Tradition. Oh, you know: Christmas trees, Thanksgiving turkey, Mother’s Day brunch, fall pumpkin carving, birthday cakes, Sunday pancakes …This could take all day. I’m a sucker for a good tradition. I just love the sense of continuity and cohesion behind it. The sense that tradition can withstand time, from generation to generation, and that we, as participants, can watch it grow and evolve. Second, the power that tradition holds to bring families together, the sense of harmony that it affords. The customs, beliefs and practices that we share with our loved ones are oftentimes derived from what has been passed down to us, or from what we established on our own. In a world that is constantly shifting and changing, tradition in its essence offers us a sense of stability. Even when our surroundings change, we can rely on traditions to remain just as we left them. They offer us a glimpse into the past, to where we have come from, along with providing a hint of what is yet to come.





I just had a deliciously sweet weekend chock full of tradition. No, I am not just referring to the overabundance of cheesecake, cookies and cannolis at Aunt Renee’s annual Christmas party. I am referring to the Christmas-tree-shopping-and-decorating goodness that comes with the holiday season. This year marked the second year that Brian and I hunted for a Christmas tree; in other words, a continuation of our own tradition. We arrived at a small lot, a wide variety of live trees displayed under globe lights strung overhead. After we found “the one” and drove it home, Brian carried the tree inside while I crazily followed him around like an irritating Paparazzi member, recording videos and snapping photographs to engrain this year into our photographic memories. After the tree was set in its stand, lingering pine needles vacuumed, we admired ornaments collected over many years of Christmases and strung them over the tips of the seven-foot Douglass Fir. Grandma assisted in wrapping white lights around the perimeter. We strapped a makeshift Santa hat and beard combination around the head of their not-so-pleased white boxer, Cody. We decorated to Christmas music, the Yule log burning in the background. Over dinner, we discussed how this was our second year picking and decorating, and we daydreamed about continuing the tradition … someday with children of our own.
Okay, so this was only year two for us. But tradition is tradition, whether it has been established for centuries, or decades or years … or even when it has just begun. The important part? Establishing a custom or practice which gives you that sweet, feel-good spirit inside; a custom that makes you look forward to continuing it into the future, watching the tradition grow and evolve, with more memories and with more love.
Here are some of my favorite shots from my tradition filled weekend:
Are traditions important to you? What traditions do you maintain? Have you started ones of your own?
Nice post. In direct answer to your question, traditions are important to me. Some family Christmas traditions have gone by the wayside as we have gotten older of course, while some have stayed. I have been writing about some of this in my Christmas themed blogs. This Saturday, my sisters together with their husbands and my niece will all gather at my parents house to decorate my parents tree. Of course we all do our own thing at Christmas, but we like to do this for my parents still, and every year my sisters and I get a photo of us putting 3 identical elf ornaments on our tree (save for the color) we purchased together sometime in the ancient past. My wife and I have a few traditions as well, but I think my favorite is sitting in our little den, the room only lit by the lights from the tree, and a glass of something in our hands as we sit and listen to Dylan Thomas reading A Child’s Christmas In Wales. Merry Christmas!
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I love everything about what you shared. It must be very special for your parents to see their children come together each year to continue a tradition started long ago – and to see all three of you change in those elf pictures each year! It’s a nice balance you have, between family time and alone time with your wife. Thank you for sharing and Merry Christmas to you and yours!
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Thank you, it is nice to maintain separate traditions like that between my family and my wife. It is a season of traditions, some cultural, some hokey fun, and some that are deeply meaningful. I treasure them all. A very Merry Christmas to you and yours as well!
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This is so sweet! Loved this post. I’ve been discussing with my boyfriend what traditions are important to us – this is the first year we’re breaking off from our families’ traditions and really making our own! I’m a total sucker for the holidays, and it’s been a little challenging to start our own, but it’s also exciting. Thanks for the inspiration!
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It is definitely exciting! It’s nice to look back in the coming years and say, “remember when we first started doing this?” It’s a nice opportunity to reflect. I wish you a very happy holiday and lots of fun creating your very own traditions. 🙂
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Tradition is important in my family especially right around Christmas. We go to church on Christmas Eve and then come back home where we have snacks and often good company and we talk and celebrate until it is late. Even some of the food is traditional: cheeseball, spinach dip, Christmas tree cookies, tarts, shortbread, chocolate brownies, little hot appetizers such as chinese food, etc. On Christmas Day we have over all of our significant others, grandmas, etc and have huge mid afternoon meal again with some special food such as perogies and cabbage roles. Presents are opened Christmas Eve but sometimes Christmas late morning if the company stays really late. Great post!
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I love it, Mandi. It seems that you opening gifts late on Christmas morning suggests only one thing – that you and your family had quite the party the night before 😉 Good company + good food? You’re speaking my language. Merry Christmas!
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Holidays are full of traditions. My five older sisters and I have gathered every year for decades for our holiday cookie baking marathon. We make 10-12 dozen of 15-20 varieties of cookies, package them up to stock them in our freezers, and give them as gifts. We are a well-oiled machine – keeping notes in a journal and documenting experiments from year to year. It never feels like the holidays until we bake.
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Ahh, cookies. Such a fabulous part of the holiday season. I would love to peek into your recipe book 😉 I used to partake in the cookie exchange at my firm, sometimes baking a few dozen at a time. That was a lot of work … so I give you credit for doing it every year! But it appears as though you really enjoy doing it, so that is the best part. Happy holidays and happy baking!
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I’m happy to share recipes! I blogged about our cookie bake last month as part of my 30 Days of Thanks series. While we use cookie baking as a vehicle to get together, the day is really about gathering as sisters with our parents, family and friends.
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Love this post!
I love having traditions. Right now I am introducing my boyfriend to some, and vice versa. But just as important as family traditions to me are ones with friends!
It can be really hard especially during the busy holidays to see your friends since everyone has a different schedule, but having one thing that everyone does every year can keep friendships and relationships strong!
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So true, Alex. I find that it gets harder and harder to coordinate schedules with friends and, as you say, especially during the holidays. You have inspired me to make that extra phone call to touch base and make some plans. Thank you for reading and happy holidays!
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The most important tradition- the one that strikes me immediately in this post, is love and togetherness during the Holiday. Well said.
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I really do love everyone coming together and sharing in the spirit of the holidays. Thank you for reading!
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This is embarrassing, but one of my traditions is having a fake Christmas tree even though I live near five Christmas tree farms in CT. I got sick of lugging in a full-grown fir every year. My husband and sons got over their horror and now our tradition is setting up the tree (in three easy pieces) and plugging it in!
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There is nothing wrong with that! While my boyfriend’s family gets a live tree each year, my family has always used the same fake one from years past. It comes with attached lighting and everything – can’t beat that 😉 Real tree or not, that doesn’t matter. What matters is the togetherness that you share with your family. Merry Christmas!
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Just thought I would share my own post about this and point some people to your blog while I am at it! http://robpatdoy.wordpress.com/2014/12/21/soundtrack-of-a-photograph-the-christmas-editions-part-21/
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Thank you for sharing! I just stopped by and left my thoughts directly on your page. I really enjoyed it.
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Thank you, I just responded 🙂 Cheers!
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Reblogged this on violettripplehorn.
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Hi there,
Merry Christmas to you and your family 🙂
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