A beautiful bright day in northern Wyoming. Our town is decked out in its Holiday finery! There is a skiff of snow, making the landscape clean and pretty. A damp fog moved in last night and left the bare trees and bushes with a coat of "frosting" to sparkle in the sunshine. The year is drawing to a close. A time for reflection.
Recently, a dear relative passed away at age 103. Then a phone call today to tell us of the death of an old friend. A coworker buried her Fathr-in-law this week. We've become the older generation. Several friends are ill or struggling to deal with recent surgeries, so we keep them all in our thoughts and prayers.
There is a new girl in our family and we have so few girls! So we are thrilled to welcome her. One of my coworkers has two small girls. They got to visit with Santa Thursday at Library story hour and sit on his lap and get their picture taken. Their beautiful eyes sparkled as they shared their adventure with me! So we must look to the young ones and hope they will enjoy a good life ahead. The best gifts are the gifts of hope and peace and good health. May they be so blest. A local couple are working with their family to build a new home. They hope to have it ready and be moved in for the Holidays. What a special gift to each other, a new home in which to spend their retirement and make new memories with their sons and Grandchildren, this Holidays and hopefully many Holidays to come.
The matriarch of my husband's family made a relish of cranberries and oranges each year. A part of our Holiday tradition. I fixed a big batch today and thought of her. Then I mixed up special fruit cakes, a tradition and recipe shared with us by friends from Texas, it features lots of Texas pecans! The shadow of Alzheimers clouds the Holidays for them. But we celebrated so many Holidays together in the past. So we will speak of them and the good times we shared and keep them in our prayers. We will join our son and his wife and attend an Open House this evening. Our friends live in a lovely log home at the foot of the Big Horn Mountains. We will warm ourselves by their fireplace and enjoy the view of the snow capped mountains and perhaps get to see an elk herd grazing on the lower meadows. There will be a huge tree, delicious food and lots of happy chatter, as we all pause a minute to enjoy the season and the simple pleasure of catching up with old friends and perhaps meeting a new friend or two.
And so new memories are made.