Keeping Christmas Traditions Alive
When I was younger, my mom and I decorated for Christmas together. It was always on the day after Thanksgiving. Times have changed. People decorate earlier. Things are different. But, I lost my mom when I was fifteen – so I try to keep some of those traditions alive so her memory stays close during the holidays.

I have kept some of her decor from when I was young. This particular Santa I had always found so ugly. I never wanted to put it up. But, my mother made this – so it goes up every single year in my home. I have some of her ornaments and other small decorations. Some things have broken over the years, but I try to keep as much as I can because it reminds me of her – of my childhood traditions with my mom.

Grief doesnโt show up the way it used to. Itโs quieter now, but deeper. It settles in my chest when the lights go on at dusk. It tightens my throat in grocery store aisles. It reminds me of the advice I still want, the reassurance I still need, the version of me she never got to meet. Losing my mom so young taught me how fragile joy isโand how intentional it must be. My Christmas now reflects that lesson. Itโs smaller. Softer. Rooted in warmth instead of performance.
Keeping these traditions isnโt about recreating my childhood. Itโs about honoring the love that carried me into adulthood. Sheโs present in the way I nurture my dogs, the way I decorate my home, the way I sit with hard feelings instead of running from them. Sheโs in the patience Iโve learned, the boundaries Iโve built, the quiet resilience I didnโt know I had.
Christmas didnโt stay the same. I didnโt either. Love adapts. It finds new forms. It lives in the details.
And every year, in the glow of soft lights and familiar songs, I carry her with meโright where I am now.

My heart is with you precious Stephanie! Your Momma is with you and so proud of her beautiful daughter โค๏ธ
Thank you ๐