The first night of Hanukkah came and
went pretty much without a whimper last night in my house.
I don't know
if it had to do with the fact that my wife and I really watched our pocketbooks
this holiday season--save one gift--or that the holiday this year is so far
removed from Christmas, but it was really a very quiet celebration last night.
My son had
homework to do, and my father came home from work late, so the celebration was
pushed back a bit. My wife and I were knocked out from our respective workdays,
and I guess this all led up to a low-key celebration.
We said the
prayer for the Hanukkah lights in both Hebrew and English, lit the middle
candle, known as the shomash, and then lit the first candle, signifying the
first night of the holiday.
Now to the
gifts ...
Unlike other
years, my son didn't get anything spectacular from us, just some clothes, which
he received in full last night, some personal products (he loves the Axe
brand), and wrestling videos, of which he already has hundreds, but let's face
it, you can't have too many of those, can you?
He will get
the wrestling videos, but as is the tradition, he will get them one per night.
He will get his second one tonight.
My daughter
was already given her present on Thanksgiving because she currently lives 300
miles away from us.
My wife gave
me a Beatles T-shirt, a Beatles DVD of their performances on "The Ed
Sullivan Show," and a great video, "The Abbott and Costello Christmas
Show" (see, I am not really Scrooge) taken from their appearances on
"The Colgate Comedy Hour."
I gave her a
couple of CDs, a digital camera (not an expensive one), and a gift card to
Dunkin' Donuts, which I think she liked the best out of all the presents I got
her.
My mom and
dad bought my family a toaster oven, and gave my wife, my son and myself some
other small gifts. They gave my daughter something when they saw her for
Thanksgiving.
My father
got a DVD and a gift card for him and my mom to go to the movies. We gave my
mom a video of Lucille Ball on "The Lucy Show," which came in a nice
lunch box.
But the big
gift was for my mom. It was a combination Hanukkah/Birthday gift, as she turns
the big 8-0 on March 11. We bought her a computer, a netbook, so she can go on
the computer anywhere in the house.
I think that
not only was she surprised, she was astonished!
In lieu of
potato pancakes--which I really can't have anymore--my wife bought chocolate
covered pretzels, which were OK. You are supposed to have something sweet for
the holiday, and this fit the bill.
And then,
that was pretty much it. There were kisses and hugs all around, and then we all
retired for the night.
Pretty
low-key, but that was fine with me.
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