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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home2/lorriego/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114<\/a>When my brothers and I were toddlers, at Christmastime my mother set out a fake table-top tree with unbreakable ornaments we could put on and take off to our hearts\u2019 content. I\u2019ve been imprinted on tree-trimming ever since, and have continued this tradition with my own children. Every year the day after Thanksgiving, we haul a little artificial tree and box of soft ornaments from the garage and set it up in the living room. My girls are in their 20s now, and can be trusted with fragile glass angels, but woven pandas and plush whales from Marine World still dangle from the table-top tree.<\/p>\n Even before our daughters were born, my husband and I started laying things away for them\u2014not money for college or a home of their own, but Christmas tree ornaments. When I was pregnant with the baby we called Tadpole before she emerged as Emma, we hung a tiny red-and-green striped stocking on our spindly tree with enormous hope and excitement.<\/p>\n For Emma\u2019s first Christmas extra utero<\/em>, we chose a bristlecone-pine bear in a cradle. Ally\u2019s arrival three years later brought a baby on a rocking horse to keep the bear company. <\/a>Along with setting up the table-top tree every year right after Thanksgiving, our family goes ornament shopping. It\u2019s our favorite tradition, and each girl is allowed to pick one special ornament. There have been some doozies along the way, like the pink-flocked hippopotamus, purple-glitter octopus, and plastic day-glo peace sign.<\/p>\n Since the girls have gone to college and beyond, some years they haven\u2019t made it home, and I\u2019ve substituted my better and more tasteful judgment. The year Emma was in St. Petersburg, and hard pressed to find her favorite food in Russia, we hung a glass-blown sushi roll in her honor. Ally\u2019s junior year abroad was marked by a miniature French baguette dangling from the tree while she downed the real thing during Christmas travels to Paris.<\/p>\n This year Ally\u2019s back in Europe, teaching English in Bilbao, where it rains 24\/7. Since the rain in Spain falls mainly on my daughter, we found the perfect ornament for her in absentia<\/em>\u2014polka dot rain boots. And Emma, who moved to Brooklyn in February but is home for the holidays, picked out a pink-frosted glass doughnut to commemorate the first job she landed in New York at an upscale doughnut store.<\/a><\/p>\n As soon as Emma and Ally have Christmas trees of their own, I\u2019ll present them with the numerous snowmen, Santas, dogs, cats, and pink-flocked hippopotami that have graced our trees through the years. It will be a good start as they set out to create their own homes, families, traditions. My husband\u2019s and my tree will be a little sparser, but that\u2019s OK. I\u2019m going to keep Tadpole\u2019s tiny red and green striped stocking for remembrance of Christmases past.<\/p>\n *<\/em><\/p>\n What’s your favorite ornament or holiday tradition and the story behind it?<\/em><\/p>\n <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" When my brothers and I were toddlers, at Christmastime my mother set out a fake table-top tree with unbreakable ornaments we could put on and take off to our hearts\u2019 content. I\u2019ve been imprinted on tree-trimming ever since, and have … Continue reading