There’s a reason why people call Christmas the most wonderful time of the year—it’s one of the very few occasions when we can press pause on our hectic lives and enjoy spending time with our loved ones. Whether it’s setting up the tree, decorating gingerbread houses, or sending festive cards to your relatives and friends, everyone has their own rituals.
Reddit user hellotintin100 asked people to share interesting or fun holiday traditions that they follow, and almost 46K Christmas enthusiasts replied. Just to warn you, some of the stories are so wholesome and adorable, your heart just melts a little bit while reading them.
Bored Panda took some of the most heartwarming comments from this post for you to enjoy. Continue scrolling and share your favorite holiday rituals in the comment section below, we would love to hear them!
Reddit user hellotintin100 asked people to share interesting holiday traditions that they follow and thousands of wholesome comments started pouring in
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My brother and I stay at my mother's house on Christmas Eve with our families every year. We still sit at the top of the stairs on Christmas morning until my mother tells us we can come down to the living room to see what "Santa" left us. We're both in our 30s and our wives and kids now sit on the stairs as well. It's getting pretty crowded but I wouldn't have it any other way!
The holiday season is all about making memories that will keep you feeling warm and fuzzy for the rest of the year. Gathering with friends and family members to participate in time-honored traditions are some of the simplest ways to make your holiday celebrations even merrier.
To find out more about the importance of holiday rituals, their history, and what they mean to us in these modern times, we reached out to Alex Palmer, a freelance writer and the author of The Atlas of Christmas: The Merriest, Tastiest, Quirkiest Holiday Traditions from Around the World. He said that there are a huge number of reasons why we feel drawn to create and continue following rituals.
"Many Christmas traditions specifically developed out of midwinter activities (feasting, singing, gathering with loved ones) meant to keep people warm and boost spirits during the chilly months," the writer explained. "Beyond meeting physical/mental needs, holiday rituals, of course, meet our spiritual needs while also helping to strengthen bonds between members of a family or community."
My parents were broke when I was a kid, but you'd never know it from Christmas. They always went all-out, put money on credit cards, etc. One Christmas we were particularly broke, but dad went out and spent (probably most) of his paycheck on last minute gifts.
When we got home, my mom had been with us all day and since there was no money, she hadn't gone food shopping. All we had were some cheap hot dogs and canned beans.
My parents put the beans in a pot over the fire, grabbed the hotdog cooker from when we went camping, and threw the dogs on over the fire too. My sister and I loved it so much, we did it again the following Christmas.
Eventually we weren't quite so poor. The two-dollar AnP hotdogs became Nathan's, then Sabretts, then butcher Bratwursts. The beans went to BnM, then eventually fancy gourmet sh*t. But my sister and I are now adults with our own families, and even on years where we're not together, our entire family has hot dogs and beans on Christmas Eve.
The author has researched a wide variety of ways in which different countries and cultures celebrate the holiday season. According to him, how a group spends their holidays is less important than the fact that they have gathered together to follow rituals they do each year.
"Whether gathering around the table to eat a feast of eel (the main course at Christmas in parts of Southern Italy), cooking up a turkey or roasting a pig, the act of sharing the same meal together year after year helps bond those people together, and puts us in a good mood (for the most part)."
The first year my boyfriend and I were living together we decorated our tree only to realize we didn't have a topper. As a stand-in, we grabbed an oven mitt from the kitchen and put it on top. It made us laugh every time we looked at it, so it stayed and when we tried a nice "traditional" topper the following year it just felt wrong. So, here we are 14 years later, married and with a daughter and each year we pick a new oven mitt to put on top of our Christmas tree, the weirder the better!!
Have you considered making a keepsake out of your former tree toppers? Perhaps you could make a quilt, or even a wreath out of them? Either way, what a fun way to make your tree unique to your family!
A tradition we had when I was a child, and one I'll be continuing with my children when I have them, is the Christmas Eve box. For Christmas Eve, we were given one gift early, and it was a box with Christmas pajamas, a mug, hot chocolate mix, popcorn, and a Christmas movie. We would get to open it around lunchtime, and we'd spend the rest of the evening in our new jammies having cocoa and movies together.
When people maintain such traditions and give meaning to them, they tend to elevate what might just be another get-together. "This is true not only of more religiously focused rituals, but even fun games or songs can take on greater significance when understood as part of an annual tradition," Palmer said. "In Finland, a trip to the sauna on the day before Christmas is treated as a special outing, even though it's not much different than the visits to the sauna that take place most other winter days."
"In Ethiopia, a game of ganna (a mix between street hockey and soccer) is played on Christmas Eve day amidst the more sober ceremonies, and even though it's meant to be fun, it's treated with a level of ceremony such activities would not usually receive," the writer continued. "When seen as part of a long tradition, otherwise mundane behavior feels more meaningful and connects us with our fellow celebrants in a deeper way."
One year my great-aunt got her older sister, my grandmother, a bottle of Elizabeth Taylor perfume. The perfume happened to come with a watch - a shiny gold pleather-y affair with fake "white diamonds" around the face. It was hideous, but my Aunt wrapped up the watch too and hammed it up like it was a big deal. My Grandma laughed and wore it all day, showing it off like "Look at my gooold watch."
The next year, my Grandma wrapped the watch and gave it to her sister... Laughter, surprise, etc.
The watch was gifted back and forth each year with great joy.
A few years ago my Grandma died in June. Later that year, when I was opening my Christmas present from my younger sister, I completely unsuspectingly unwrapped the gold watch. I sobbed and laughed, of course, and we have been trading it at Christmas ever since.
My grandpa would always get up on the roof about an hour after our bedtime and stomp around on the roof with sleigh bells
It also shows the bond that we have with our friends and family and how strong our relationships are. Alex Palmer mentioned that "traditions are typically shared with those we consider closest to us, those we trust and with whom we share a connection whether familial or otherwise."
The rituals we create "may be playful, such as a holiday game, or more serious, such as attending church service or honoring ancestors. The tone of the tradition and the way we practice it can say a lot about the relationships we have with those who join us in the ceremony."
We have signs all over our house spelling out Leon instead of Noel. It started out as a joke because my dad is dyslexic, but it stuck and we even named our dog Leon and we’ve been doing it since I can remember.
My husband's middle name was Leon. We had those Noel signs. Id rearrange them to Leon.
When my oldest was born his uncle gave him a teddy bear which became his favorite toy. His uncle died just before his first birthday. The bear goes everywhere and gets pretty ragged after a while. We did a lot of searching and found the bear, bought several, and every year teddy waits in the Christmas tree to be picked up by the elves where he goes to the north pole and gets pampered. He comes back looking brand new and santa leaves him for our son. We've marked every bear with the year it's from and I'll be sad when he outgrows this tradition but for now, it's my favorite.
The author continued that some traditions have evolved over time. "These changes may be out of convenience (opting for store-bought Christmas cookies rather than baking them all yourself), safety concerns (for example, the illuminated crowns that kids wear during Sweden's Saint Lucia parade no longer use actual candles), or any number of cultural or political shifts (following the establishment of the USSR, the gift-bringing character of Ded Moroz shifted from honoring Christmas to honoring New Years as celebrating religious holidays were banned)."
When we were younger, my parents had a tradition with us. We would always go out into the front yard with my dad to find the 'perfect' pine cone. Maybe a week or two before Christmas, we planted the pine cone in a pot and watered it. Then, overnight, it would become this magnificent, huge (to my young eyes), and fully decorated Christmas tree. It only worked in December and we were always told it was the Christmas magic. Then my sister and I figured it out when we found pine needles in my parents’ car.
My family has a tradition of leaving riddles on cards and guessing what the gift is before opening.
We go around 1 by 1, reading our hint out loud so everyone can guess, then open it and show the room.
Ends up taking like 5 hours for everyone to get through their gifts, but it's always a fun time.
I like this, it's no fun if everyone just rips open their gifts in a few minutes
As soon as this pandemic is over, and we can once again have Christmas gatherings, my sister and I can get back to smacking the hell out of each other with cardboard wrapping paper tubes. We’re in our 50s, btw.
In some countries, Christmas has proven to be very adaptable: "While some cultures continue to observe it as a solemn religious holiday, others have embraced it in almost exclusively secular ways. While we think of Christmas as a cold-weather holiday, it has been adapted to warm weather in creative ways from Australia to The Bahamas."
As kids we'd have this tradition of sneaking into each other's rooms and 'borrowing' something a week or so before Christmas. Then you wrapped the stolen item up and give it back as a decoy gift. We did it with our cousins, grandparents, aunts and parents too. It had to be something unimportant, but something they'd miss. Like a stuffed toy, a favourite spatula or a book. It became a very exciting competition to see how big the stolen item could be without you being caught. Bonus points if they didn't even notice it going missing One year my aunt noticed her stuffed bear was missing (it was also a hot water bottle) and made huge wanted posters that she hung everywhere - from the trees in our yard, to our bathroom to the Christmas tree. It was hilarious and my friends were very confused by this. My grandma was always in on the sneaking and diverting
Every Christmas the kids in the house have wrapping paper put over the entrances to their rooms so they get to rip through it in the morning. It originally started as a way to keep a certain kid in when he kept coming out early and opening presents before everyone was awake.
Every year my wife and I buy an ornament for our tree that corresponds with something that happened that year. So we have a tree filled with all of these weird wacky ornaments like a tennis ball (we started playing tennis that year), swedish chef (Europe trip), Ship Captain Nutcracker (our first cruise), amongst many others. It's such a fun tradition in December to debate what we to get and then finding something. And then reliving them all when we put them up.
Maybe you already have interesting and fun holiday traditions that you share with others and follow every year. Or maybe it’s time to find new ideas, put your family’s twist on them and incorporate them into your own annual celebrations. If that’s the case, then you’re in the right place, because these stories are filled with good cheer that will inspire you and make your Christmas all the more memorable and fun.
I always changed my Mother in laws Noel candles to say El No. she would ask me if I did it and I’d say El No. She found me amusing and I miss her.
Each year we cut a round off the bottom of our Christmas tree. We label it with the year. Over time, it makes a sweet display and reminder of years past
A buffet for 10..... for 2
So my wife and I spend the days leading up to Christmas Eve going around and buying a selection of the poshest ‘party food’ from the likes of M&S, Booths, Waitrose. On Christmas Eve We will bathe the kids (10 & 5) play board games with them, watch movies etc.... it’s bed for 9pm & 10pm for them both. The oven then goes on. 30-40 minutes later we have enough food to feed at least 10, but it’s just for the 2 of us and we always do pretty well and are stuffed by 11:30pm. A few glasses of wine or G&Ts keep the merriment going. We arrange the gifts at around 1am and it’s off to bed. Excited ourselves, we usually end up discussing what food was our favourite and my wife makes a note to buy again the following year.
Apart from seeing the kids faces on Xmas morning, this is by far my favourite part of Xmas.
I hope everyone has a good one this year and is able to fill their bellies and enjoy the company of those you love.
Every year my grandpa reads our family The Night Before Christmas. He has Christmas ornaments that go along with the book so everyone was handed an ornament and you put it on the tree when your phrase was read out
I was sent out to find pine needles in the back park a day or two before Christmas. They were allegedly for reindeer snacks, and they had to fill this big wicker basket that was normally full of magazines.
Turned out, years later, that it was to get me out of the house while my mom transferred wrapped presents from the neighbor's garage into our house, as I always tried to find and open any gifts that I snooped on before Christmas day.
28 years ago I was one of the first 100 customers at an HEB grand opening, for that honor I got two cans of this.
That Christmas we had a fun Dollar Store White Elephant exchange with the family Christmas Eve. I wrapped a can of the potted meat as my contribution. My Mom got it and got a real kick out of it, she immediately re-gifted it to me the next day.
Well next year I wrapped it and gave it to my sister, the year after that she wrapped it and gave it to my Dad.
For the last 28 years this has been the most coveted gift of Christmas. I gave it to my son last year and he happily wrapped it for his cousin this Christmas.
My uncle always hosts Christmas at his house since family comes from all over and he has beds for everyone to stay over. On his property is about an 150 foot diameter pond.
Every Christmas morning we wake up and build a giant bonfire to get ready for the impending shock we will feel later on around noon. We also try to get a decent drunk blanket going (for those that are of our families required drinking age) just in case.
Come Noon on Christmas Day, we do the Polar Plunge to rid our selves of last years crap and look forward to next year. We huddle around this bonfire while my Grandpa passes around shots to help warm up because that pond is f*cking freezing!
On Christmas Eve we're each given a present early. It's always pajamas and once everyone has opened their present the Pajama Races begin. Everyone runs to their respective rooms and puts on their pajamas then races back to the tree. There is no prize for the winner except bragging rights.
Then there is a final present that has been wrapped multiple times with a ton of tape. We all stand around the kitchen table and attempt to unwrap it one at a time. Except you have to put on mittens and a Santa hat before attempting to unwrap it. The person to your left is rolling dice and if they get doubles then you stop trying to unwrap it and pass the mittens and hat to them so they can try. This game becomes very loud and fast so you need to keep on your toes. It keeps going around in a circle until someone is successful. The gift is always a board/card/dice game and we play the game until its time to go to bed. My siblings and I are all grown now, but we'll probably continue to play this with our parents until we have spouses to bring home...then make them play as well.
We used to do a similar game to the present one, but we put on gloves and had to eat a huge bar of chocolate with a knife and fork until someone rolled a 6 on a d6. We usually went until everyone felt too sick to carry on.
I'm Catalan, meaning I follow Catalan Christmas traditions. In Catalonia (Barcelona's the capital), we've got two fun, or at the very least, interesting traditions. I want to preface this by assuring you all that I'm not making this up (google it if you don't trust me).
Here it goes.
It's 'el Tió de Nadal' (Yule Log), colloquialy called 'Caga Tió' (a translation would be 'Crapping Log', or something similar). Tió is a cut log with a painted face on the cut surface, and a red cap (a traditional Catalan hat called barretina). We've got it at home, typically under the Christmas tree, often covered with a blanket (God forbid Tió gets cold!).
During the weeks before Christmas, kids give some food to their Tió (mandarines, bananas, biscuits...) every night. When they wake up *gasps* Tió's eaten it all! (the parents removed the food, but the little ones are oblivious to that, obs). The idea behind that is that we want Tió to eat a lot so that he can, er, poop a lot. Why? Well, Tió is a magical log that poops presents. Yes, Caga Tió is our Santa Claus equivalent.
How exactly does a log poop, though? Easy. Kids need to grab a stick and hit Tió repeatedly while singing a song that basically says, quote/translation: "Crap, Tió. Crap hazelnuts and pine nuts nougat. If you don't behave yourself, I'll hit you with my stick. Crap, Tió." Note that this is just one version. There are others.
After that, the kids lift the blanket and usually get nougat, other Spanish and Catalan Christmas sweets, chocolate, and toys. I got my first bike thanks to Tió back when I was 3, so presents can be big XD Parents just need to hide the presents under the blanket, unseen by the children, before the song/hitting ritual begins.
Children love it.
2) We've got another scatological tradition called 'El Caganer'. This is a figurine we add to the nativity scene/manger (not sure what it's called in English, sorry). The thing is that ' el caganer' means 'the crapper'. It's a figurine which shows a shepherd typically dressed in traditional Catalan clothes (including that barretina Tió also wears), squatting while he defecates. It may seem offensive, but the Catholic Church is okay with it, as the poop symbolizes fertility for the land where Jesus is born. El Caganer is so famous some people buy 'celeb' caganers (there's a Trump version, a Rosalía version, a Harry Potter version, a Merkel version... and so on).
Why are Catalans obsessed with poop? Nobody really knows. Don't ask me.
We celebrate more traditions (both Catalan and Spanish), but these two are the funniest. If I talked about them all, this post would be even longer XD
Happy, safe holidays from Catalonia!
Our family has a rather odd Christmas tradition that got its start over thirty years ago. At the time our two sons had a collection of small plastic figures that provided a lot of play time with each other. These figures would sometimes be part of an elaborate array of props and story lines; at other times it would be just a couple of figures taken along to occupy the time while riding in the car.
One of younger boy's favorites was a figure he called Radio Pants. Radio Pants went missing one day. Everyone looked for him but it seemed he was lost. He was disappointed. Occasionally there would be a renewed search, but he was not found. It was the Christmas season and there were other distractions so the missing Radio Pants faded from our memory.
We have an artificial Christmas tree that spends most of its life packed away in two boxes that are stored above the garage with the other decorations. Each year all the Christmas decorations are brought down and when the boys were small the excitement of the holidays usually began by assembling the tree and putting on the ornaments.
The year following the loss of Radio Pants was no exception in the routine of putting up the tree. After placing the central “trunk” in its holder, the individual branches would be taken from the box and its twigs would be adjusted. The color coding on the end of each branch would be checked and then it would be put into place.
During this process we came across Radio Pants clinging to one of the branches. During their play the previous year he had evidently been placed in the tree. We hadn’t thought to look for him there, or at least if we did, he went unnoticed. We had a good laugh when the younger son shouted, "Radio Pants"!!!
We were all happy to see him again and since the little group of plastic characters were no longer occupying the boys’ time we just left him on the tree. He seemed perfectly happy to spend the holiday on the tree after being boxed up in the garage for a year. When it came time to put the decorations away it was decided that Radio Pants would maintain his place on the branch and he was packed away with the tree and put above the garage.
That routine has been repeated each year. Radio Pants recently emerged from the box along with his branch and will be celebrating his thirty-first return to spend Christmas with us. He is a happy reminder of the many Christmas seasons we have spent together. I look forward to seeing him each year and he doesn’t seem to mind the fact that he spends most of his life in a dark box. I think he, like me, has to wonder how little boys can grow so quickly into men.
My best friend and I started a tradition of celebrating Christmas Eve Eve together (actual day is a little loose on interpreting based on life). We switch it up each year but we always dress up in Christmas outfits, have dinner, some kind of activity and a movie. At dinner we also exchange a book we picked for the other that we wrote a personal note inside. Then afterwards, we create a magnet for each other of our favorite photo from the night.
I love when traditions born out of poverty are held onto and evolve. For my family it is chocolate oranges. My grandparents grew up during the depression and an orange would be all that they would get in their stocking, then in the ‘60s they held onto the idea of that by making sure that my mother and her siblings had orange gummies in their stockings, then when my mother had my siblings and I she updated it to chocolate oranges.
I’m not a really big fan of sweets and chocolate doesn’t really like my digestive system since about my mid twenties, but I am so looking forward to getting that chocolate orange on Friday because it just takes me back to being a little kid.
I always rearrange my moms Santa to say satan and see how long it takes her to realize it
We meet up with some friends in a park and launch model rockets while drinking hot chocolate or coffee with booze, been going on for over 20 years.
The family Goober award! Throughout the year, the previous winner tracks all the goofy mistakes family members make , i.e. locking yourself out of the house in your underwear when the trash collector is around the corner. Then at the big Christmas gathering, we all sit down and the previous year's winner presents all the family "goober nominees" leading up to the winner, the most laughable of them all, who gets awarded a decorated 3' tall trophy.
Every year for the last 8 years my sister and I gift each other a weird thing that makes the other one laugh. It started with when our house almost got repossessed just before Christmas and everything was so terrible that we just wanted to make each other laugh.
Highlights include: 12 packs of frozen potato smiley faces to resolve a long forgotten childhood argument, 3 chocolate tubes filled with tinny rubbber ducks instead of chocolate, a lucky dip which involved hiding small gifts in socks and this year a bag of potatoes with Nicholas Cage's face blue tacked on every individual potato
The tradition in our house was whatever you got for Christmas, you had to wear to the pub at lunchtime on Christmas Day. I’ve been to the pub in pjs, 4 pairs of socks, running vest and shorts, etc etc
My dad's mom used to read Santa Mouse to me and my cousins. It was a book about Santa's helper who was a mouse. So for my whole life we have left out milk and cookies for Santa, and cheese and crackers for Santa Mouse. In return Santa Mouse would put gift cards or cash into the tree itself. So after opening presents you hunt in the tree for Santa Mouse's gifts!
Definitely a tradition I will carry on to my kids down the road.
We design and build our own gingerbread "houses" out of homemade gingerbread. And they've gotten progressively more advanced. Last year I made Notre Dame cathedral (with candy cane buttresses), this year I made Avengers Tower.
No pictures?!! I would like to see a Gingerbread version of Avengers Tower.
We do this thing called "el recalentado" which means "the reheating" in Spanish. Basically in the morning after Christmas eve(which is when we celebrate) all our family even the ones who didn't celebrate together go to our aunts house with a dish from the day before and we all just reheat the food from the parties and just eat and hang out. It's kinda a little get together in the morning after the party.
My family has the Christmas Elephant.
The Christmas Elephant was the animal that Mary rode into Bethlehem on (donkey lobbyists disagree) and brings presents to good children on Christmas Eve. Bad children get a pile of elephant dung.
Every year we decorate the house with Red and Gold elephants and wait for the Christmas Elephant to come.
I love my weird family
My grandmother gave us a blowup Santa in an outhouse. My family thought it would look weird in our yard, so now we prank friends on Christmas Eve by putting it on the front door and waiting for them to see it.
My brother and I were hungry one year and our parents(where we celebrate Christmas) live very close to a gas station, where they sell surprisingly good hotdogs. So we went to get one each. My sister in law thought it was so ridiculous, so she snapped a picture. Now its tradition for us to go get a hotdog and pose for the yearly Christmas hotdog picture.
We always put an orange or tangerine in the Christmas stocking.
I think the tradition started when my Oma was a child in WWII era Germany and fresh produce was hard to come by. She passed away but we will always put oranges in the stocking in memory of her.
Scandinavian Xmas. 3hr dinner on the 24th until the oldest male of the house hears “Tomten” and we’re ushered into a room. We hear oldest male offer beer, milk or cookies to Tomten (who snuck through the key hole btw) Few mins later, we exit room, Tomtens load of presents are at the tree and we play a 70yr Swedish folk song while “hands on the hips” of the person in front of you, dancing a snake through the house, out the front door around the street with all pets yapping at your feet. You’re plastered as you started dinner with triple sized shot glass of unflavoured schnapps before the wine. We then sit in a circle and watch each person open a present handed to them by someone else, one at a time, passing said present around to “ooh ahh” inspect and/or smell it, if a scented product like cologn, etc. it’s never ended before 2am. The 25th is just a normal hangover day with a nice sit down lunch. Plot twist, we’re in Australia so it’s 40c lol.
Each year for Christmas, instead of writing our real names on the presents, my parents would take a random theme and assign my siblings and I a name based on said theme (for example this year’s theme is liquor and the names are “Scotch,” “Whiskey,” and “Gin”) and we have to guess who is what name. Whoever guesses correctly gets a little homemade Christmas themed “trophy” called the “Christmas smartass award” that they can keep until next Christmas
On Christmas Eve, I play "Silent Night" on the softest, most beautiful stops on the pipe organ while a cello plays the melody.
Everyone joins in singing Silent Night in harmony with the church in candlelight.
I’m 9 years older than my brother and we used to build a huge blanket fort every Christmas Eve. It was mainly to make sure he wouldn’t leave in the middle of the night and stumble upon Santa, but we kept it up for a while even after I left for college and it was one of my favorite things to look forward to
We have quite a few.
We open Christmas season by putting up the tree the day after Thanksgiving and watching Polar Express. We've done this for so long that my 20 and 17 yr olds have no memory of not doing it, and my 13 year old has never had a Christmas where we didn't do this.
My youngest and I make a list of holiday movies, and keep track of all the ones we watch. We shoot for one movie a day starting December 1st up until Christmas--with some movies earmarked for specific days. We also watch as many holiday themed episodes of our favorite tv shows as we can.
The weekend before Christmas is when we make hot cocoa, pile into the car, put on Christmas music, and drive around to look at light displays.
December 23rd is Cookie Day. I get up early, and spend the day baking. I always make way too much. The kids help when they get up. I watch A White Christmas in the morning, and we watch Christmas with the Kranks in the afternoon. This also happens to be the anniversary of my mom-in-law passing. We always buy a Christmas bouquet of flowers and tell stories about her. The kids were young when she died so they have a foggy memory. They like to hear about her. She was an amazing grandma.
Christmas Eve is when we hand out new pajamas and watch Home Alone. Home Alone is our favorite Christmas movie so we cap off the season with it.
Christmas Day is usually when I do this incredible BBQ brisket. This year we did that early in the month, and are having a simple meat & cheese spread for Christmas day. That way I can spend less time in the kitchen and more time playing board games and video games. For the past decade, Santa has made it a habit of bringing us all Steam gift cards and a huge stack of board games. Pajamas all day, good food, board games. It's perfect.
We always watch Terry Pratchett's "Hogfather". Such a fantastic seasonal movie!
Not a family tradition, as much as it's something that I just decided everyone has to do a few years ago.
Everyone makes plates for someone else in the family. No one is allowed to get food and drinks for themselves. It reminds my kids that even little gestures show appreciation for those around you, and to not be selfish when it comes to making others feel loved.
My family is a bunch of cowboys. Literally. I have grown up riding horses. My dad is the oldest of four boys and their dad was a champion team roper/actual cowboy from West TX. Anyway, there are a lot of cowboy/horse items laying around. Pre-COVID, for my entire life, we’ve gathered on Christmas Day to eat and open presents. Before we transitioned to Dirty Santa, everybody would have to get everyone something and it was a nightmare. One year, my uncle Cody decided he didn’t want to buy everyone presents so when it was his turn, he sat a cowboy hat upside down on my grandmother’s rug in the living room. Then instructed us that we were now in teams- the brothers, the wives, and the grandkids (my grandmother got to play on each team). Each person stood at the other end of the rug and tried to toss a balled up pair of tube socks into the hat. You get 3 chances. It gets tricky because the socks can bounce out of the hat easily. I was champion the first year, only to get beat by my grandmother the next year. The prize is a dollar for how old he is that year. I think we’re at $58 now. This started when I was in middle school and I’m 29 now. It’s the Cody Sock Game. With a bunch of cowboys and football coaches in the room, it gets competitive, but it’s a lot of fun!
Me and my little cousin go to my nan’s to decorate her Christmas cake with a bunch of little decorations she has for it. Instead of placing them and decorating it normally, we put the decorations in weird and whacky situations; examples include Santa getting his ass sniffed by a polar bear, carol singers getting assaulted with snowballs, a tree crushing someone and robins crapping on people.
My boyfriend and I grab a bag of Krystals (White Castle for the rest of you) and roll around town looking at Christmas lights. There were so many good displays this year (and all wildly spaced apart) that it took nearly three hours to see them all.
When my husband and I had our first baby, in April, someone gave us a lovely photo frame ornament for baby's first Christmas. We forgot about it and when it was time to decorate the tree we didn't have time/energy to find a pic, so we left the store pic in it. After 7 years of this, when our 2nd baby was 2, she asked who the baby was. We said it was a stranger baby, which is now written on the ornament in Sharpie. It's been 18 years now, and we love talking about where stranger baby has ended up when we decorate the tree.
Started when I was about 24 but my mom has been getting me a Taylor Swift Calender and throwback 90's movie DVD. Going on 8 years and now and what I look forward to most Christmas morning. Soon to be 32y/o male for reference.
We always have McDonalds on Christmas Eve because we leave our wrapping until last minute and that's all we have time for. Sounds sad, but comes with happy nostalgia from wrapping and family.
Years ago my mom made fake gingerbread cookie ornaments for the Christmas tree. Our family dog would try to pull them down and eat them. She still hangs one (with two bitten limbs missing) in memoriam. It’s been 10 years, but we still miss that greedy girl.
We eat rice porridge and hide a peeled (?) almond in it. The person finding it is the winner, and the price is a marzipan pig. (Norway)
I watch the Muppets Christmas Carol every single year, been doing that for the last ~25 years and I plan on continuing to do so.
My husband loves A Christmas Carol and we watch 3 or 4 movie versions every year. Occasionally there will be a reading on the radio and we'll listen to that too. The Muppet version is my favorite.
We have two main traditions. First, Christmas morning, breakfast is always a pan of cinnamon rolls and orange rolls. And second, on Christmas you can't get dressed for the day; everyone has to wear pajamas all day, no exceptions.
Wow, is this me? Did I write this? We always had cinnamon rolls on either Christmas Eve or Christmas Day, and orange rolls on the other day. But my sister is gluten-free now and we haven’t found any good gluten free rolls, and it turns out I’m allergic to cinnamon after not liking it very much my whole life. So my sister gets a breakfast hash and I get orange rolls. And absolutely no clothes other than pajamas and I have to at least put a coat on to take the dogs out.
Surprise presents drinking auction.
I was introduced to this tradition by a co-worker who organized it for our office party, apparently it was a thing at their house. Basically, there's a bunch of wrapped gifts, with different sizes and values, and a big jug of moderately strong drink, could be half mixer-half liquor of something you like.
Each gift gets put up for auction, but you bid shots of drink. Whoever will drink more shots in exchange for the gift gets to keep it, drinks his bid, and then finds out what's inside the wrapping paper. We ended up coupling up so we could bid more shots and we all ended up pretty wasted. Good times.
We always played Bingo as a family on Christmas Day, ever since I was little. We have prizes- some silly, some good, and scratch off tickets. We stopped for a long time after my Grandpa died, but we started playing again, and it felt really good to play together again as a family. Our kids now enjoy playing it too
With my dad the tradition has been that he always gives me a pair of pajamas along with whatever else. Here is a picture of the ridiculous onesie he got me last year.
With my mom it's always been a tradition to go to a movie on Christmas Day, which also happens to be her birthday. It's part of a tradition we have where we watch a movie together on each other's birthday. Of course this year that's out of the question, but we're probably just gonna get HBO and watch the new Wonder Woman on the couch instead.
My own personal tradition is to get drunk while watching Bad Santa. I love that movie and it's a fun one to drink along with.
Every year everyone in my immediate family buys each other a Christmas tree ornamented. Now our tree is covered with good memories that actually have meaning.
We hide a pickle in the Christmas tree, the person who finds it gets an extra present.
Go to Frankenmuth (Christmas town in MI) and sing along to the Emmet Otter’s Jug Band Christmas soundtrack all the way home
Santa puts the stockings on everyone's bed. This way, the kids can play with the stuff in the stockings and the adults get more sleep.
Vowing to watch the entire 24 hr marathon of A Christmas Story, watching it once, giving up, and vowing that I'll do it next year.
Wife and I order from the same Chinese restaurant every Christmas Eve. We eat from there almost exclusively on Christmas Eve - we don't do much chinese through the year regularly. Started one Christmas Eve when we were both feeling lazy and hasn't stopped... 12+ years now.
HEY! We’ve been doing that too for 35+ years. Takeaway Chinese food was at that time an extravagant luxury that could only be afforded once a year. Always ordered from the same restaurant too until they retired 2 years ago.
In the south of France where my dad and his family grew up, there this tradition of the 12 Desserts of Christmas, we used to do it when my grandma was alive because she loved this tradition and we're trying to keep it alive. You just have to bake, cook or prepare 12 different desserts, ranging from almond paste stuffed dates to piles of cookies and eat them at Christmas eve, but it usually lasts way longer than that.
My great grandfather was making a Christmas ham many years ago and while taking it out of the oven my great grandmothers water broke and he dropped it. So now every year we have a ham lol.
In my small hometown in west Germany, in the morning of 24. the people used to to gather at the marketplace, with all pubs opened for that occasion, and get absolutely wasted. It's a pretty fun come together, where we used to meet old friends once a year, before we went to our families for the big Dinner and the more traditional Christmas stuff. Obviously with Covid this can't happen this year. Sad times.
Something a little different i suppose. We always have lasagna Christmas Eve Eve (day before Christmas Eve). We also open our presents Christmas Eve instead of Christmas Day, but on Christmas Day we would always go to our grandparent’s house to open presents with them.
We had an old friend who was perfect for playing the Santa. The kids and I loved his antics and dance. He unfortunately passed away a year ago after being in a terrible accident. We give him a tribute by talking to his parents on Christmas, us friends drinking together and dancing for his favorite songs with his signature steps. Although we can't meet up this year, we've set up a zoom call and ordered Christmas caps & fake beards online. We're pretty sure that idiot is still rocking the costume somewhere far away from us. We miss him every Christmas.
I watch the Hobbit and Lord of Rings trilogies every year around xmas.
We tip my grandma over in her chair (carefully). We couldn't do it last year because she moved her chair to be against the wall, and we can't do it this year because of covid. But regardless, it is our tradition, alongside sventsunka (no idea how to spell it), which is just Polish sausage, pierogi, and rye bread and butter. Very fun.
I wonder if she moved her chair on purpose to prevent being tipped.
I don't know if anyone else find it interesting but in my family we don't open presents until after the Queens speech. We're not royalist but it's tradition
But it's worth the wait because it makes the christmas feeling last longer!
My dad likes to get stuck into the red wine on Xmas day. A couple of years ago we were in the kitchen and he was pretty well inebriated and spots a fly and says "oh great there's the lucky Christmas fly!".
We were all like what the hell are you taking about and he continues to try and convince us drunkenly this is a legit tradition, that if you spot a fly on Xmas day it's good luck.
We had a great laugh about it but the irony now is that it has actually become a tradition in our house. If a fly is spotted in the house on Dec 25th our luck is in
Leaving whisky & mince pie for Santa & a carrot for Rudolph. Reading The Night Before Christmas all tucked up in bed. Having a chocolate selection box for breakfast on Christmas morning.
I'm 29 & still keep these up, can't wait to pass them down!
In a normal year, out son would be spending the night on Christmas Eve, I always made lasagna. The next day hubby would make an enormous breakfast and we'd open our presents (always way too many) and we'd lay around like beached whales for the rest of the day, watching A Christmas Story and Christmas Vacation. He'd head home at three and hubs and I would finish the lasagna for dinner. Not this year though.
I know my family isn’t the only one, but we have a huge party Christmas Eve. We wait till midnight then open our presents. I come from a big family so it’s always chaos every year and so fun. So sad it ain’t happening this year, my daughter was born this year and won’t see them all with her.
Shaker present. Shake present, ask yes or no questions, you figure it out before xmas, you open it.
We hide a Christmas Spider in our tree and on Christmas morning the kids get to look for the spider. Who ever finds it gets to open the spider's gift (usually it's something they can share)
Every year we make Christmas paella. Also nothing makes it Christmas besides eating it on Christmas. There is no turkey or ham, and the clams don't start singing Deck The Halls when they open or anything...
We did a traditional snowball fight with different sized marshmallows. Christmas Eve, after opening up Christmas pj's and wearing them. Next morning they would come wake us up to open gifts and we would throw more marshmallows there way. They loved it! Christmas Eve was aldo an appetizer night each kid made their own to share
Every Christmas we go to Grandma's house, sit in a circle (I always sat next to the Christmas tree) with the whole extended family (parents, siblings, my aunts, uncles and grandparents) and take turns opening presents. But then my aunts got married, they had kids and the family got bigger. So it was way more hectic in 2019. Then 2020 happened. Basically my family, my aunts' families took turns visiting Grandma in 1 hour slots. We sat in a socially distanced circle (masks on and hands sanitised) opened the presents, then left so my aunt and my cousins could visit next. So last year was a little more peaceful and not as crowded. 😂
Every year we watch Terry Pratchett's "Hogfather". A great seasonal movie by my favorite author. GNU, Sir Pterry.
I read it every year on christmas eve! It's my personal tradition, to snuggle with this book after the presents are opened, kids are asleep and I get my hour of peace at Discworld!
Load More Replies...We have an accidental tradition that someone will be hiding somewhere finishing making a present until like 6 pm on Christmas Eve lol. We used to have a “carpet picnic” - mom would put an old quilt on the floor and we’d have bowls of chips, triscuits, m&ms, olives on the quilt, turn off all the light except the Christmas lights, and watch Christmas movies. Then we’d get to open one present and mom would read The Cajun Night Before Christmas and The Polar Express. We stopped due to a combination of my sister going through a very lengthy bitchy phase and it hurting too much to sit on the floor for that long.
There were only the 3 of us, mom, dad and me. It was a tradition that after finishing Christmas shopping we would show to one another what gifts we had purchased for the other family member. So, for instance, I would show dad what I had bought mom. Mom would show him what she had bought me. My father's last Christmas (he went into the hospital just before then and died just after New Year's) mom and I had finished our shopping. She showed dad what she got me. I showed him what I got her. He never let on one little bit. He went in to hospital on the 21st and took a turn on the 22nd. On Christmas morning, oh the surprise when mom and I opened our gifts and saw that we had bought each other the same tops. We wore them to the hospital. My dad looked like he was out of it, but we talked to him and told him we were wearing our tops. We teased him about not letting on about it at all. He kept quite the secret. My dad wasn't out of it. He smiled.
Every year we go to my GrGr (Grandma on my Mom's side)'s house, usually Christmas Eve or the afternoon of Christmas. They have this pickle ornament, and every year an adult hides the pickle somewhere in the tree. Then, when it comes time to open presents, the kids (and sometimes the adults too) all scramble to try and find the pickle - not an easy task bc GrGr always has the tree dressed up all pretty. Whoever finds it gets to open the first present. Then they pick the next present for someone else to open, and so on.
My husband and I always go out for Christmas dinner. Christmas Eve and Morning are for the family, but dinner is just the two of us. The restaurant is always somewhere we haven't been and then we tip the total of the bill. (If the bill was 75 dollars the waiter/waitress gets 75 dollars.)
Our kids get one christmas ornament in their advent calendars every year. On the ornaments i write their name and the year. This started when our daughter was born. Mostly because I remembered how much money I spent on christmas ornaments when my wife and I started having our own christmas with decorations, a tree and so on. So I buy something for the kids every year so they will have a nice collection of ornaments with, hopefully, a lot of good memories attached.
I do this too! My son's first one though is his foot print in sculpy clay I had leftover.
Load More Replies...Gifts from mom and dad are always signed Love XXX. Santa still fills the stockings Xmas Eve. Gifts from Santa are always wrapped in colored tissue paper instead of regular Xmas wrapping paper. BTW, the youngest is our family is now 55.
Being an only child my mom wanted Christmas to be as magical as possible. When I very young she went out and bought a couple bags of potpourri at the local craft store. When my parents took down the Christmas decoration and packed them away she divided the potpourri into the boxes to marinate for the year (we kept our Christmas items in the attic). The following year all of the decorations smelled so nice like the potpourri. She would always say it was the "The magic of Christmas bringing everyone together for festivities and merriment." To me the potpourri became the smell of Christmas and magic. Plus it made the house smell good without lighting a candle (we had pets). So whenever I smell a sent similar (candle, perfume, diffuser ect.) I stop in my tracks and smile knowing that there is still magic somewhere. I'm now in my late 20's and hope to continue this tradition with my Christmas decor.
Growing up, our family tradition was that on the night we decorate our Christmas tree we got to open and eat the ONE and ONLY box of See's candy we would ever get that year. Still do this my children who are grown if they can be home. They are continuing the tradition in their families. One year my son was deployed to Iraq for a year. At Christmas, I bought a mini Christmas tree, mini Christmas lights and mini Christmas decorations. I packed it all in a box including a box of See's candy to open with whoever he decided to have him help decorate the tree. Thank you See's Candy for almost 60 years of memories!
This was delightful thread! Really made me remember all the traditions we have as kids... like my dad's "christmas miracles" - he used to hide various random stuff (stuffed toys, cheese packets, buns, mittens...) into our christmas tree and the nativity scene we had set up and when somebody found out, he claimed it's christmas miracle. Best one was when he placed jar of olives instead of baby Jesus in the nativity and we hadn't noticed for a day. Oh boy I have to do it this year.
Everyone got my 8th grade school picture. You know the type: nerdy cats-eye glasses, beehive hair, not-in-the-least-stylish outfit. No makeup. Dad adored the picture. Pretty sure he had 500 copies made. I'd find them hidden everywhere, beautifully gift wrapped... my first car, first date, first concert, birthdays. It became a game to find them before others could see them. He continued it until Alzheimer's took him from us. Decades! I still find them in his memorabilia. Sigh.
Not very strange, but we open gifts slowly to savor the experience a bit. Generally one person at a time has hands on a gift, and everyone watches them open it, talk about it and we all just share the excitement and be happy with them before moving on to a gift for the next person. It surprised me to learn that many families are a more free-for-all occasion.
When I was married, the closest thing we had to a Christmas Day tradition was participating in the Jewish "tradition" (although we weren't Jewish) of eating at a Chinese restaurant. Mmmmm, dim sum. Then we'd spend the rest of the day going to movies—at least two, sometimes four if the showtimes allowed.
When my kids were younger we would have a birthday cake on Christmas Day - complete with candles and singing Happy Birthday - because it was Jesus' birthday. Each year I buy four more tree ornaments representing the four family members. Sometimes it's a theme, sometimes it's ones that catch my fancy. I use a Sharpie on the back to write the year and the person's initials. Adding to the collection are special ornaments sent by faraway friends or ones that celebrate a significant event (eg, Baby's 1st Christmas). I even buy them for the years we don't have a tree due to being away, etc. It's fun to look at them when we decorate the tree and while the tree is up.
We also have a unique tree topper. When we got our house and could get a properly sized tree (condo was too small), I searched for 2 months for a topper I liked. Eventually I gave up and bought some other decorations, including this owl that's supposed to sit on a mantel or shelf somewhere. My husband hated the owl- thought it was so ugly, but my oldest (who was about 2 at the time) and I loved it. So we stuck it on top of the tree as a joke, and now it's up there every year. Bonus is that it scares the sh*t out of the cats, so they don't attack the tree as much.
My favorite part of Christmas is actually doing the stockings for my kids. I just shop at the dollar store and stuff them full of cheap toys and candy. I couple of years ago I decided they were too old for such as they were now in their ‘30’s. They were so disappointed! So I make sure and do stockings every year now for my kids and their spouses. ❤️❤️❤️
Hope everyone has a wonderful Christmas. I personally try to make the best of each because you never know who will no longer be here for the next. Cherish those you love on this holiest day of the year. Remember that you are blessed to have the opportunity to spend it with them. Most of all, have fun and relax so you can truly enjoy your company.
We have the official first song of Christmas, Barbara Streisand’s super fast version of Jingle Bells. No one is allowed to play any Christmas music until we play that one, which can’t happen unless the whole family is there. We crank the volume up to max, dance wildly the whole song through, and collapse on the couch dramatically at the end. I mean like crazy dancing, no standing around allowed. And then we turn the volume down and go about our business as usual. There’s also the first ornament of Christmas, which is a plaster and cardboard Depression-era heirloom nativity set that always gets nestled in the branches right at the front of the tree before we put any other ornaments up.
In 8th grade I had to make an ornament that reminded me of Texas for a TX History assignment. I made a pretty TX state shaped flag out of sequins and for extra credit a 6 inch coach roach with a Christmas bow. We were not prepared for the size of the huge roaches in the house day 1 when we moved here. My first memory of the house includes running, screaming and stomping. Mom stopped the movers bringing in furniture and became good friends with the bug man. Hence the coach roach which sits on a prominent spot on the tree every year for the past 30+ years.
As kids in the 60s we put up an ancient but elaborate tabletop navitity scene every year (so old that the animals were missing legs and ears, etc) We alternated the 'honor' of putting baby Jesus in the creche as the last step. One year my younger brother, miffed that it wasnt his turn, put baby Jesus in the hanging bucket in the well. 50 years later he still takes baby Jesus out of the creche and puts him in the well everytime we go to my parents house for Christmas.
My sister's and I used to slowly change out pieces of our dad's nativity scene, by Christmas Mary was a hot wheels and baby Jesus was a trex
I´m german and we always met at my grandparents house to celebrate xmas together with quite a lot of people even coming from the states since some siblings of my father emigrated in the 50ies. Our tradition each year was to discuss grandpas (died long ago..) involvement in the NSDAP and why he and my grandmother were OK with this. He was quite inner circle working for Albert Speer as chief engineer. Maybe this sounds awful but it was necessary and I learned a lot from the "excuses" my grandma stated how even decend people were sucked and forced into that murderous apparatus. Mostly this happened when everybody was drunk later in the evening. Before that everything was all shiny and nice..xmas tree, presents, nice decoration, uncle playing piano...happy children. Loved my grandma anyways. Still.. NEVER AGAIN.
I have 2 boys, about 4 years apart. First of all, my husband and I decided that we wanted our kids to understand that Santa brings one gift for each of us, but the real gifts come from Mom and Dad. So Santa leaves a very special gift and candy. The kids are allowed to look at the Santa gifts (as they are unwrapped), but they can't touch anything in their stocking or under the tree! Because, one Christmas eve night, my oldest decided to get up early and began opening ALL the gifts under the tree! Then when my youngest was old enough to get the gist of Santa, the two conspired to open their gifts under the tree, and close them back up. Ever since, I have had to code the packages. I include my husband, and I change the codes each year. Sometimes it's one number in their birthdays, or a letter from their name. So the kids never know who gets which gifts. It started to keep them from opening gifts before we could all be together. Now they look forward to the codes!
So my mom passed away 17 years ago this Dec. 23rd, and I won't lie, it's hard as f***- I cry a lot at Christmas, haha... We did this thing called the throw up man, it was this insane old cookie cutter that looked like a gay clown mime or something, it was just a bizarre and hilarious cookie cutter, so I was of course drawn to him, despite the rule that Santa wouldn't eat the cookies that weren't Christmas shapes (I always I insisted on a birthday cake, a turkey, and the shamrock, and "Santa" [aka my Papa] never did eat them, haha...) Anyway, so it was hilarious to cover the man with ALL THE SPRINKLES, and once baked they melted together into a brown, lumpy mess, hence his name- she even mentioned it in her last letter (she overdosed, we don't know if she meant to or not...)so... Yeah. Still do it, found the exact same cookie cutter set on Ebay, and it was so nice, even tho, yes, I cried the whole time. Love and miss you forever, Mommy, Mimi and Papa. Christmas just isn't the same...
My family loves our riddles and prank gifts. Almost every year somebody gets a present wrapped in duct tape, a box in a box in a box, or has to solve a set of riddles to FIND their present. Our other tradition is you have to model the clothes you get on Christmas. The story goes that when my uncle was in high school he asked for a Speedo. Christmas morning it was wrapped around the top of the tree. After some coercing, he went off and came back wearing it. That's when the rest of the family mobbed him. He fought them off, but somebody still got a photo. He *thinks* he managed to destroy them all 😉.
My grandmother made all us grandchildren stockings from her own design. When my oldest had her child, she said that now that I am the grandma, I should make them. My grandma must have made 50 in her time as the stocking artist. I've made 6. (Kids spouses, grandkids) But I'm documenting mine, and making stencils and patterns to make it easier on the next person!
Not Christmas, but on Thanksgivings starting a couple years ago somehow my mom and I started buying rubber duckies and putting them out with the thanksgiving meal. When anyone asked what’s up with the ducks, we would look at them confused and say “what do you mean? It’s Thanksgiving, of course we need rubber ducks!’” And act like it’s as normal to Thanksgiving as turkey, surprised that they seemed to have forgotten that! So it’s added to our shopping list, always remembered, and we keep the act up that it’s normal
When my sister and I were like 5 we had just learned the song "O Christmas Tree" and decided to hold hands in front of the tree, and sing the song to it, we're now 13 and 14 and I have a little brother now and we still do it the night we put the tree up :)
Every Christmas eve all of my grandkids and my oldest daughter stay the night with me and they have their Christmas eve boxes. My daughter is the first one to wake up on Christmas every year, automatically she will start calling my son and his wife to get them to head to my house. I have a picture of her staring out the window like a creeper watching for them. Each year we spend Christmas with my daughters ex mother, and my daughter in laws mother, and really anyone who has no place to go for the holidays. I do my best to make sure each person has a gift even if its something small. I am the one that does all the cooking but have started teaching my daughter and daughter in law how to make Christmas dinner so eventually I can retire. I love Christmas a lot, probably more than the kids, lol. I think its magical, and I enjoy being able to give my grown kids things that they want since they sacrifice everyday during their year for their families, the rest of the night we play games.
In my family we have Christmas Eve traditions. We eat dinner, then go downstairs and watch some combination of Charlie Brown Christmas, the original Grinch, and Christmas Story. Then we drive around town to look at all the lights. Then we all sit on the couch and someone reads Night Before Christmas.
The year we went to see Polar Express Santa "lost" a little bell that only my kids could hear. It went in with the Christmas decorations and every year they checked to see if they could still hear it! They heard that bell for many years until it turned up missing!
Here in Germany, we get our gifts on Christmas Eve. So every year on the 24th, my dad would take me and we'd burn down a few sparklers while looking for Santa. Some years, I was certain I caught a glimpse of him and why wouldn't I? After all, when we came back in, there'd be plenty of presents under the tree... which I'm sure had nothing to do with my mother, who stayed inside... anyway, we still do that every year.
My husband and I started a tradition that Christmas Day is just for our nuclear family: me, him, and our 2 kids. No parents/in-laws, no aunts, uncles, cousins, friends (unless it's like a friend who doesn't have anyone else to spend the day with), no one but us. It's amazing. This year will be the first time in 9 years that we're spending Christmas with his family because his mom guilt tripped him into agreeing to it--without even asking me how I felt. I'm kinda resentful about it.
Every Christmas we go to Grandma's house, sit in a circle (I always sat next to the Christmas tree) with the whole extended family (parents, siblings, my aunts, uncles and grandparents) and take turns opening presents. But then my aunts got married, they had kids and the family got bigger. So it was way more hectic in 2019. Then 2020 happened. Basically my family, my aunts' families took turns visiting Grandma in 1 hour slots. We sat in a socially distanced circle (masks on and hands sanitised) opened the presents, then left so my aunt and my cousins could visit next. So last year was a little more peaceful and not as crowded. 😂
Every year we watch Terry Pratchett's "Hogfather". A great seasonal movie by my favorite author. GNU, Sir Pterry.
I read it every year on christmas eve! It's my personal tradition, to snuggle with this book after the presents are opened, kids are asleep and I get my hour of peace at Discworld!
Load More Replies...We have an accidental tradition that someone will be hiding somewhere finishing making a present until like 6 pm on Christmas Eve lol. We used to have a “carpet picnic” - mom would put an old quilt on the floor and we’d have bowls of chips, triscuits, m&ms, olives on the quilt, turn off all the light except the Christmas lights, and watch Christmas movies. Then we’d get to open one present and mom would read The Cajun Night Before Christmas and The Polar Express. We stopped due to a combination of my sister going through a very lengthy bitchy phase and it hurting too much to sit on the floor for that long.
There were only the 3 of us, mom, dad and me. It was a tradition that after finishing Christmas shopping we would show to one another what gifts we had purchased for the other family member. So, for instance, I would show dad what I had bought mom. Mom would show him what she had bought me. My father's last Christmas (he went into the hospital just before then and died just after New Year's) mom and I had finished our shopping. She showed dad what she got me. I showed him what I got her. He never let on one little bit. He went in to hospital on the 21st and took a turn on the 22nd. On Christmas morning, oh the surprise when mom and I opened our gifts and saw that we had bought each other the same tops. We wore them to the hospital. My dad looked like he was out of it, but we talked to him and told him we were wearing our tops. We teased him about not letting on about it at all. He kept quite the secret. My dad wasn't out of it. He smiled.
Every year we go to my GrGr (Grandma on my Mom's side)'s house, usually Christmas Eve or the afternoon of Christmas. They have this pickle ornament, and every year an adult hides the pickle somewhere in the tree. Then, when it comes time to open presents, the kids (and sometimes the adults too) all scramble to try and find the pickle - not an easy task bc GrGr always has the tree dressed up all pretty. Whoever finds it gets to open the first present. Then they pick the next present for someone else to open, and so on.
My husband and I always go out for Christmas dinner. Christmas Eve and Morning are for the family, but dinner is just the two of us. The restaurant is always somewhere we haven't been and then we tip the total of the bill. (If the bill was 75 dollars the waiter/waitress gets 75 dollars.)
Our kids get one christmas ornament in their advent calendars every year. On the ornaments i write their name and the year. This started when our daughter was born. Mostly because I remembered how much money I spent on christmas ornaments when my wife and I started having our own christmas with decorations, a tree and so on. So I buy something for the kids every year so they will have a nice collection of ornaments with, hopefully, a lot of good memories attached.
I do this too! My son's first one though is his foot print in sculpy clay I had leftover.
Load More Replies...Gifts from mom and dad are always signed Love XXX. Santa still fills the stockings Xmas Eve. Gifts from Santa are always wrapped in colored tissue paper instead of regular Xmas wrapping paper. BTW, the youngest is our family is now 55.
Being an only child my mom wanted Christmas to be as magical as possible. When I very young she went out and bought a couple bags of potpourri at the local craft store. When my parents took down the Christmas decoration and packed them away she divided the potpourri into the boxes to marinate for the year (we kept our Christmas items in the attic). The following year all of the decorations smelled so nice like the potpourri. She would always say it was the "The magic of Christmas bringing everyone together for festivities and merriment." To me the potpourri became the smell of Christmas and magic. Plus it made the house smell good without lighting a candle (we had pets). So whenever I smell a sent similar (candle, perfume, diffuser ect.) I stop in my tracks and smile knowing that there is still magic somewhere. I'm now in my late 20's and hope to continue this tradition with my Christmas decor.
Growing up, our family tradition was that on the night we decorate our Christmas tree we got to open and eat the ONE and ONLY box of See's candy we would ever get that year. Still do this my children who are grown if they can be home. They are continuing the tradition in their families. One year my son was deployed to Iraq for a year. At Christmas, I bought a mini Christmas tree, mini Christmas lights and mini Christmas decorations. I packed it all in a box including a box of See's candy to open with whoever he decided to have him help decorate the tree. Thank you See's Candy for almost 60 years of memories!
This was delightful thread! Really made me remember all the traditions we have as kids... like my dad's "christmas miracles" - he used to hide various random stuff (stuffed toys, cheese packets, buns, mittens...) into our christmas tree and the nativity scene we had set up and when somebody found out, he claimed it's christmas miracle. Best one was when he placed jar of olives instead of baby Jesus in the nativity and we hadn't noticed for a day. Oh boy I have to do it this year.
Everyone got my 8th grade school picture. You know the type: nerdy cats-eye glasses, beehive hair, not-in-the-least-stylish outfit. No makeup. Dad adored the picture. Pretty sure he had 500 copies made. I'd find them hidden everywhere, beautifully gift wrapped... my first car, first date, first concert, birthdays. It became a game to find them before others could see them. He continued it until Alzheimer's took him from us. Decades! I still find them in his memorabilia. Sigh.
Not very strange, but we open gifts slowly to savor the experience a bit. Generally one person at a time has hands on a gift, and everyone watches them open it, talk about it and we all just share the excitement and be happy with them before moving on to a gift for the next person. It surprised me to learn that many families are a more free-for-all occasion.
When I was married, the closest thing we had to a Christmas Day tradition was participating in the Jewish "tradition" (although we weren't Jewish) of eating at a Chinese restaurant. Mmmmm, dim sum. Then we'd spend the rest of the day going to movies—at least two, sometimes four if the showtimes allowed.
When my kids were younger we would have a birthday cake on Christmas Day - complete with candles and singing Happy Birthday - because it was Jesus' birthday. Each year I buy four more tree ornaments representing the four family members. Sometimes it's a theme, sometimes it's ones that catch my fancy. I use a Sharpie on the back to write the year and the person's initials. Adding to the collection are special ornaments sent by faraway friends or ones that celebrate a significant event (eg, Baby's 1st Christmas). I even buy them for the years we don't have a tree due to being away, etc. It's fun to look at them when we decorate the tree and while the tree is up.
We also have a unique tree topper. When we got our house and could get a properly sized tree (condo was too small), I searched for 2 months for a topper I liked. Eventually I gave up and bought some other decorations, including this owl that's supposed to sit on a mantel or shelf somewhere. My husband hated the owl- thought it was so ugly, but my oldest (who was about 2 at the time) and I loved it. So we stuck it on top of the tree as a joke, and now it's up there every year. Bonus is that it scares the sh*t out of the cats, so they don't attack the tree as much.
My favorite part of Christmas is actually doing the stockings for my kids. I just shop at the dollar store and stuff them full of cheap toys and candy. I couple of years ago I decided they were too old for such as they were now in their ‘30’s. They were so disappointed! So I make sure and do stockings every year now for my kids and their spouses. ❤️❤️❤️
Hope everyone has a wonderful Christmas. I personally try to make the best of each because you never know who will no longer be here for the next. Cherish those you love on this holiest day of the year. Remember that you are blessed to have the opportunity to spend it with them. Most of all, have fun and relax so you can truly enjoy your company.
We have the official first song of Christmas, Barbara Streisand’s super fast version of Jingle Bells. No one is allowed to play any Christmas music until we play that one, which can’t happen unless the whole family is there. We crank the volume up to max, dance wildly the whole song through, and collapse on the couch dramatically at the end. I mean like crazy dancing, no standing around allowed. And then we turn the volume down and go about our business as usual. There’s also the first ornament of Christmas, which is a plaster and cardboard Depression-era heirloom nativity set that always gets nestled in the branches right at the front of the tree before we put any other ornaments up.
In 8th grade I had to make an ornament that reminded me of Texas for a TX History assignment. I made a pretty TX state shaped flag out of sequins and for extra credit a 6 inch coach roach with a Christmas bow. We were not prepared for the size of the huge roaches in the house day 1 when we moved here. My first memory of the house includes running, screaming and stomping. Mom stopped the movers bringing in furniture and became good friends with the bug man. Hence the coach roach which sits on a prominent spot on the tree every year for the past 30+ years.
As kids in the 60s we put up an ancient but elaborate tabletop navitity scene every year (so old that the animals were missing legs and ears, etc) We alternated the 'honor' of putting baby Jesus in the creche as the last step. One year my younger brother, miffed that it wasnt his turn, put baby Jesus in the hanging bucket in the well. 50 years later he still takes baby Jesus out of the creche and puts him in the well everytime we go to my parents house for Christmas.
My sister's and I used to slowly change out pieces of our dad's nativity scene, by Christmas Mary was a hot wheels and baby Jesus was a trex
I´m german and we always met at my grandparents house to celebrate xmas together with quite a lot of people even coming from the states since some siblings of my father emigrated in the 50ies. Our tradition each year was to discuss grandpas (died long ago..) involvement in the NSDAP and why he and my grandmother were OK with this. He was quite inner circle working for Albert Speer as chief engineer. Maybe this sounds awful but it was necessary and I learned a lot from the "excuses" my grandma stated how even decend people were sucked and forced into that murderous apparatus. Mostly this happened when everybody was drunk later in the evening. Before that everything was all shiny and nice..xmas tree, presents, nice decoration, uncle playing piano...happy children. Loved my grandma anyways. Still.. NEVER AGAIN.
I have 2 boys, about 4 years apart. First of all, my husband and I decided that we wanted our kids to understand that Santa brings one gift for each of us, but the real gifts come from Mom and Dad. So Santa leaves a very special gift and candy. The kids are allowed to look at the Santa gifts (as they are unwrapped), but they can't touch anything in their stocking or under the tree! Because, one Christmas eve night, my oldest decided to get up early and began opening ALL the gifts under the tree! Then when my youngest was old enough to get the gist of Santa, the two conspired to open their gifts under the tree, and close them back up. Ever since, I have had to code the packages. I include my husband, and I change the codes each year. Sometimes it's one number in their birthdays, or a letter from their name. So the kids never know who gets which gifts. It started to keep them from opening gifts before we could all be together. Now they look forward to the codes!
So my mom passed away 17 years ago this Dec. 23rd, and I won't lie, it's hard as f***- I cry a lot at Christmas, haha... We did this thing called the throw up man, it was this insane old cookie cutter that looked like a gay clown mime or something, it was just a bizarre and hilarious cookie cutter, so I was of course drawn to him, despite the rule that Santa wouldn't eat the cookies that weren't Christmas shapes (I always I insisted on a birthday cake, a turkey, and the shamrock, and "Santa" [aka my Papa] never did eat them, haha...) Anyway, so it was hilarious to cover the man with ALL THE SPRINKLES, and once baked they melted together into a brown, lumpy mess, hence his name- she even mentioned it in her last letter (she overdosed, we don't know if she meant to or not...)so... Yeah. Still do it, found the exact same cookie cutter set on Ebay, and it was so nice, even tho, yes, I cried the whole time. Love and miss you forever, Mommy, Mimi and Papa. Christmas just isn't the same...
My family loves our riddles and prank gifts. Almost every year somebody gets a present wrapped in duct tape, a box in a box in a box, or has to solve a set of riddles to FIND their present. Our other tradition is you have to model the clothes you get on Christmas. The story goes that when my uncle was in high school he asked for a Speedo. Christmas morning it was wrapped around the top of the tree. After some coercing, he went off and came back wearing it. That's when the rest of the family mobbed him. He fought them off, but somebody still got a photo. He *thinks* he managed to destroy them all 😉.
My grandmother made all us grandchildren stockings from her own design. When my oldest had her child, she said that now that I am the grandma, I should make them. My grandma must have made 50 in her time as the stocking artist. I've made 6. (Kids spouses, grandkids) But I'm documenting mine, and making stencils and patterns to make it easier on the next person!
Not Christmas, but on Thanksgivings starting a couple years ago somehow my mom and I started buying rubber duckies and putting them out with the thanksgiving meal. When anyone asked what’s up with the ducks, we would look at them confused and say “what do you mean? It’s Thanksgiving, of course we need rubber ducks!’” And act like it’s as normal to Thanksgiving as turkey, surprised that they seemed to have forgotten that! So it’s added to our shopping list, always remembered, and we keep the act up that it’s normal
When my sister and I were like 5 we had just learned the song "O Christmas Tree" and decided to hold hands in front of the tree, and sing the song to it, we're now 13 and 14 and I have a little brother now and we still do it the night we put the tree up :)
Every Christmas eve all of my grandkids and my oldest daughter stay the night with me and they have their Christmas eve boxes. My daughter is the first one to wake up on Christmas every year, automatically she will start calling my son and his wife to get them to head to my house. I have a picture of her staring out the window like a creeper watching for them. Each year we spend Christmas with my daughters ex mother, and my daughter in laws mother, and really anyone who has no place to go for the holidays. I do my best to make sure each person has a gift even if its something small. I am the one that does all the cooking but have started teaching my daughter and daughter in law how to make Christmas dinner so eventually I can retire. I love Christmas a lot, probably more than the kids, lol. I think its magical, and I enjoy being able to give my grown kids things that they want since they sacrifice everyday during their year for their families, the rest of the night we play games.
In my family we have Christmas Eve traditions. We eat dinner, then go downstairs and watch some combination of Charlie Brown Christmas, the original Grinch, and Christmas Story. Then we drive around town to look at all the lights. Then we all sit on the couch and someone reads Night Before Christmas.
The year we went to see Polar Express Santa "lost" a little bell that only my kids could hear. It went in with the Christmas decorations and every year they checked to see if they could still hear it! They heard that bell for many years until it turned up missing!
Here in Germany, we get our gifts on Christmas Eve. So every year on the 24th, my dad would take me and we'd burn down a few sparklers while looking for Santa. Some years, I was certain I caught a glimpse of him and why wouldn't I? After all, when we came back in, there'd be plenty of presents under the tree... which I'm sure had nothing to do with my mother, who stayed inside... anyway, we still do that every year.
My husband and I started a tradition that Christmas Day is just for our nuclear family: me, him, and our 2 kids. No parents/in-laws, no aunts, uncles, cousins, friends (unless it's like a friend who doesn't have anyone else to spend the day with), no one but us. It's amazing. This year will be the first time in 9 years that we're spending Christmas with his family because his mom guilt tripped him into agreeing to it--without even asking me how I felt. I'm kinda resentful about it.