Stories From Women Who Walk

60 Seconds For Story Prompt Friday: A Cup of Christmas Tea.

Episode Summary

This Season turns on generosity and giving of ourselves to others. Wishing you the magic of memory, sharing and stories.

Episode Notes

Coming to you from Whidbey Island, Washington this is 60 Seconds, your daily dose of hope, imagination, wisdom, stories, practical tips, and general riffing on this and that.

Tom Hegg wrote A Cup of Christmas Tea in 1981 at the request of his pastor to celebrate the church’s 125th anniversary. Drawing on childhood memories he composed a poem about an event that may sound familiar no matter where we come from, whether we celebrate Christmas or Festivus For the Rest of Us. This Season, more than any other, turns on generosity. In that spirit I share Tom Hegg’s poem with you.  

"The log was in the fireplace, all spiced and set to burn

At last the yearly Christmas race was in the clubhouse turn.

The cards were in the mail, all the gifts beneath the tree

And 30 days reprieve till VISA could catch up with me.

 

Though smug satisfaction seemed the order of the day

Something still was nagging me and would not go away

A week before I got a letter from my old great Aunt

It read: Of course I'll understand completely if you can't

But if you find you have some time how wonderful if we

Could have a little chat and share a cup of Christmas tea.

 

She'd had a mild stroke that year which crippled her left side

Though house bound now my folks had said it hadn't hurt her pride

They said: She'd love to see you. What a nice thing it would be

For you to go and maybe have a cup of Christmas tea.

 

But boy! I didn't want to go. Oh, what a bitter pill

To see an old relation and how far she'd gone downhill

I remembered her as vigorous, as funny and as bright

I remembered Christmas Eves when she regaled us half the night.

 

I didn't want to risk all that. I didn't want the pain.

I didn't need to be depressed. I didn't need the strain.

And what about my brother? Why not him? She's his aunt, too!

I thought I had it justified, but then before I knew

The reasons not to go I so painstakingly had built

Were cracking wide and crumbling in an acid rain of guilt.

 

I put on boots and gloves and cap, shame stinging every pore

And armed with squeegee, sand and map, I went out my front door.

I drove in from the suburbs to the older part of town

The pastels of the newer homes gave way to gray and brown.

 

I had that disembodied feeling as the car pulled up

And stopped beside the wooden house that held the Christmas cup.

How I got up to her door I really couldn't tell...

I watched my hand rise up and press the button of the bell.

I waited, aided by my nervous rocking to and fro

And just as I was thinking I should turn around and go

I heard the rattle of the china in the hutch against the wall

The triple beat of two feet and a crutch came down the hall.

The clicking of the door latch and the sliding of the bolt

And a little swollen struggle popped it open with a jolt.

 

She stood there pale and tiny, looking fragile as an egg

I forced myself from staring at the brace that held her leg.

And though her thick bifocals seemed to crack and spread her eyes

Their milky and refracted depths lit up with young surprise.

"Come in! Come in!"  She laughed the words. She took me by the hand

And all my fears dissolved away as if by her command.

We went inside and then before I knew how to react

Before my eyes and ears and nose was Christmas past, alive, intact!

 

The scent of candied oranges, of cinnamon and pine,

The antique wooden soldiers in their military line,

The porcelain Nativity I'd always loved so much,

The Dresden and the crystal I'd been told I mustn't touch.

My spirit fairly bolted like a child out of class

And danced among the ornaments of calico and glass.

 

Like magic I was six again, deep in a Christmas spell

Steeped in the million memories the boy inside knew well.

And here among old Christmas cards so lovingly displayed

A special place of honor for the ones we kids had made.

And there, beside her rocking chair, the center of it all

My great Aunt stood and said how nice it was that I had come to call.

 

I sat and rattled on about the weather and the flu

She listened very patiently then smiled and said, "What's new?"

Thoughts and words began to flow. I started making sense

I lost the phony breeziness I use when I get tense.

She was still passionately interested in everything I did.

She was positive. Encouraging. Like when I was a kid.

Simple generalities still sent her into fits

She demanded the specifics. The particulars. The bits.

 

We talked about the limitations that she'd had to face

She spoke with utter candor and with humor and good grace.

Then defying the reality of crutch and straightened knee

On wings of hospitality she flew to brew the tea.

I sat alone with feelings that I hadn't felt in years.

I looked around at Christmas through a thick hot blur of tears.

 

And the candles and the holly she'd arranged on every shelf

The impossibly good cookies she still somehow baked herself.

But these rich and tactile memories became quite pale and thin

When measured by the Christmas my great Aunt kept deep within.

Her body halved and nearly spent, but my great Aunt was whole

I saw a Christmas miracle, the triumph of a soul.

 

The triple beat of two feet and a crutch came down the hall

The rattle of the china in the hutch against the wall.

She poured two cups. She smiled and then she handed one to me

And then we settled back and had a cup of Christmas tea."     [Tom Hegg, author; Tristan Publishing, Inc.] 

 

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Production Team: Quarter Moon Story Arts

Music: Mer’s Waltz from Crossing the Waters by Steve Schuch & Night Heron Music

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