Holiday Traditions
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With
the holidays fast approaching, we'll soon be in the midst of family
traditions. Whether simple or involved, sacred or bawdy, traditions are
a way of doing things; a family's etiquette for an event, situation, or
in this case a holiday. Old traditions reflect a picture of your
ancestors, their countries of origin, cultures and times, while new
traditions (those breaks with traditions you think you've made have
become traditions themselves) reflect you, and your cultural
environment. Why not blend the new and the old to produce a reflection
of your entire family, contemporary and ancestral? Here are a few easy,
stress free ideas. Make it a holiday tradition to display your family heritage albums, family tree charts, and ancestral memorabilia. It will not only give a nostalgic feel to your rooms but will also encourage conversations among your other family and friends that might reveal surprising new information about your family and ancestors. Consider creating a new tradition by incorporating something from an ancestor's culture or time period into your own holidays, such as a particular food, activity or decoration your ancestor might have used as part of their holidays. It won't take much research on the Internet or in your local library to find something fun, festive and easy. Keep it small and simple if you want the tradition to survive. For example, if your ancestors were Scandinavian, you may want to bring into your traditions "First Stepping", a holiday practice in which a senior member of the family ceremoniously takes the first step into the house (or living room if you want to adapt it to modern life) officially bringing in Christmas or the New Year. Many people include a letter with their holiday card updating family and loved ones on their children or household. Why not include a newsletter with updates on the larger, extended family? If a member of each family branch provides facts or updates about their branch, it won?t be a lot of work. Be sure to exchange new addresses of those who have moved away, and include recent births, marriages, graduations and deaths. This is a great opportunity to exchange family history information as well. Even if the rest of your family doesn?t share your zeal for the research, they?ll certainly enjoy and take pride in the information. We appreciate old traditions from our ancestral lands but why not make an intentional effort to bring your own community's culture into your holidays as a matter of tradition? Living in Ohio, our family enjoys candy buckeyes - chocolate and peanut butter candies fashioned to resemble the buckeye (a nut from a tree common in Ohio) ? and we were surprised to learn that people from other parts of the country are unfamiliar with the buckeye ? candy or otherwise. We've made sure to make buckeyes a tradition so future generations will not only enjoy the delicious treat but also experience a bit of Ohio no matter where they make their home. As you practice your traditions this holiday season make sure to share with your children and loved ones the meaning or history of the traditions. This will insure that as your traditions are handed down, they will continue to link your family?s past with it?s present. |
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