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

Tuesday, 14 January 2025

Answers to Christmas Anagram Quiz by Lynne Benton

Happy New Year, everyone!   I hope you all had a really good time over Christmas/winter holiday, and that you've come back fully refreshed.

And for anyone who had a go at my Christmas Anagram quiz, here are the answers.  I hope you enjoyed doing them, and I'm sure most of you will have worked them out by now.  (And yes, to my reader who spotted my mistake: no. 7 was incorrect, having too many a's and only one c.  Sorry, everyone!)


1 Christmas Tree                                        16 Candles

2 Star                                                           17 Angels

3 Reindeer                                                  18 Sprouts

4 Jingle Bells                                              19 Stable

5 Mistletoe                                                  20 Santa Claus

6 Turkey                                                       21 Manger

7 Crackers                                                   22 Snow

8 Carols                                                       23 Shepherds

9 Mince Pies                                               24 Frankincense

10 Stockings                                               25 Mulled Wine

11 Presents                                                  26 Wrapping paper

12 Decorations                                           27 Gold

13 Tinsel                                                     28 Chocolates

14 Oranges                                                 29 Sleigh

15 Myrrh                                                     30 Poinsettia 



And, since this is my last blog for Abba, I also have to say goodbye. Now that I no longer write for children, but have begun writing for adults, I don't feel I can continue to justify my presence on this site, so with some reluctance I've decided to bow out.  However, I will keep reading other people's blogs and sometimes post comments.  There is so much of value here!

Meanwhile I'd like to thank everyone who has read my blogs over the last few years, especially those who have posted comments, and to those who organise it all so efficiently.

And I wish you all, wherever you are, a Happy 2025.  

Website: lynnebenton.com

Saturday, 14 December 2024

Christmas Quiz - Anagrams by Lynne Benton

 Hello everyone!  

Here is my annual Christmas Quiz, but this time I decided to do Christmas Anagrams.  So here is a list of things to do with Christmas, all in anagram form.  (Because some of them, especially the short words, are so easy, I’ve given you thirty.)


Enjoy!


1 CARTRIMS THESE                                      16 SLANCED

2 RATS                                                       17 GLEANS

3  DENIERRE                                                18 SUSPORT

4 JELS LEBLING                                             19 BLEAST

5 STOLE TIME                                                20 STALC SAUNA

6 YURTEK                                                      21 GRAMEN

7 AKSCARER                                                   22 OWNS

8 LORCAS                                                      23 DRESS HEPH

9 EPIC MINES                                                  24 NICER SKEFANN

10 KINGS COST                                               25 WILDEN LUME

11 TRESS PEN                                                26 PREPARING PAWP

12 CASTIN RODEO                                         27 MY HINCE

13 SILENT                                                      28 TEACH COOLS

14 GORE SAN                                                 29 SHIGLE

15 RHYMR                                                      30 INSET PATIO

 

Answers in January.

Have a lovely Christmas, everyone!




 

 

Tuesday, 3 December 2024

CHRISTMAS CRACKERS by Sharon Tregenza

 CHRISTMAS CRACKERS


I wrote these little fellas for a magazine many years ago - I found them lurking in a corner of my computer today and thought I'd post them here as a lead up to the festive season...






Turkey bones and paper

empty bottles fill the bins.

But Christmas isn't over

'til your shirt is free of pins.


We collected our gobbling turkey,

and settled it down for the night.

The next day we had it for dinner,

it sat next to me on the right.

Why not...

Mix turkey DNA

with a centipede, say,

then we'll all get a leg

of the bird Christmas day.



She's cooked and she's cleaned

the family's in clover.

But Christmas day night.

Mum's cope runneth over.


Happy holidays to all.


www.sharontregenza.com

sharontregenza@gmail.com

Sunday, 1 December 2024

CHRISTMAS, THAT KING JOHN AND ME by Penny Dolan

                                  DECEMBER GREETINGS!
                                     Free Christmas Holly Images, Download Free Christmas Holly Images png ...

This post is about King John, a character who worried me, especially at Christmas time. I was very young when I first 'met' him, and knew little about the tales of Robin Hood back then. Later, of course, I knew the monarch in a more historical light but not this first time, face to face.

I met 'my' own King John in a children’s poem that began with this familiar verse:

        King John was not a good man

        He had his little ways

        And sometimes no one spoke to him

        For days and days and days

        And men who came across him

        While walking in the town

        Gave him a supercilious stare

        Or passed with noses in the air -

        And bad King John stood dumbly there,

        Blushing beneath his crown.

I found my King John in ‘Now We Are Six’, a collection of poems by the writer A.A.Milne. He was the original author of the 'Winnie-The-Pooh' and 'The House at Pooh Corner' stories, all wonderfully and unsurpassingly illustrated by E. H. Shepard.

The poem was in a hardback poetry book, a gift from a beloved uncle on my fourth birthday. When I was three, he had given me ‘When We Were Very Young.’ Read again now, the book was probably meant to comfort my mother, as several poems and illustrations show wilful young children.

We had few children's books, so the pages were read and re-read, and the poems eventually learned by heart. Before the age of five, I could read these books (and any others) and knew King John very well. Too well, really. 

King John haunted the weeks before Christmas because I knew, deeply and secretly, that he was rather like me. I recall empathising (not that empathy was a word then) with this bad, sad, non-historical King John. I recognised my own five-year-old faults in him, as described in that first verse, and others that follow. 

I knew, and was often told, that I behaved badly, threw tantrums, was noisy, untidy and disrespecful, which must surely have been why no friends came to call. I must add a lot of balance by adding that my mostly loving grandparents, who were of strict army stock and dour habits, had not expected me or my parents to be living with them. Unfortunately, young children are not good at living under sergeant's orders or keeping quiet.

The king and I were both to blame.

King John does have one fine quality. He is hopeful. He hangs his thin single stocking from the mantelpiece, and then he climbs up on to the snowy roof and props a large envelope against the chimney stack, addressed as follows:

                    'TO ALL AND SUNDRY - NEAR AND FAR - F. CHRISTMAS IN PARTICULAR.'

Inside is his hand-written - and minimal-to-any-child-now - list of everything he wants: crackers, candy, chocolates, and an orange, and ending with his dearest wish: a big, red, india-rubber ball.  All night, King John dreams hopefully of the gifts. 

Waking, he finds his stocking hanging limp and totally empty. The worst, the expected, has happened

                                                    As I feared, nothing again for me’.

He has been proved unlovable, even to Father Christmas - and that, surely, was the terror one felt about the threat of Christmas to come.  The not-being-good enough.

So my young heart was – and still is - transfixed by the image of King John, as he stares out of his window, watching the happy boys and girls playing in the snow. A wretched man, hopeless, self-pitying and despairing. 

And then, and then, suddenly, mercifully, the poem swerves and comes in with a full-force, poignantly redemptive ending:

        A while he stood there watching,

        And envying them all . . .

        When through the window, big and red,

        There hurtled by his royal head,

        And bounced and fell upon the bed.

        An india-rubber ball!

Oh, the relief of that moment! How, as a child, that ending gave hope! Maybe one was not totally undeserving, not entirely unlovable after all? Maybe someone loved you despite all?

Then, finally - and interetingly, from a writing point of view, - the poem ends with a great outburst from the poet himself. A.A. Milne, as shocked and delighted as his reader, shouts out as loud-capitals response. Even he, breaking the fourth wall,  cannot hold back his own feelings of relief:

        AND OH, FATHER CHRISTMAS,

        MY BLESSINGS ON YOU FALL

        FOR BRINGING HIM

        A BIG RED

        INDIA-RUBBER

        BALL!

Hooray for the relief of a Happy Ending! Hooray for catching moments of happiness! Hooray for delight! And thank you for that ending and, as shown in Shepard's fine illustration, King John's joy in that big, red india-rubber ball

Thank you for reading and listening, if you still are. This odd little poem, despite the swish and swash of seasonal ads flooding screens everywhere, still captures something meaningful and magical for me. Even if, I admit, slightly lacking in total cheeriness . . .

You can find A.A.Milne's KING JOHN’S CHRISTMAS poem online for - as they say - the whole experience. Although, by now, you might be quoting the entire poem from memory yourself  . . .

Wishing you all as easy a December as possible and a Peaceful Christmas.
Penny Dolan

                                         Free Christmas Holly Images, Download Free Christmas Holly Images png ...
NOTE: THE AWFULLY BIG BLOG ADVENTURE BLOG CLOSES FOR THE HOLIDAYS ON FRIDAY 20th DECEMBER and OPENS AGAIN IN JANUARY 2025.


Saturday, 14 January 2023

My "To Do" list by Lynne Benton

MY “TO DO” LIST

I often wonder how people get on if they don't make lists!  Shopping lists, birthday lists, and most especially To Do lists - I am never without one, and I keep adding to it all the time.  (Confession: sometimes I add a job I've already done, so I can start by crossing something off!)


 So, since the first thing on my list today is "Write Blog!" I wrote a poem about my today's "TO DO" list, and here it is:

My head is fit to burst
With all the things I haven’t done,
It’s time to make a list of jobs,
And tick them one by one.

Must ring Aunt Jane and thank her
For my lovely Christmas gift.
She’ll talk for hours, I know, but then
It gives her such a lift.

Then I must email Jennifer
I need to ask her how
Her operation went – I do so hope
She’s feeling better now.

And then I’ll text my brother,
Who is stuck in Cameroon,
I hope he’s caught a plane by now
To bring him home quite soon.

I’ve also got to strip the beds
And put the sheets to wash,
Then make them up for grandsons three –
By Thursday, what a squash!

Then I must make a shopping list
Of food I need to seek,
But first I ought to work out
What we’re eating all this week.

And in between these other jobs
I ought to clean and dust
And put the hoover round the house,
And tidy up, I must!

 I know I need to do these things,
To make the house look bright,
But one thing I’ve not mentioned yet –
I’ve got a book to write!

 So maybe I’ll forget the rest
And turn my laptop on,
I’ll write my thousand words, and then
The morning will be gone!

So what about my list, you ask?
I shake my head in sorrow.
I know those jobs will still be there -
I’ll do them all tomorrow. 

And that's the way it often goes, I'm afraid.  I'm sure many writers are the same - it's a question of priorities, and somehow dusting is never going to take precedence over getting on with my writing!

The other thing I promised to do today was to give you a list of my answers to last month's Christmas Song Quiz.  So here they are:

1) I'm Dreaming of a White Christmas, Just like the ones I used to know.  2) Make my wish come true, All I want for Christmas is you.  3) I saw mummy kissing Santa Claus underneath the mistletoe last night.  4) Dashing through the snow in a one-horse open sleigh.  5) So here it is, merry Christmas, everybody's having fun.  6) Have yourself a merry little Christmas, let your heart be light.  7) Chestnuts roasting on an open fire, Jack Frost nipping at your nose.  8) Rocking around the Christmas tree, have a happy holiday.  9) It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas, everywhere you go.  10) Oh I wish it could be Christmas every day, let the bells ring out for Christmas!

I hope you had fun with them.  (And one of my followers produced her own set of ten further questions, but I'll let her give the answers to hers in the Comments.  Many thanks for those - they provided my family with even more entertainment - and it was nice for me to have to work some out too!)

website: www.lynnebenton.com

Latest book:

Billy and the Queen (available via Amazon)



Tuesday, 20 December 2022

Joy - Joan Lennon

 


For me, Christmas is about joy, children and music.* Here they all are, in one happy video, courtesy of the Goede Hoop Marimba Band and Vivaldi.

*And books, of course.


Joan Lennon website

Joan Lennon Instagram

Saturday, 18 December 2021

Old Christmas customs, strange beliefs and superstitions - by Lu Hersey

 Our superstitions and customs, like the way we live, have changed beyond recognition over the last century. Possibly the most superstitious thing you'll do this Christmas is cross your fingers you haven't burnt the turkey. You might still honour the old custom of decking your halls (ok, house, flat, room, whatever) with holly and ivy, but even that may well involve fake evergreens made in China. The old significance of evergreens as symbols of enduring and renewed life is almost forgotten. But worry not - this post is to tell you a bit more about some of the once commonly held seasonal customs and superstitions you might want to bring back - and a few you definitely won't. At the very least, your new found knowledge might lead to a host of new Christmas story ideas...


Most of the changes are down to modern lifestyles. How many of us go out to gather a Christmas faggot these days? Even the meaning of the word has changed. Faggots were originally simply bundles of sticks, and a Christmas faggot was a very special bundle. Nine ash sticks, bound with nine strips of ash cordage, brought into the home to burn on the Christmas fire and bring luck to the household for the coming year. A piece of unburnt ash stick was always kept to light the fire the following year for even more luck. (Incidentally, in case you're interested, faggot was first used as a term of abuse in the sixteenth century - against women, not men. Usually old, poor women who scraped a living collecting firewood.)

Anyway, a lot of old Christmas customs were to do with fire and light - traditions that probably hark back long before Christianity, and are more to do with yule and other midwinter festivals that celebrate a turning of the year and the return of the sun. 

Candles, especially beeswax candles, were a luxury form of lighting and weren't always seen as bringing light to your life - according to one superstition, lighting a candle from the fire in the hearth would lead to a miserable death in the workhouse (fortunately not an option these days, and the worst that will happen is you'll probably melt the candle if you try it). There are many superstitions about leaving candles burning in empty rooms (all kinds of doom can follow). But at Christmas, these rules change - a special Christmas candle left to burn through the night on Christmas Eve brings light, warmth and plenty for the following year. (Though I'm not sure there's any responsible health and safety guidance on this one..)


In Wales, watching the shadows made by the firelight of everyone present on Christmas Day might tell you who was going to die the following year. Anyone whose shadow was missing a head was destined for the afterlife in the coming months. So if you happen to be spending Christmas in a room lit only by romantic firelight, I'd advise taking care where you sit to make sure your shadow is complete. Just in case.

Many superstitions involved animals. It was a widely held belief that cows turn to the east at midnight on Christmas Eve and kneel in adoration at the holy birth, just as their ancestors did in the stable all those years ago.  Most of us are unlikely to test this by traipsing through fields of cowpats to find out - and anyway, according to another superstition, cows have the gift of speech on Christmas Eve and (of course) it's bad luck to listen to them. However, if you're up for going out at dawn on Christmas day, sheep (whose sheeply ancestors were also reportedly present in the stable at Bethlehem) are said to bow three times towards the east at first light. Probably because they can see the grass better facing that way at dawn, but who am I to question animal motivation?

Because the best candles were made of beeswax, bees were considered very special - constantly humming god's praises, providing delicious honey, and making beeswax for church altar candles. If you happen to keep bees, or know someone who does, it might be worth checking out the hives on Christmas Eve at midnight. Your bees (according to tradition) will be humming Psalm 100. Curious? Psalm 100 starts Make a joyful noise to the Lord - and bees humming surely counts as a joyful noise...

And so we come to food and all that midwinter feasting - starting with mince pies. Apparently if you eat a mince pie on every day of the 12 days of Christmas, you'll have twelve happy months in the following year. You should also accept any mince pies offered to you, even if you're already stuffed with the things. Refusing something that signifies good will and abundance can lead to a year of poverty (but possibly a slimmer waistline).


Bread baked on Christmas day was believed to have magical and healing virtues. If you kept a Christmas baked loaf in the house, it protected you from fire, accident and misfortune for the following year. Kept in the stable (not that many of us have one, but you never know when this information might come in handy) your Christmas loaf keeps away mice and weevils if you shove it in the corn.  The magical loaf can also cure dysentery, diarrhoea and stomach pain. Apparently.

There are many oddities I haven't time to cover here, but the strangest mostly involve people's need to find out their future - and Christmas Eve was supposedly a good time to do it. Like the 'dumb cake', a way of finding out who you were going to marry. Want to give it a go? 

First make a cake with flour, eggs, water and salt (between one and three people can try this at the same time). If there's just one of you, you carve your initials on the top of the dumb cake, leaving space for the initials of your future spouse. Their spirit/doppelganger will magically come to add their initials next to yours overnight - though you have to leave the door open, or something terrible will happen. So definitely wouldn't actually recommend trying this if you live in the inner city... 

If there are three of you, divide the dumb cake into three, take a piece each up to your room (walking backwards up the stairs) and eat your portion before going to sleep. You will dream of your future partner. Or get chronic indigestion. Possibly both.


I won't even start on the watching in the church porch idea. Ok, twist my arm...want to know who's going to die in the parish in the following year? Go to the church porch on Christmas Eve and wait there for an hour before and after midnight. At some point (usually around midnight), the forms of those who are soon to kark it will appear before you. Of course there's always the risk that you might be among them...

On that happy note, it only leaves me to wish you all a very merry Christmas (or whatever seasonal celebration you enjoy) and a happy new year. Preferably free of spectres or overdose of mince pies.


Lu Hersey

Friday, 18 December 2020

A load of old baubles - by Lu Hersey

People have been celebrating the turn of the year at midwinter for thousands of years. Originally marking the winter solstice, people decorated their homes with evergreens and fir branches as a reminder of the coming spring. The Romans celebrated Saturnalia over the solstice period, with decorations to honour the god Saturn. With the coming of Christianity, the evergreens came to represent the promise of everlasting life with God. 

Christmas trees came much later, an idea thought up by either Estonians or Latvians (they're still arguing about who thought of it first). Either way, they first appeared in town squares thanks to the Brotherhood of Blackheads. I went down a google rabbit hole to find out more about the Brotherhood of Blackheads, so to save you a bit of time and effort, they were a group of Christian merchants (male, single) who banded together to put down an uprising by the indigenous pagan population of Estonia, who wanted to get rid of Christians and foreigners. The Brotherhood then started an annual Christmas celebration, dancing around the fir trees they put up in the centre of town.

The first indoor tree we know about was erected in in the guild house in Breman in Germany in 1570, and decorated with apples, nuts, pretzels and paper flowers. It possibly wasn't the very first indoor tree, but it's the first one someone took the trouble to make a note of in the town records.  

There are various legends as to why the people of Germany started bringing fir trees into their own homes. The most popular is that Martin Luther was gazing up at the stars sparkling through the trees one night, and thought of Jesus, who left the stars of heaven to come to earth at Christmas. Luther brought a small tree indoors to tell the story to his children. 

Whatever the truth of this legend, indoor Christmas trees soon became popular throughout Germany, and were decorated with lighted candles (to represent stars), edible treats and roses made of paper or gold foil. A figure of the baby Jesus was placed on the top, later replaced with either a star, to represent the Star of Bethlehem, or an angel, who brought the news of the birth to the shepherds. Glass makers started making tree ornaments, and the Christmas tree bauble was born. 

Tinsel also started in Germany, originally made from beaten silver. The idea behind tinsel is connected to traditional folktales about the Christmas spider. All versions of this folktale centre on a poor family who can't afford to decorate their tree and leave it bare on Christmas Eve. Overnight a spider covers the tree in webs, and on Christmas morning the family awake to find the webs have miraculously turned to silver or gold. To this day, spider ornaments and silver webs for trees are popular in the Ukraine and over much of northern Europe, as they are considered lucky. 

Christmas trees were unknown in Britain until Queen Charlotte (the German wife of King George III) had one set up in Windsor Lodge in 1800. The idea caught on fast, and by Victoria's reign, anybody who was anybody had one in their home. All the first Christmas trees were decorated with lighted candles - which led to rather a lot of house fires. Fortunately someone invented strings of electric lights sometime in the early 20th century, and so these days few of us still run the risk of lighted candles. (Though I know one German family who do, and only put the tree up on Christmas Eve - and have to admit, candles look AMAZING)

Everyone has their own decorating preferences for Christmas trees. Some go for glittering white lights and themed baubles, which look tasteful and classy - and some don't. Our family always has coloured tree lights, for sentimental reasons - my grandmother loved coloured lights and she lived with us when I was a child. Every year, she'd repeat the story of how they reminded her of her honeymoon, which she and my grandfather spent visiting the Blackpool illuminations. Apparently they'd never seen anything so magical. (Of course it was a very long time ago, and neither of them had electricity at home back then). Anyway, our coloured Christmas tree lights remind me of her, and the warmth and love she brought into my life.

My mother aspired to white lights because she thought they were much more tasteful and had real class. But being a child of the war generation that wasted nothing, she could never bring herself to spend money on new white ones until the old ones broke. Unfortunately for her, my grandmother's coloured lights proved immortal (well, allowing for the odd blown bulb every year that my father painstakingly replaced - checking every single bulb until he found the faulty one) and somehow she never managed to achieve her white light goal. 

I often look wistfully at the beautiful white tree lights sparkling in other people's windows, and think of my mother. Perhaps one day I'll get some like the ones she aspired to and put them round the tree in memory of her - and that will tell a different story. And I will wish she could see them, along with the family she didn't live long enough to meet.

Our tree baubles are a hotchpotch, a family history of the last 30 years in bauble form. Some brought back from travels abroad, some given by friends, some chosen in shops, some handmade. Everyone has their personal favourites, and there's an annual squabble about which ones hang nearest the front (though this year, thanks to Covid, I got to dictate. But I missed the squabble. It's part of the tradition). 

If you have a Christmas tree, it probably tells your own story. But whether you do or not, I hope you have a peaceful and stress-free festive season, after what's been a very strange and difficult year for us all.


Lu Hersey 

Tuesday, 15 December 2020

The Writing Gift - by Rowena House

 

For December, I want to be festive and positive, despite Brexit and Covid19 and Climate Change. Here, I wanted to say how precious the good things are in bad times. Family. Home. Nature. Writing.

Our new puppy brightens the future and softens the shadows of grief.

Sadly, I can’t force festive positivity today. It’s Monday morning, and the piece I drafted on Sunday is trite, with a naff extended metaphor about writing as a gift. What can I salvage from it?

Writing has been a gift this year. Not the doing of it; that’s been hard for a lot of us. But planning the work-in-progress, however slowly and sporadically, provided the time and head space to investigate and imagine, to analyse and gain perspective.

This Yuletide I’m planning to light a candle to whatever ancestors bequeathed us writers with the genetic code for curiosity of mind, plus the ability and drive to turn thoughts into words.

This quote, attributed to Jack Kerouac, sums up this end-of-year feeling nicely: “One day I will find the right words, and they will be simple.” 

  

I’m also deeply grateful for the sense of connection with other writers throughout the year. Thank you especially to writer friends for long, supportive phone calls, and to Arvon for Zoom masterclasses. Writers on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter have kept open windows into our world, too. Thank you.

As I blathered on about yesterday (having googled writing as a gift), creativity is also about giving. If the ideas and insights we get from research, planning and plotting are what we receive, it is the stories we create out of them that we give back.

See? I said it was trite. Nevertheless, in difficult times, I find that separation reassuring.

The intrinsic value of writing (the received bits) can stand alone for now; there’s no need to worry about findings readers or pitching to editors; that way madness lies.

It’s OK, too, if the forge of inspiration turns out to be stone cold (to mix metaphors, soz.)  Just stack the ore of the story into a corner; there’ll be time to sift through it one day.

A form of giving that’s been hard to accomplish this year is teaching creative writing. I hugely admire all of you who’ve kept going remotely. Young people need to express their thoughts and feelings more than ever. Congratulations if you gave them that gift.

Ordinarily, I try to develop these blogs into something worth reading, but the puppy needs walking, logs brought in (our central heating boiler died), There are business calls to make, an invoice to be emailed, then we've got to go to my elderly dad's.

The Christmas tree is still in its pot in a quiet corner of the garden where it lives between its short weeks of glory, and for a few more days the decorations will have remain in their boxes.  

Meanwhile, I hope you are better prepared. More festive and positive. Feeling resilient in the face of whatever 2021 will fling at us.

I wish you as happy a midwinter festival as your circumstances allow, and send love to those grieving, sick, fearful, hungry or homeless here and abroad.

May the New Year be a creative, caring time for you and yours.