The perfect Christmas Tree
1997-12-14 07:36:59.0
During this holiday season in my youth, I was always disappointed with my
father, who brought home some of the most miserable excuses for Christmas
trees. He would grab the handsaw about a week after thanksgiving, and spend
very little time choosing greenery to decorate our house.
"There is just no excuse for spending twelve hard-earned dollars for a
tree we will throw away at the first of the year," he would bellow in that
loud authoritarian voice of his. Usually we used large limbs growing out
from an evergreen in the middle of the old unused windmill tower in the
front yard. Those limbs were flat on the bottom side, so they would go flat
against the wall and not take as much space in our small house. We never
could go around our trees with tinsel and lights, as the flat side against
the wall was full of dead limbs and contorted branches. Strangely enough,
the front of the tree often didn't look too bad, especially after my
sisters would apply the popcorn strings, icicles, and hand-made ornaments
that accumulated each year. It seemed someone made something each year. A
star my middle sister cut out from a bean can lid usually held the place of
honor at the top of the .tree.
As we looked at that sorry excuse for a tree during the season, we
usually grew to accept the imperfections, and hated to see it go on New
Years Day. Still, I promised myself when I got old enough, my family would
have a proper tree in the house, and not a beat-up scrap from a bush in the
yard.
When my wife and I met in college, her parents had decided not to put up
a tree, since their only daughter had left the house and was living in the
dorm. Sue and I decided we would re-start the tradition, and spent a lot of
time each year picking the perfect tree. We went from place to place where
trees were sold, including cut-your-own lots, in an effort to find the
perfect tree to decorate for the season. We would bring the tree home,
assured that each year we had attained decoration perfection, only to find
something wrong each year. We had a large illuminated snowman, which almost
always found a place in a bare spot somewhere on the tree. Tinsel would
cover up misplaced branches, and sometimes old magazines would have to be
placed under one leg of the stand, in an effort to compensate for a crooked
trunk not noticed until the tree had been placed in the living room.
Somehow, though, after the tree was up, we would all back off and
exclaim each year, "You know, it's just the best tree we ever had!"
Now I realize all the friends I have made over the years are just like
those Christmas trees from the past. None of us are perfect, just as none of
our trees are perfect-and never will be. We accept our friends along with
their faults, and try to help each other muddle through this life. Along
with a little help from our friends, we become the best people we can
possibly be, just as each Christmas tree was the "best we ever had."
I look back at all the attempts for a perfect tree and realize a lot more
about what I have been searching for all my life. Now I realize the true
celebration of the season. Only one perfect being lived, and it's His birth
that we celebrate on Christmas!