Mike's
Story
It's
just a small, white envelope
stuck among the branches of
our Christmas tree. No name,
no identification, no inscription.
It has peeked through the
branches of our tree for the
past 10 years or so.
It
all began because my husband
Mike hated Christmas - oh,
not the true meaning of Christmas,
but the commercial aspects
of it - overspending, the
frantic running around at
the last minute to get a tie
for Uncle Harry and the dusting
powder for Grandma - the gifts
given in desperation because
you couldn't think of anything
else. Knowing he felt this
way, I decided one year to
bypass the usual shirts, sweaters,
ties and so forth. I reached
for something special just
for Mike.
The
inspiration came in an unusual
way. Our son Kevin, who was
12 that year, was wrestling
at the junior level at the
school he attended; and shortly
before Christmas, there was
anon-league match against
a team sponsored by an inner-city
church, mostly black.
These
youngsters, dressed in sneakers
so ragged that shoestrings
seemed to be the only thing
holding them together, presented
a sharp contrast to our boys
in their spiffy blue and gold
uniforms and sparkling new
wrestling shoes. As the match
began, I was alarmed to see
that the other team was wrestling
without headgear, a kind of
light helmet designed to protect
a wrestler's ears. It was
a luxury the ragtag team obviously
could not afford.
Well,
we ended up walloping them.
We took every weight class.
And as each of their boys
got up from the mat, he swaggered
around in his tatters with
false bravado, a kind of street
pride that couldn't acknowledge
defeat.
Mike,
seated beside me, shook his
head sadly, "I wish just
one of them could have won,"
he said. "They have a
lot of potential, but losing
like this could take the heart
right out of them."
Mike
loved kids - all kids - and
he knew them, having coached
little league football, baseball
and lacrosse. That's when
the idea for his present came.
That afternoon, I went to
a local sporting goods store
and bought an assortment of
wrestling headgear and shoes
and sent them anonymously
to the inner-city church.
On
Christmas Eve, I placed the
envelope on the tree, the
note inside telling Mike what
I had done and that this was
his gift from me. His smile
was the brightest thing about
Christmas that year and in
succeeding years.
For
each Christmas, I followed
the tradition - one year sending
a group of mentally handicapped
youngsters to a hockey game,
another year a check to a
pair of elderly brothers whose
home had burned to the ground
the week before Christmas.
The envelope became the highlight
of our Christmas.
It
was always the last thing
opened on Christmas morning
and our children, ignoring
their new toys, would stand
with wide-eyed anticipation
as their dad lifted the envelope
from the tree to reveal its
contents. As the children
grew, the toys gave way to
more practical presents, but
the envelope never lost its
allure.
The
story doesn't end there. You
see, we lost Mike last year
due to dreaded cancer. When
Christmas rolled around, I
was still so wrapped in grief
that I barely got the tree
up. But Christmas Eve found
me placing an envelope on
the tree, and in the morning,
it was joined by three more.
Each of our children, unbeknownst
to the others, had placed
an envelope on the tree for
their dad.
The
tradition has grown and someday
will expand even further with
our grandchildren standing
around the tree with wide-eyed
anticipation watching as their
fathers take down the envelope...
Mike's
spirit, like the Christmas
spirit, will always be with
us.
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