So, another year has come and gone. We are
each of us a couple years beyond three quarters of a century on this earth, and
still vertical, mostly…in the past year.
Just exactly what makes you think I'm the one who's been snatchiung the summer sausage. |
Daughter Sara, son-law John and grandson James are only a few blocks away. James catches the bus from our house while we puppysit the grandpuppys, Bischoff (“Bischoff” is German for Bishop and also a popular brand of beer in Deutschland) a bordoodle (border collie and standard poodle) and Baxter, an aged Shih Tzu as well as our aged Shih Tzu who thinks he is a pit bull.
Sara and John are working for the Veterans Administration. James is an 8th grader at Patrick Henry. He plays soccer, does cross country in the fall and indoor soccer in the winter.
A CHRISTMAS POEM
A broken hip stopped old Kris Kringle
He’s getting pretty old you know
The jingle bells no longer jingle
Sleighing across the fallen snow
Out at the mall the crowds so merry
Are not so much this year
But the UPS driver was kind of cheery
Bringing the Amazon packages here
Warm and cozy by the fireplace flame
We dream of the days when I as you
Believed that Santa Claus really came
Down through that old coal heater flue
- john marius nelson
Dissertation on Why People Choose to
Live and Stay in South Dakota in the Winter
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I’m still in a relapse of the vasculitis that
caused my kidney failure in 1974 and now is in my lungs causing interstitial
lung disease a.k.a. pulmonary fibrosis; so, my prednisone is still increased a bit ☹. Despite
an endless string of tests, scans and medication, my lung function has declined a bit and my doctors want me to use oxygen at least some of the time.
We lost some dear people this year: John’s sister Anne and John’s cousin Robert
Nelson. Robert (Bobby) and I sort of grew up together, living a few miles apart.
Bob was a combat Vietnam War veteran; was active in the VFW and a member of the
VFW Honor Guard.
Here
is a Story about a Christmas from my past.A Christmas Story for Anne
Anna Mary was the oldest of four siblings born to Kermit and
Bernice (Carlson) Nelson. Dad called her Suzie after singing the song “Sioux City
Sue”, and Anne singing with him.
On the farm in southern Lincoln County, Anne, 6 years older, taught
me everything a five to eight year old farm boy needed to know; how to ride a
bicycle, how to fix a flat with a ‘hot patch’, how to catch tadpoles, how to
swim in the stock tank.
On the coldest winter nights, the kids would all sleep in the
dining room by the old pot-belly coal stove that heated the whole house.
I remember one of those nights, when I was four or five and it
was almost Christmas time. By the glow of the fire through the little mica
windows on the old pot-belly coal stove, Anne told me about how Santa Claus
would climb down the chimney and then through the stove pipe and hop out of the
old stove, brush himself off and head for the stockings.
On Christmas Eve, we would hang our stockings, not some fancy decorated things
with our name on it, but the actual socks we wore, from a nail on the wall.
Then on Christmas morning, we would race to see what Santa had left us. It was
mostly small stuff, the good presents were under the tree and were opened on
Christmas Eve right after our dinner (we called it supper). Usually oyster stew
with the little oyster crackers; then presents could be opened, after the
dishes were done.
The old coal heater (which as I recall looked something like
the one pictured above-left) and the corn cob fired kitchen range (above-right)
were the only sources of winter-time heat in that old drafty house. A few years later, the coal stove was
replaced by an oil-fired heater with an electric fan. The corn cob fired range
was replaced with a ‘modern’ LP gas kitchen range. By that time, I had learned the
true Santa story and reality and didn’t worry so much about Santa burning up in
a hot stove.
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Happy holidays from our old, not so big, house to your house!
It just occurred to me that, ‘this old house’ which we built is now about the same age as the house where I grew up was, and which, at the time, I thought was really, really old. So, does that mean that we are really, really old?
It just occurred to me that, ‘this old house’ which we built is now about the same age as the house where I grew up was, and which, at the time, I thought was really, really old. So, does that mean that we are really, really old?
All in all, Bonnie and I are doing pretty well and enjoying
life. As I often say, “Every day is a gift.”
We hope you all are well and are having a blessed holiday
season, and that you will have a wonderful new year.
Happy holidays from our old, not so big, house to your house!
It
just occurred to me that, ‘this old house’ which we built is now about the same
age as the house where I grew up was, and which, at the time, I thought was
really, really old. So, does that mean that we are really, really old?
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