It is getting ever closer to the most
wonderful time of the year. And I have
a small problem. Smallest Boy cannot
write yet. Hence no letter to
Santa. Also, he is quite laid back and
easy going and has requested “stuff” for Christmas.
“Stuff” sounds easy, right? But seasoned parents recognise “stuff” for
what it is: your worst
Santa nightmare in the run up to the most wonderful time
of the year.
*What the
jangles am I is Santa going to get him???
Christmas was a very big deal for me
and my siblings many moons ago. Not for one minute am I suggesting it is
anything less than that for my own boys, but for us, Christmas was the perfect
opportunity to request proper “stuff. “Stuff”
that we really wanted, lusted after
and couldn’t sleep due to the expectations of receiving the “stuff.”
Our parents ensured my siblings and I
always got what we asked for. Without
fail. And there were a few lovely
surprises thrown in for extra squeals of joy and delight. As much as I loved my First Love doll, the
poster paints, my many, many books and the bookcase I still have, the bulging stocking was what I loved going through and
always kept till last. If I could hold
out.
This is how it looks in the boys' bedroom |
This was filled with items including a
toothbrush, a pair of socks, some pencils and school stationery supplies, toiletries
as we got older, notebooks, and other odds and ends, little knick knacks that
only the young can really enjoy. It was
like a giant, satisfying party bag after the
party.
But one Christmas gift from Santa
stands out far and way above everything else and when Sinead from Bumbles of Rice invited the Irish Parenting Bloggers to join in on her nostalgia post on a favourite toy from Santa, I knew immediately which one I
was going to write about.
My Petite 990 typewriter.
Even the ad on the telly filled me
with fizzing joy.
I am fizzing with joy thinking about
it more than three decades later.
I loved
it!
I spent many, many happy hours banging away on those keys. It must have driven my parents mad. But I learned valuable
typing-with-two-fingers-skills on that machine.
I had lots of words a minute.
A couple of years ago, on our annual trip
to Rosslare, we stopped off at a café absolutely buckling under the weight of
its retro objects.
And there, in a little alcove close to
where we sat, was a typewriter. Not my
beloved Petite 990 but a real, honest to god, typewriter all the same.
The boys were fascinated and hadn’t a clue
what it was. One of them hazarded a
guess at it being an old computer. He
wasn’t completely wrong but when I explained to them how it worked, they were
disbelieving and full of “but why? What’s the point? All the mistakes you would make. It would be
too slow.”
But those were the times we lived in,
boys. And years after my Petite 990 was
laid to rest somewhere, I went on to learn to type properly on one of those old-fashioned
typewriters.
*stuck
and desperate for desperation we did the only thing we could do with such a
short time before The Most Wonderful Time Of The Year: we took them to Smyth’s Toy store and let
them loose. I photocopied everything
they liked the look of and told them they could make one small alteration to their Christmas lists. as luck would have it, Smallest Boy
happened upon the one toy he spotted on the channel Pop over a month ago. Much joy!
We’re sorted. And I bet none of
their “stuff” will last as long as my book shelf did. But that’s not the point really, is it?
Such a great way to enjoy Christmas toys and there should be more of it as it gives us the feeling of real joy. Christmas has always been my favourite festival.
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