Posts Tagged ‘Christmas’

  • Christmas at the Creche!

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    “Ho, Ho, Ho! Papai Noel Chegou!!”  was the cry we were greeted with as our small caravan of three cars, not camels, arrived at the daycare center, or Creche, in Santa Maria.  The kids were chanting “Ho, Ho, Ho, Santa is Here!!” because we were bringing these kids Christmas gifts.  They all come from very poor families, and live in a rather poor neighborhood, and otherwise don’t receive any gifts.  Their excitement was contagious and quickly spread to the church group, made up of Americans and Brazilians.

    The kids sang for us, and then we taught them new songs and one team member had a puppet and told the kids a Christmas story about the first Christmas with the puppet.  The kids loved it!  There were smiles all around, as the kids waited in anticipation to get to take their presents home.  We were glad to share the real meaning of Christmas with them, as well as love on and give to those who have less than we do.

    We gave the kids a snack, and had a chance to play with them.  We sort of gave out the gifts to some kids, but they weren’t allowed to unwrap them.  Can you imagine 30+ 2-6 year olds all opening up Christmas gifts at once?  What chaos that would be… so we took photos with the kids we bought the gifts for, and when their parents got them, they took the gifts home to open.

    This visit to a project was a nice change for me.  I wasn’t leading it,which was different.  Almost everyone spoke Portuguese and English, so no translating for me either.  I wasn’t even interviewing the co-ordinators of the project or anything, as I usually do.  I was just free, absolutely free.I was able to play with the kids, photograph them playing, see their joy in receiving gifts, and be reminded that we give gifts to these kids just as the magi gave gifts to baby Jesus.  We, the rich, the middle class, the modern day magi, took time to give thoughtful gifts for these children, born into destitute situations.  Many come from broken families, born out of wedlock, the mother pregnant without being married, like little baby Jesus’ family was.  We never know who these children will grow up to be, like Jesus came from such a humble family’s beginnings, yet grew up to be the Savior of the World.  We give to kids we don’t even know, to kids we meet when we give the gift, in the same manner as the magi gave to a baby they had never met.  But the magi knew he was special.  Like we all know these kids are special.As we celebrate Christmas, we must not forget the real reason why we give gifts, and why we celebrate.  And if you have the opportunity to give an Angel Tree gift, or an Operation Christmas Child shoebox, or donate to a local homeless shelter, please take the opportunity you have to bless someone else and show them what Christmas is really all about.

  • Peace in Rio

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    I’m just posting quickly, as it i late here, that Rio de Janeiro is in crisis.  What happening isn’t making it to the news outside of Brazil much.

    Basically, the police, army, marines, special forces, etc have invaded an entire favela complex of 9 favelas and everyone who lives there either had to flee or has to stay in their houses without chance of rescue or getting out safely.

    Unfortunately, because of the way things go here in Brazil, I can’t say what I really think about this whole thing online…

    I do believe that the govt is trying to “clean up” the city and get rid of favelas for the Olympics and World Cup that are coming up in the next few years.  But, killing people and forcing them out of their houses, and searching through every house, turning everything upside down is not a just nor fair nor right way to make a violent city get any less violent.

    I am not for the drug trade, but I believe in mercy, and the ones who are taking over the favela are merciless.  The official death count hovers around 40, but the “official” count is not anywhere near the real count.  We need peace in Rio, but more violence and street war is never the answer.

    War does not bring peace.  In this season of Christmas, when we celebrate the Prince of Peace coming to earth, take a few moments and pray for Peace in Rio.

  • $0 Christmas Wreath

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    I’ll admit, I haven’t been too motivated to make Christmas decorations recently. I’ve made a few so far, but I haven’t been thinking about Christmas much at all. However, I did make this really cute wreath. Its made out of paper, cardboard, and ribbon. Really easy too.

    First I cut out a ring of cardboard from the back of a sketchpad. Thanks to my college art teacher, who actually had us do that for a project in class, I figured it was ok to semi-destroy a sketchpad I never use.

    I used little green paper candy wrappers for the foliage part of the wreath. These were leftover from candies from our wedding. They are kind of like mini cupcake papers. But they were wrapping chocolates, and the chocolates were also wrapped in plastic wrappers, so no need to worry about ants with the green paper wrappers.

    I glued the wrappers on the cardboard ring, overlapping their edges. Then I waited until the glue dried to wrap the ribbon around the wreath. The ribbon is this awful feeling cheap-o ribbon I got to use on wedding invitations… I have alot of it left, and just want to use it up, it feels stiff and scratchy. Can’t really use it on much besides things that hang on the wall.

    I wrapped the ribbon around and taped it in the back.  I didn’t feel like taking the time to glue it, and it turned out just fine being taped.  Then I glued a bow on the front.  And my wreath is finished and hanging on the wall!  And I spent $0 on it!

  • Operation Christmas Child

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    Its that time of year we’ve all been waiting for!  Its SHOEBOX time!!!

    What am I talking about?  Shoeboxes?

    Operation Christmas Child Shoeboxes! Operation Christmas Child is a ministry of Samaritan’s Purse that uses a simple shoebox filled with toys, gifts, clothes, school supplies, and candy to reach out to the lives of children all over the world.

    Simply fill an empty shoebox with age-appropriate gifts and drop it off at a local church or other drop-off location.  The boxes go around the world and are given as Christmas gifts to children who otherwise wouldn’t have any gifts.  It is often the first gift that child has ever received.

    One of the kids I nannied for a few years ago had received a shoebox in the children’s home she had lived in Latvia.  She told me that the hair things were the best part!  Of course, she was a typical pre-teen girl!

    The boxes go to real kids, with real lives, pains, joys, and need.  This girl I nannied for was adopted and helped me pack some boxes in 2008, she was, of course, really excited to help me!

    Last year Samaritan’s Purse started allowing you to track where your boxes went if you donate the $7 for shipping online. Some of the boxes I packed went to Nepal, Panama, Cameroon, and southeast Asia!

    Shoeboxes are given to local churches and ministries and distributed through them. The churches are able to use them as a wonderful evangelism tool to reach out the kids and their families.

    OCC has a great how-to-pack a box video.

    Happy Packing!

  • $0 Christmas Decorations

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    I am that person who listens to Christmas music from October through January. That person who seeks out the Christmas shops in July, that person who ogles at the decorations in Walmart, Target, the dollar store, craft stores, etc. I’m one of those people that has a huge Christmas village of 30+ ceramic houses plus figures, enough to take over my entire bedroom if I let it. I love snowglobes, stockings, decorating the tree, and making Christmas cookies.

    However, this year, Christmas will be different. It will be the first Christmas not in the US. Two years ago, I spent the Christmas season in Africa (listening to “Winter Wonderland while burning in the African heat was great!) but I got back to the US on the 23rd of December. This year, my family will be visiting me, but its not the same.

    We won’t have a tree, other than my little 8” high tree. I’ll be lucky if I have a tomato plant for Christmas- it’d be pre-decorated with red balls! I’m thinking about covering the mangoes on the mango tree outside our house with glitter paint to make believe its a Christmas tree. No pine trees grow here. The fake trees are expensive and ugly.

    What is a Christmas lover to do when thrown into a tropical climate where Christmas is merely one day in the year rather than an entire season of red, green, and glittering lights? I hear that Christmas is usually red and white, not red and green, even. Although, one mall is covered in white and blue sparkling Christmas lights and snowflakes. And Walmart does sell Christmas decorations for fairly cheap. But without any extra income, we don’t have money to buy any Christmas decorations.

    So I am left with the little that I managed to stuff in my bags when I was moving. 2 stockings, my manger set, tiny tree and dollhouse Christmas setup, and 5 ornaments. I don’t know why I chose to bring ornaments. I knew I wouldn’t have a tree. I think more for sentiment. That got wrecked when the starfish Santa my late grandmother gave me was seen floating on the floor during our household flood. Luckily it dried, and didn’t get broken.

    Which brings me to my Christmas season adventure. I am going to decorate the house without spending a penny. I am going to make decorations and be very creative about it. My rules:

    1. I can’t spend any money
    2. I must use junk/recycle/upcycle materials
    3. I can use craft supplies I have in the house
    4. I can use other people’s equipment and junk (ie, borrow a sewing maching, using scraps of fabric that would otherwise be thrown away.)
    5. They must be my own ideas, or adapted from others’ ideas (not directly copied) and I need to give credit to where I find the ideas.