Can Opener Christmas
Years ago, like 40 years ago, we bought my mom a can opener for Christmas. She did not want a can opener for Christmas. No one wants a can opener, or a vacuum cleaner, or a mixer for Christmas. Those are wedding shower gifts. Parenthetically, I still have and use the hand mixer gifted to me 36 years ago. (Thanks, Mark and Gail.).
It became a family joke all through the gifting season. Everyone laughed except Mom. She refused to even think of it. When the day finally arrived we were all festively around the living room, the tree was lit, and the gifts scattered.
I wish that I remembered more of the details in the right order. It was a beautiful moment. We bought Mom a countertop electric can opener and wrapped it in holiday paper.
My dad, who was the OG jokester, had bought her a simple and gorgeous opal necklace. He liked to surprise her with things like that. In case you were not privileged to see the dynamic of their relationship firsthand, Mom was the practical one who loved it when Daddy doted on her with the unpractical gifts. A match made in heaven.
The necklace was not wrapped but sealed in a gift can. This was a novelty wrapping service provided in the Longview Mall at that time.
I think she cried a little when she saw the can. She knew that she was getting a can opener.
As I said I don’t think I remember the details in the right order but she attempted to open the can with a key change military issued can opener that my dad carried. She was not able to open it. He came to the rescue. She reached in to find the necklace. She cried.
If you have read any of my other blogs you know that I love few things more than a good analogy. I could draw so many conclusions here like:
- Accept the gifts you are given as tools to achieve greater happiness
- What you want and what you need are connected by those you love.
- Christmas shenanigans, bullying in love.
Ok. That last one was weak.
This year my mom and I both needed a can opener. The hand crank devices, or my hands, were failing. I was on the shopping prowl for an old school electric countertop can opener. I will simply use it then return it to its place out of sight in the cabinet. I don’t love it but I do it for the toaster. I can make it work for the sake of green beans and carrots.
I couldn’t find the dinosaur. I shopped the usual places, Walmart and Target, but found none. Not one. I did, however, find a battery operated handheld device. I bought two. One for me and one for Mom.
I put mine in the drawer in the kitchen but I wrapped hers and put it under the tree.
She cried and as she did she recounted the story of that Christmas years ago. She, like me, couldn’t remember all of the details but she remembered the necklace. She told my kids and their kids about the can and the necklace.
Some stories are worth remembering, reliving and repeating. Tell your children, and their children about your love for God. Tell them about being enslaved and in bondage to sin. Tell them about restoration and forgiveness. Tell them in song and story and example.
Deuteronomy 6:4-9
4.Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one LORD:
5 And thou shalt love the LORD thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might.
6 ¶ And these words, which I command thee this day, shall be in thine heart:
7 And thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up.
8 And thou shalt bind them for a sign upon thine hand, and they shall be as frontlets between thine eyes.
9 And thou shalt write them upon the posts of thy house, and on thy gates.
As far as the great can opener Christmas here is my big take away. It’s not always about recreating the moment. Sometimes it’s just about retelling the story.