a strange Christmas, but its the only one that comes to mind.
                Christmas 1968. It was our first married Christmas and i was pregnant with DS1.
                I didn't suffer with morning sickness, i had all day sickness.
                We were all sat round the table at in laws for dinner.
                After a couple of bites of dinner,i knew what was coming.
                I dashed upstairs to the bathroom and after the inevitable, i thought ooo i can eat my dinner now.
                When i came down,my plate was empty, my dinner had been shared out.
                Sometimes I forget to like posts,but that doesn't mean I don't like them.

                Comment


                  #9
                  That was unfair Nanto
                  What is life if full of care we have no time to stand and stare

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Nanto - I'm sorry, but that made me laugh out loud. I wonder if you in laws ever realised you were then ready to eat it yourself!

                    Lizzie - what a terrible end to a night out.

                    Oma - yes I can definitely see that as a comedy sketch on TV. What a good job you could all laugh about it. Did you ever wear the dress again?

                    Gem - not a good time to catch a tummy bug. At least some of the family escaped it.
                    "Joy is what happens to us when we allow ourselves to recognise how good things really are. "

                    (Marianne Williamson)

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Oh yes Daisy it was my favourite Cruise Black tie night dress , its hanging all wrapped up in a dress bag with tissue ,on the hopes one day I will fit into it again,
                      Well I still fit into it its just the lumps and bumps show more in it now
                      Im not fat just 6ft too small

                      Comment


                        #12
                        The strangest one was the year I was pregnant with DS, He was a week overdue by then. I spent Christmas Eve helping OH and FiL to erect a swing for DD. I then spent Christmas Day, opening presents, cooking dinner and timing contractions and wondering if I could hold out until we'd had dinner. Contractions were helped by sipping champagne and I even managed to take the dog out for a walk. By evening everything had settled down and DS didn't put in an appearance until the 28th! But that's another story!!

                        Believe you can and you're halfway there.
                        Theodore Roosevelt.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          WeeGranny - it's amazing you had so much energy being 41 weeks pregnant! I bet your DS has never lived it down.

                          Certainly a Christmas Day to remember.
                          "Joy is what happens to us when we allow ourselves to recognise how good things really are. "

                          (Marianne Williamson)

                          Comment


                            #14
                            I remember one Christmas we were going to DD's and Sil's. When we arrived my DD greeted us with "Turkey is cooked" it was 11 am. They had set the oven the night before and the turkey was cooked at 8am.!
                            What is life if full of care we have no time to stand and stare

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Plant - I had the opposite problem one year. I'd set the timer to come on at 8 am, and when I finally got round to checking it about 10 am - the oven was stone cold!!
                              "Joy is what happens to us when we allow ourselves to recognise how good things really are. "

                              (Marianne Williamson)

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X