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7 Fun, Simple Christmas Traditions to Enjoy with Your Family
#1 READING CHRISTMAS BOOKS OUT LOUD
#2 PUTTING TOGETHER A 1000 PIECE CHRISTMAS PUZZLE
#3 ROLLING CHANGE FOR CHARITY
#4 WRITING CHRISTMAS LETTERS TO EACH CHILD
#5 MAKING CRAFTS WITH ELDERLY NEIGHBORS
#6 MAKING HANDMADE CHRISTMAS ORNAMENTS
#7 BAKING ANDY’S FAVORITE ITALIAN COCOA COOKIES
WHEN IT COMES TO CHRISTMAS TRADITIONS, stick to what you love! What did you love about Christmas when you were growing up? What made you feel safe, connected, and cherished? Here are my favorite Christmas memories that turned into fun, simple Christmas traditions for my own family:
#1 READING CHRISTMAS BOOKS OUT LOUD
One of my most favorite memories from my childhood is sitting in the living room listening to my dad read out loud. I loved listening to fun, happy stories around Christmastime, and my kids do too.
This year, I found a new favorite read-aloud book that is perfect for kids of all ages: The Children of Noisy Village by Astrid Lindgren. What a sweet and funny book! Each chapter is about the holiday customs of six Swedish children living in the countryside.
From the chapter titled “Christmas in Noisy Village” …
“I don’t know when Christmas starts in other places, but in Noisy Village it starts the day we bake ginger snaps. We have almost as much fun that day as on Christmas Eve. Karl Bill and I each get a big chunk of gingersnap dough, and we can bake it in the shape of anything we want. The last time we were to bake ginger snaps, Karl forgot all about it and went to the forest with Daddy to get wood. Right in the middle of the forest he remembered what day it was and rushed home so fast that the snow whirled around him, Daddy said.“
(If you need a ginger cookie recipe, here is one of our favorites!)
For years, Andy and I have been reading The Best Christmas Pageant Ever to our kids every Christmas. We just love that book! It is still one of our favorites. But now my kids are asking me to read The Children of Noisy Village!
#2 PUTTING TOGETHER A 1000-PIECE CHRISTMAS PUZZLE
When I was little, my sisters would start the 1000-piece Santa Clause puzzle every December. I wasn’t allowed to touch the puzzle until I was old enough to not break it! So just imagine how excited I was to finally get to work on the Santa Claus puzzle. A few years ago, I went looking for a similar puzzle to start with my own kids. I thought this puzzle looked fun and delicious.
This year, we found out that we have one piece missing.
We finished the puzzle early this year, so I think I will put it away and bring out more puzzles to keep our hands busy on rainy days.
#3 ROLLING CHANGE FOR CHARITY
Andy’s mom gave the kids a jar that counts change and told them to save up their change all year so they could give a donation to charity the following Christmas.
This became a fun and meaningful Christmas tradition for the kids. The first few years we gave our donation to Smile Train and World Vision. This year we will give it to a friend in need.
#4 WRITING CHRISTMAS LETTERS TO EACH CHILD
The best part about writing a letter to each child this time of year is that it helps me remember their stage of life, the funny things they say and do, and how they interact with each other–the little things that photos and videos cannot capture.
I keep the letters in a special book that holds our family photos and/or Christmas cards as well. It might mean more to me than it does to them, but as they get older they appreciate the memories more and more.
#5 MAKING CRAFTS WITH ELDERLY NEIGHBORS
Our lovely neighbor made crafts with her grandchildren every year and gave them to their parents for Christmas. Soon after we moved in, she decided she would adopt our kids as her grandchildren and carry on the same tradition to surprise Andy and me with the projects our kids completed at her house. The crafts are really nice, sometimes quite complicated projects that take a few months. I can’t wait to see what they have been working on this year!
Angelina made this beaded bell decoration last Christmas.
#6 MAKING HANDMADE CHRISTMAS ORNAMENTS
After I saw a magazine article picturing a tree with all handmade, natural ornaments: orange slices that had been dried in the oven, cinnamon stick stars, simple decorative paper that was hole-punched and strung, and simple cutouts of white, baked dough, I decided that I wanted to decorate my tree that way. I love how the natural items look on real tree branches!
I added a few more things over the years: baked cinnamon dough cutouts, rosemary wreaths, white and red bean patterns glued to cardboard shapes, and white yarn pom-poms. It is fun for me to come up with a new, handmade, natural item to add to the tree each year. Of course, the kids make all kinds of handmade ornaments at preschool and church, and we hang those on the tree, along with candy canes and framed photo ornaments of the kids.
#7 BAKING ANDY’S FAVORITE ITALIAN COCOA COOKIES
Because Andy’s birthday is in December, and his favorite cookies are the Italian Cocoa Cookies his great great grandmother used to make, these cookies have become a Christmas tradition in our family. They are made with flour, butter, milk, sugar, cocoa, cinnamon, and spices, and topped with chocolate icing. He prefers it when I bake them with a maraschino cherry in the middle–like his grandmother did!
Looking over this post, I notice that my traditions are not super spiritual or focused on the birth of Jesus. We have those traditions too! But for this list, I included some things that I find simple, meaningful, and fun. I see these traditions and all of the traditions of Christmas as part of the tremendous gift that Jesus offers us in this life. I thank him for letting me live in a time of peace in my country, so I can enjoy these blessings with my family. As my elderly neighbor, who grew up during war, always reminds me: “You young people have no idea how lucky you are. You have no idea.”
For many of us, Christmas just wouldn’t be Christmas without our special family traditions. What is one of your family traditions that you want to pass along? Please share!