I got up early…..sort of…..to write. I did have to finish
Marc Cameron’s new Clancy novel, “Oath of Office,” but after I took care of
that, well….look at me! I am writing. While cruising around the internet doing
only worthwhile things a week ago, I came across a video recording of Carols by
Candlelight made in 1987. Carols by Candlelight originated in 1937 in
Melbourne, Australia as the brain child of Norman Banks, a radio broadcaster. He
noticed many people spending Christmas alone and wanted to reach out. In 1938
he organized the first gathering. It consisted of entertainers who sang Christmas
carols and who then led the gathered crowd in singing carols. The first event had
about 10,000 attendees, and it has been held annually ever since. The venue has
changed to accommodate the huge numbers that now attend. Funds raised were
historically given to various charities and hospitals. Since at least 1987, the
funds have gone to Vision Australia, a nonprofit serving those who are blind
and with low vision.
The 1987 version was the 50th anniversary and was
a great opportunity to belt out the carols with thousands of my best friends
living a world away. Though Carols By Candlelight has grown into a worldwide
experience with variations held the world over, including London, Dallas, San
Antonio, San Diego, and Jackson, Mississippi to name a few, the original is
still held on Christmas Eve in Melbourne. Events elsewhere are held at various
times during the Christmas season. Last night we watched a recording of the 2017
experience, the 80th anniversary show, and tickets are on sale for
2018 if you happen to be in Melbourne. The show starts at 1AM in Alaska; that
is the morning of Christmas Eve. https://carols.visionaustralia.org/tv-and-radio
It occurred to me watching the 1987 show that I was mentally
willing to suspend time, seeing an event of 30 years ago as the present. When I
shook my head out and looked at the babies that were shown in the videotape
made then, it was difficult to imagine them at 31 or 32 years old today. The
2017 edition featured a performer, Silvie Paladino, only 16 at the 50th
anniversary show, and who was suddenly 46. She has aged well and has a
beautiful voice….and a much prettier dress now…, but in an instant she is 30
years older!
This happens to all of us. Our mental snapshot of a person
is as the last time we saw them. Not long ago a friend posted a group picture
of our 5th grade class. While I could not put a name on every face,
every face was burned away into the recesses of my brain. I could look at them
and imagine them in class or on the playground, suspended in time. Imagining
the experiences, the joy and pain and happiness and sorrow that has gone on in
each of the lives of my 5th grade classmates robs them and me of the
health and innocence we all once had, even if it only exists in my mind.
I’ll be turning 65
this year and I count myself as lucky that I am healthy and well and that joy
has outweighed sorrow in my life many times over. I attribute that to good
genes, a good upbringing, a good wife, a good education, good luck, and being
blessed by my Father in Heaven in more ways than I deserve. I know that some of
my classmates have not been as fortunate, and perhaps some more so.
Reality is that worrying over what advantages we did or didn’t
have is a pointless exercise. The good fairy will not swoop down and wave a
magic wand to give us all the things we think we should have had. The only real
answer for each of us is to do the best we can every day and trust that it will
lead us to the best outcome.
Evil and misfortune truly exist in the world and it is
heart-breaking and rage-inducing to be a recipient, or even a witness. We all
watched the videos of the “Knock-Out Game” a few years ago where an innocent
person walking down the street would be struck by an attacker with the goal of knocking
him out in one blow. That seemed to me to be an iconic example of evil, and we
are all potential victims. It might be a thief who breaks into our home or one
who uses the internet to clean out our bank account. It might be a fire or an
earthquake that robs us of all we have. We all want justice, but justice is
rarely obtained and never fulfilling. The loss will still be there and the
sooner we put it behind us and focus on making ourselves whole again, the
sooner we will recover; physically, emotionally, and spiritually.
The message of the Christmas season, and of the life and
mission of Jesus Christ is that when we stop focusing on ourselves and focus on
making others whole, we will find that we also have become whole.
“I tell you these things that ye may learn wisdom;
that ye may learn that when ye are in the service of your fellow beings, ye are
only in the service of your God” (Mosiah 2:17).
2 comments:
Nice post. I've always loved this time of year, and have contemplated why Christmas is such a great time of year. I've decided that as we remember Christ we have his spirit to be with us, and as we collectively have the spirit we all get to enjoy the fruits of the spirit.
I've realized more and more how magical youth is - bursting with possibility and potential. I wish I had realized it then!
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