SATURDAY NIGHTS WITH SPARKS
THE GIFT OF
FORGIVENESS
The
Christmas of 1949 we didn’t have a tree. My dad had as much pride as anybody, I
suppose, so he wouldn’t just say that we couldn’t afford one.
When
I mentioned it, my mother said that we weren’t going to have one this year,
that we couldn’t afford one, and even if we could – it was stupid to clutter up
your house with a dead tree. I wanted a tree badly though, and I thought – in
my naive way – that if we had one, everybody would feel better.
About
three days before Christmas, I was out collecting for my paper route. It was
fairly late – long after dark – it was snowing and very cold. I went to the
apartment building to try to catch a customer who hadn’t paid me for nearly two
months – she owed me seven dollars.
Much
to my surprise, she was home. She invited me in and not only did she pay me,
she gave me a dollar tip! It was a windfall for me – I now had eight whole
dollars.
What
happened next was totally unplanned. On the way home, I walked past a Christmas
tree lot and the idea hit me.
The
selection wasn’t very good because it was so close to the holiday, but there
was this one real nice tree. It had been a very expensive tree and no one had
bought it; now it was so close to Christmas that the man was afraid no one
would.
He
wanted ten dollars for it, but when I – in my gullible innocence – told him I
only had eight, he said he might sell it for that.
I
really didn’t want to spend the whole eight dollars on the tree, but it was so
pretty that I finally agreed.
I
dragged it all the way home – about a mile, I think – and I tried hard not to
damage it or break off any limbs. The snow helped to cushion it, and it was
still in pretty good shape when I got home. You can’t imagine how proud and
excited I was. I propped it up against the railing on our front porch and went
in. My heart was bursting as I announced that I had a surprise. I got Mom and
Dad to come to the front door and then I switched on the porch light.
“Where did you get that tree?” my mother
exclaimed. But it wasn’t the kind of exclamation that indicates pleasure.
“I bought it up on Main Street. Isn’t it just
the most perfect tree you ever saw?” I said, trying to maintain my
enthusiasm.
“Where did you get the money?” Her tone
was accusing and it began to dawn on me that this wasn’t going to turn out as I
had planned.
“From my paper route.” I explained about
the customer who had paid me.
“And you spent the whole eight dollars on
this tree?” she exclaimed.
She
went into a tirade about how stupid it was to spend my money on a dumb tree
that would be thrown out and burned in a few days.
She
told me how irresponsible I was and how I was just like my dad with all those
foolish, romantic, noble notions about fairy tales and happy endings and that
it was about time I grew up and learned some sense about the realities of life
and how to take care of money and spend it on things that were needed and not
on silly things. She said that I was going to end up in the poorhouse because I
believe in stupid things like Christmas trees, things that didn’t amount to
anything. I just stood there. My mother had never talked to me like that before
and I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. I felt awful and I began to cry.
Finally, she reached out and snapped off the porch light.
“Leave it there,” she said. “Leave that tree there till it rots, so every
time we see it, we’ll all be reminded of how stupid the men in this family
are.”
Then
she stormed up the stairs to her bedroom and we didn’t see her until the next
day. Dad and I brought the tree in and we made a stand for it.
He
got out the box of ornaments and we decorated it as best as we could; but men
aren’t too good at things like that, and besides, it wasn’t the same without
mom. There were a few presents under it by Christmas day – although I can’t
remember a single one of them – but Mom wouldn’t have anything to do with it.
It
was the worst Christmas I ever had.
Fast
forward to today, Judi and I married in August of 1963, and dad died on October
10 of that year. Over the next eight years, we lived in many places. Mom sort
of divided up the year – either living with my sister Jary or with us.
In
1971 we were living in Wichita, Kansas – Lincoln was about seven, Brendan was
three and Kristen was a baby. Mom was staying with us during the holidays. On
Christmas Eve I stayed up very late. I was totally alone with my thoughts,
alternating between joy and melancholy, and I got to thinking about my paper
route, that tree, what my mother had said to me and how Dad had tried to make
things better.
I
heard a noise in the kitchen and discovered that it was mom. She couldn’t sleep
either and had gotten up to make herself a cup of hot tea – which was her
remedy for just about everything. As she waited for the water to boil, she
walked into the living room and discovered me there. She saw my open Bible and
asked me what I was reading. When I told her, she asked if I would read it to
her and I did.
When
the kettle began to whistle, she went and made her tea. She came back, and we
started to visit. I told her how happy I was that she was with us for Christmas
and how I wished that Dad could have lived to see his grandchildren and to
enjoy this time because he always loved Christmas too. It got very quiet for a
moment and then she said, “Do you
remember that time on Twelve Mile Road when you bought that tree with your
paper route money?”
“Yes,” I said, “I’ve just been thinking about it you know.”
She
hesitated for a long moment, as though she were on the verge of something that
was bottled up so deeply inside her soul that it might take surgery to get it
out. Finally, great tears started down her face and she cried, “Oh, son, please forgive me.”
“That time and that Christmas have been a
burden on my heart for twenty-five years. I wish your dad were here so I could
tell him how sorry I am for what I said. Your dad was a good man and it hurts
me to know that he went to his grave without ever hearing me say that I was
sorry for that night. Nothing will ever make what I said right, but you need to
know that your dad never did have any money sense (which was all too true).
We were fighting
all the time – though not in front of you – we were two months behind in our
house payments, we had no money for groceries, your dad was talking about going
back to Arkansas and that tree was the last straw. I took it all out on you. It
doesn’t make what I did right, but I hoped that someday, when you were older,
you would understand. I’ve wanted to say something for ever so long and I’m so
glad it’s finally out.”
Well,
we both cried a little and held each other and I forgave her – it wasn’t hard,
you know.
Then
we talked for a long time, and I did understand; I saw what I had never seen
and the bitterness and sadness that had gathered up in me for all those years
gradually washed away.
It
was marvelously simple.
By
John William Smith.
There
is nothing liberating as forgiveness. There is this light headedness that comes
with it. Try it today. Let go of that hurt in your heart.
NotVikkytorya
About the Author
Here is what Andikan Inyang also known as 'Sparks' has to say about herself......................
Here is what Andikan Inyang also known as 'Sparks' has to say about herself......................
As
a Chemical Engineering graduate, former Immigration Officer and present
day banker.....and most importantly, a foodie, I hide behind my
pen.......therein lies my strength. I hope to pursue a career in writing
and explore the world of poetry. So help me God. 
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