Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Into the Spirit of Things


Festivus

This has to have something
to do with Christmas,
right?
I just wrapped
a couple of presents
and now feel
much more christmasy!
I even wrapped a couple
of “gag” presents – such fun!
I’ve just sat down
with a glass of bubbly –
a present…
and the Carols in the Domain sing-fest
is about to begin.
I’m going to watch
and hum along to the carols…
I’m going to get
a little more festive.
I’m so tired… so tired!
But, today…
my Christmas present
to myself turned up.
I now have to new lounge chairs!
Woohoo!
They go beautifully
with my brand new floors.
My house smells different –
and a little funny
(new flooring will do that, I guess!)
and my house looks very different.
 I love it!
It’s time to get festive!!

Friday, December 21, 2012

Carols


Go Caroling Day

I don’t know how
I would react if a group
of people suddenly stood
at my front door,
singing carols.
I think I would be pretty surprised…
I can’t imagine it happening.
I wonder how people would react
 if I suddenly appeared
at their doors?
Today is Go Carolling Day,
but… here in Australia,
if we want to go carolling,
we go to the park
and sing along
at the annual carols night.
We sit around a picnic
and talk as people sing to us.
(Carols in the Domain
in Melbourne
started in 1938!)
We don’t walk around
and sing to each other.
I never really thought
about this before…
My voice isn’t cheerful enough
for me to go singing carols
to my neighbours, so…
unfortunately,
I will give this day a miss.
Perhaps I could sing along
to a Christmas CD?
 
I did learn that carols
were very popular 
from the 1130s to the 1150s.
After this time,
Prodestants took over
and carols were regarded as
non-essential parts
of the Catholic religion
and were "ditched"!
Luckily, they still fill
our ears as we rush
to the shops to finish
our last minute
Christmas shopping!
Happy Caroling!

 

Bar Hum Bug


Humbug Day

I’m guessing this is for those
anti-Christmas types…
and, I don’t mean those
who celebrate
different religious events
instead of the birth of Christ -
which to all kids
means the arrival of Santa!
I mean those people
who just don’t believe
 in Santa (What?)
or those who just don’t want
 to be swept up
in the Christmas Cheer…
Perhaps, they just don’t l
ike those carols!
Sadly, I am feeling a little this way
 at the moment.
I cannot believe how busy
I have been lately.
I am longing for the time
when I can lie back a
nd just relax for a little while.
Work has been amazingly busy,
 with obligations
and commitments rolling in,
one after the other.
On Wednesday, just as things
were about to ease up
 and the kids were about to
start their holidays…
one of my girls
broke her collar bones.
Nasty for her!
Fiddly paperwork for me!
Today, however, finally…
is my last day of work!
We’ll enjoy some bacon and eggs
 for breakfast
and will pretend to be interested
 in our fellow teachers
as they present to us
about Literacy and Numeracy.
 After celebrating the end of
the year last night,
a few people may need
 the grease of the bacon
and listening may become
very difficult… but,
it’s the last day!
There will be a few of my locals
 gathering at a nearby
watering hole this evening,
 downing a little bubbly
and celebrating the fact
that we have made it!
 I think, with a little bubbly
and a few laughs,
and no more deadlines looming
 (apart from Santa’s arrival
and Christmas Day!)
I will have a little less
 of the bar-humbug-ness
and a little more
Christmas Cheer.

How’s your Humbug-ness?

Friday, December 7, 2012

Inspired into Writing

Letter Writing Day
I am feeling the pressure
 of the Christmas card season.
I am a little,
no… very slack
when it comes to
sending Christmas cards.
But, today is
Letter Writing Day,
so… today…
I am going to write on
some Christmas cards!
I will, I promise!
I will write on them…
sort out some envelopes…
and mail them!
Woohoo!
Today is not only a
“crazy day”
it is an Inspiring Day!
 
(Check your mailbox!)
 

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Nick and Shoes


Can’t wait until Christmas?

You don’t have to!
Go and check your shoes…
Right now!
Is there anything in them?
Are they filled with lollies?
Apples or Nuts?
Coins?
Did you find a present?

No?
Maybe you didn’t leave
 your shoes by the chimney?
Maybe next year.
Today is St Nicholas Day.
Kids leave their shoes
by the chimney,
Good Old Nick turns up
 during the night and leaves
 a small gift in the kids' (stinky) shoes!
I did read about one poor
 teacher’s story
about this tradition.
She taught some childen
who were lucky enough
to have been visited by St Nicholas.
 They came to school,
excited and happy to tell their
classmates all about it.
 Those poor kids who were not
 visited by St Nick were
devastated and crying,
asking why they were not visited!
Oh, imagine!
I wonder how worried those kids
 were on Christmas Eve –
and how relieved
they must have been
 to wake up to presents
 on Christmas Day!
On that note – I have had
to supress a grin or two
when the kids in my class
 have told me about seeing Santa –
the REAL one!!
Oh, the fun of Christmas
when Santa is still real!

Thursday, December 22, 2011

I Believe

So, it’s impossible for Santa to travel the world, dropping presents down chimneys and eating biscuits wherever he lands...

Apparently not!

Cutting-edge science explains how Santa is able to deliver toys to good girls and boys around the world in one night.

If you're sceptical of Santa's abilities to deliver presents to millions of homes and children in just one night, North Carolina State University's Dr. Larry Silverberg, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, can explain the science and engineering principles that allow the Jolly Old Elf to pull off the magical feat year after year.

Santa and his North Pole elves have a lot going on under the funny-looking hats, Silverberg says. Their advanced knowledge of electromagnetic waves, the space/time continuum, nanotechnology, genetic engineering and computer science easily trumps the know-how of contemporary scientists.

Silverberg says that Santa has a personal pipeline to children's thoughts - via a listening antenna that combines technologies currently used in cell phones and EKGs - which informs him that Mary in Kiama hopes for a surfboard, while Michael from Minnamurra wants a snowboard. A sophisticated signal processing system filters the data, giving Santa clues on who wants what, where children live, and even who's been bad or good. Later, all this information will be processed in an onboard sleigh guidance system, which will provide Santa with the most efficient delivery route.

Silverberg adds that letters to Santa via snail mail still get the job done, however.

Silverberg is not so naïve as to think that Santa and his reindeer can travel approximately 200 million square miles - making stops in some 80 million homes - in one night. Instead, he posits that Santa uses his knowledge of the space/time continuum to form what Silverberg calls "relativity clouds."

"Based on his advanced knowledge of the theory of relativity, Santa recognizes that time can be stretched like a rubber band, space can be squeezed like an orange and light can be bent," Silverberg says. "Relativity clouds are controllable domains - rips in time - that allow him months to deliver presents while only a few minutes pass on Earth. The presents are truly delivered in a wink of an eye."

With a detailed route prepared and his list checked twice through the onboard computer on the technologically advanced sleigh, Santa is ready to deliver presents. His reindeer - genetically bred to fly, balance on rooftops and see well in the dark - don't actually pull a sleigh loaded down with toys. Instead, each house becomes Santa's workshop as he utilizes a nano-toymaker to fabricate toys inside the children's homes. The presents are grown on the spot, as the nano-toymaker creates - atom by atom - toys out of snow and soot, much like DNA can command the growth of organic material like tissues and body parts.

And there's really no need for Santa to enter the house via chimney, although Silverberg says he enjoys doing that every so often. Rather, the same relativity cloud that allows Santa to deliver presents in what seems like a wink of an eye is also used to "morph" Santa into people's homes.

Finally, many people wonder how Santa and the reindeer can eat all the food left out for them. Silverberg says they take just a nibble at each house. The remainder is either left in the house or placed in the sleigh's built-in food dehydrator, where it is preserved for future consumption. It takes a long time to deliver all those presents, after all.

"This is our vision of Santa's delivery method, given the human, physical and engineering constraints we face today," Silverberg says. "Children shouldn't put too much credence in the opinions of those who say it's not possible to deliver presents all over the world in one night. It is possible, and it's based on plausible science."

Aussie Jingle Bells

I’m dreaming of a white Christmas…
With chestnuts roasting on an open fire…
With icicles hanging from the roof and
snowmen sitting in the front yard.
Dreaming is right!
In Australia –
people are roasting in the summer heat
And the grass in the lawn is crunchy
and brown from the sun’s heat
Here’s a Jingle Bells song… Aussie style

Dashing through the bush
In a rusty Holden Ute
Kicking up the dust
Esky in the boot
Kelpie by my side
Singing Christmas songs
It’s summer time and I am in
My singlet, shorts & thongs



OH, JINGLE BELLS, JINGLE BELLS
JINGLE ALL THE WAY
CHRISTMAS IN AUSTRALIA
ON A SCORCHING SUMMER’S DAY
JINGLE BELLS, JINGLE BELLS
CHRISTMAS TIME IS BEAUT
OH WHAT FUN IT IS TO RIDE
IN A RUSTY HOLDEN UTE

Engine’s getting hot
Dodge the kangaroos
Swaggy climbs aboard
He is welcome too
All the family is there
Sitting by the pool
Christmas day, the Aussie way
By the barbecue!

OH, JINGLE BELLS, JINGLE BELLS…

Come the afternoon
Grandpa has a doze
The kids and uncle Bruce
Are swimming in their clothes
The time comes round to go
We take a family snap
Then pack the car and all shoot through
Before the washing up

OH, JINGLE BELLS, JINGLE BELLS…


 
 So, Santa ditches the sleigh for the Aussie ute…
He ditches the reindeer for the kelpie dog. 
He’s dashing down the country roads
with an esky/cooler of beer
in the boot/trunk of the car.
Santa ditches that heavy red coat
for an Aussie singlet and some shorts.
He ditches the black boots for some rubber thongs.
Being a caring guy, he picks up the swaggie –
a term relating way back to the 1930’s Depression –
but today’s long-term,
scruffy backpacker would be the same thing.
Before long, an uncle has pushed some kid
into the pool – resulting in a few other
people being tossed into the pool
– clothes and all.
Knowing they won’t get together for a while,
the family huddles into a group –
smiles and photos are taken…
And then
It’s time…
The kitchen is roasting with the
heat of the day
and the crazy tradition
of roasting meat for hours. 
Dishes, plates, cups and cutlery
fill every surface of the kitchen…
leading to the sneaky – but crucial…
Shooting through before the washing up
(but possibly after a few feeble
offers to do the dishes!)
Happy Christmas – Aussie Style