Looking forward to 2023!

Well, here’s hoping that all had a great and safe Christmas holiday. I know that we certainly did. We left our home in the Newport News, Va neighborhood of Kiln Creek around 7ish on the morning of December 24th, and headed out I-64 to connect with the I-95 interstate north. We do our Christmas Celebration on Christmas eve to allow my son and his family to spend Christmas Day with his wife’s family.

We had hoped to make the trip with minimal travel constraints and were pretty successful for the majority of the distance up the infamous I-95. Our GPS took us up to the exit for VA123 and then onward to the Loudoun County Parkway and my daughter Kurby’s home.

Gathering together with my small family (daughter Kurby, son Cliff, daughter-in-law Becky, granddaughters, Rebecca, Hattie, and Camilla; and Phyllis, Cliff and Kurby’s mom.), we spent several hours talking, catching up with everyone and exchanging small gifts. Then came the Christmas dinner food. The old skipper was not cautious with the intake, since it was a holiday feast.

At around half past three pm, we gathered up our goo0dies, and said our farewells until the next time. The Bride ( still consider her the bride, cause it’s only been over 40 years together at this point) once again took the helm of our pretty blue Buick SUV and pointed her nose southward toward our home. Once again, we were blessed with a reasonable amount of traffic crowding, excepting the section between the DC area and Fredericksburg. Once we cleared that constant jam up, our path was clear, and we were able to make the voyage home without problems and arrived safely at our home.

Christmas Day dawned with clear skies again. We had a nice Christmas Day with a great homemade Spinach/Bacon/Mushroom Quiche for our Christmas Breakfast. We then spent most of the day watching seasonal movies and the Christmas Dinner that Charlotte prepared. Yum, along with homemade desserts the Christmas Day feast was wonderful.

So, at the end of the day, we had a very good Christmas holiday. Monday was also a quiet day for us, since most of the country was also taking that day as an extension for the Holiday. We celebrated one more holiday at our new home in the Tidewater area of southeastern Virginia and let those 20+ degree temps stay outside.

Once things warm back up, we will look into the idea of more Hampton Roads Day Trips.

Here’s hoping that we survive the changes in our current Congress.

It’s Beginning to look a lot like Christmas!

This morning we awoke to a changing weather environ. Yesterday was very cold, temps in the low 30s and high 20s. Windy and damp! Today’s weather forecast was indicative of a fairly heavy rain, with some thunderheads booming in the afternoon. Not sure we will get that weather, but not a problem for me.

On this 22nd day of December in the year 2022, we are finalizing our plans for travel up to Northern Virginia, the township of Ashburn and a Christmas eve day spent with our children and grandchildren. Perhaps even a friend or two might drop by my daughter’s home which is where we will have our holiday gathering as we have for several years, the pandemic exception noted.

Our major concern at this point is the forecasted drop in temps for Saturday, our day of travel to and from my daughter’s home in Northern Virginia. If the rains continue and the ground is wet, the drop in temps to the mid 20’s and 30’s might cause problems. The drive to visit with family and enjoy the Christmas spirit with great times is almost 200 miles each way. If the roads are icy, we may have to stay home, but indicators are that we will have a decent environment for the trip up and back, so fingers crossed.

Well we got some rain, and tomorrow is calling for high winds. If things go well for us, the wind will dry out all the wetness on the streets and highways so our Christmas trip to our kids and grand kids will go well.

Keep good thoughts for our voyage.

Wishing you all a very happy season, love and family.

Well, forgot to send this to the blogosphere. So, a bit of an update.

Today is December 23, the temps have dropped considerably and as that old standard Christmas/Winter song said, Baby it’s cold outside. Things brightened up though. We had a fast moving rainstorm come through about noon or slightly earlier. Didn’t last long and the skies brightened up to a beautiful clear blue skies. Oh but there’s more, the temps dropped from the 40s down into the 20s.

Charlotte drove the car over to the local Target to pick up a grinder and some espresso coffee beans to make espresso powder for her cake baking. The crowds and traffic were horrendous, but she persevered and brought home the products. Now comes a great Chocolate Cake for the old man’s Christmas feast.

We will spend the day tomorrow on the road to the Christmas gathering of our family and then returning to our home in Newport News. About 5 hours of driving, plus several hours of family, good food and warm familial love. So looking forward to that!

Okay, time to stop, get this blog entry published and then have a bite to eat before bedtime. Hope for a great holiday season for all of you, regardless of your faith or celebratory activity. Take care and have a great new year.

Old Harv

And a Happy Christmas Season to All!

Today brings us ever closer to the Christmas holiday and my thoughts turn to family, friends, and life in general. My fervent wish for this season would be a return to the Christmas seasons of my youth, back in the olden days. It was truly a magical season back then, and all those days seem to be but a very precious memory.

The Christmas holiday for some time now has seemed more commercial than a holiday of faith, religious observance, and love of family & friends. The stores start their Christmas sales and advertisements the day after Thanksgiving and in some years this marketing begins just after the Halloween holiday.

Why?

How did things turn so commercial for a season that was identified for so many years as a reflective and faithful celebration? At my advanced age, I can still remember when the gift giving aspects of the Christmas season was focused on the kiddos receiving presents from Santa and mom and dad, and the big deal for us kids was the appearance of the Christmas TREE! Lots of decorations to place on that tree, faith items to display around the house and then the first lighting of the tree’s decoration lights. And also, the big deal for the season was that we all went to Christmas service at whatever church of whatever faith we all subscribed to. Of course, for my siblings and myself, getting all “gussied up” in dressy clothes was not a thrill because we had to be extra careful not to get them dirty, so we had to be quiet and still.

But, between the gifts, the great meal, and lots of family members around, this was a time of joy and comfort for all of us. I can still remember my mom, dad and other family members gathering at our house, my grandparents’ house or some other family member’s house for renewal, lots of great food, and happy times. Almost all of those folks are gone now, and out of five brothers and three sisters, there are only two sisters and me remaining. And since those two siblings live all the way on the other side of our great country, there is no chance to “gather together” with them anymore.

BUT we now have our own family unit with my son, Cliff, his wife Becky. our four granddaughters, Abby, Becca, Hattie and Cammie, along with my daughter, Kurby and their mother Phyllis, to have a gathering of family with myself and my wonderful wife, Charlotte.

So, come the 24th day of this month of December, (my son, my daughter in law and their kids spend Christmas Day with the Becky’s family), my wife and I will arise at a very early hour, while still very dark outside and feed our two senior kitties, we will then load some simple gifts, a batch of freshly baked cookies and ourselves into our car and make the drive up to Kurby’s home in Ashburn, Northern Virginia from our home in the Hampton Roads area of Southeastern Virginia to spend this special time with our family. Believe me, I am really looking forward to this holiday visit.

Come on folks, we are quickly approaching the season of faith, from the observance of Christmas, of Hannukah, of Now Ruz, and of Kwanza. Let us all remember what these holiday observances truly mean, renewal of our faith, and a rededication to a love of mankind. If we cannot recapture the “good will toward man” to some viable degree, then we may truly be lost as a species. I frankly refuse to believe that is our situation.

Time for us all to remember those halcyon days of yore. When we all gathered around the house, shared gifts, some of monetary worth, but most of love and compassion.

It is the season of faith renewal, whether one is a religious person, a person of faith, a person of agnostic belief, or a person who is atheistic. Time to set aside our hate, our disdain, and our division; let’s remember that this time of year is all about hope, love and renewal.

Sadly, one observance by this old man regarding the religions in our nation and most likely in many nations around the world, is that people are moving away from religion as currently practiced in many of our organized churches. Sadly, the once large church congregations are shrinking year by year. In many, many cases one only needs to look at two aspects of modern religious practices, at least in this nation, to understand the apparent departure of so many people from organized religion.

First, of course, is the obscene display of exceptional wealth by some religion practitioners. The huge houses, the expensive cars and in many cases the private airplanes while their membership rely on much less in possessions and money are a real turn off by people of modest means who are exhorted by these wealthy preachers to give more and more of their hard-earned incomes.

The second apparent cause for the departure of people from the organized religious church facilities is the growing influences of these so-called preachers of some religions injecting themselves and their congregational membership into the political aspects of our nation. There is a good reason why religion and politics/governance should remain clearly separate and the actions over the past few years are perfect examples of this reason.

There are other countries in our world, that are ruled by a religion dominated government and all of them, without exception are bound by religious strictures imposed by the religious leaders, against the individual rights of their citizens. One simply has to look to the countries in the Middle East, such as Iran, Saudi Arabia, among others in this part of the world. Simply consider the recent instance in Iran where a young girl was beaten to death by the Iranian Government’s Religious/Morality Police! Her horrible crime? She allowed some of her hair to be seen outside of her chador or head and body scarf in a violation of that theocratic society moral stricture about the cover of a female’s hair. As one who has lived in these middle eastern countries as an expatriate consultant, I observed this situation firsthand and hope mightily to NEVER see this aspect in our United States of America society.

Frankly, I believe very strongly that religion and religious practices should remain within the church community and far, far away from any involvement with government and politics, and the same thing with government from religion! However, one can take heart in the fact that there are still many religious faith groups that do not presume to be the end all for societal mores, political influence, and individual rights. This is my thankful attitude, we still have some religious groups that believe their charge is to help guide in faith, to guide not demand.

So in this coming holiday season, try to renew your faith, renew your love of all mankind, and renew your gratefulness for family, friends, and home.

As one who is still a faithful person, I wish you all a very happy holiday season, for my Christian friends and family, a Merry Christmas, for my diverse friends a happy Hannukah, Now Ruz, Kwanza, and Good Tidings to those of no religious faith. May your holiday be pleasing, and your new year be better than before.

And from Harvey, Charlotte, Duchess the elderly cat and Penny the senior cat;

Have a Holly Jolly Christmas, and oh by golly have a Hap Hap Happy New Year!