Looking back, it was the best Christmas I had as a child.
It was the year my sister and I bought my parents bicycles and
the year I learned about giving. I was 10 and my sister was 12.
My sister, who was and still is the organized one of the family,
had the idea of buying our parents bicycles for Christmas.
It was May and we had about seven months to save our allowance
along with any other money we could earn. Every Monday
we would sneak off to our bedroom, my sister would crawl under
her bed and come out with an old cigar box, where we hid the
money we were saving. We would put in all the money we could
come up with for that week. Being the oldest, my sister would
carefully count the money and write it down in a note book that
was kept in the box. At first we each put in half of our two dollar
a week allowance. By mid–August my sister said we were not
going to have enough money to buy the bicycles, so reluctantly I
put in my whole allowance. In October we were still not going to
have enough saved to buy the bicycles. “We have to start putting
in half of our lunch money too,” my sister informed me, after
counting the money.
“You’re going to starve me to death,” I cried. I was all for the
idea of getting our parents the great gift and sacrificing my allowance
was not too hard, but my lunch money—was my lunch
money! This was more than I could take. She eventually persuaded
me to give in and I began putting in half of my lunch
money along with my whole allowance. The more we saved and
the closer it came to Christmas, the more excited I became. “I
can hardly wait to see mom and dads faces when we give them
the bicycles. I’m glad you made me put in the extra money,” I
told my sister one night as we lay in bed talking about surprising
our parents.
About the end of October we started searching the newspaper
sale ads, we were looking for the perfect pair of matching bicycles
that were in our price range. We had one problem, when we did
find them, how were we going to get there, buy them and bring
them home. We decided to let our grandparents in on our secret.
Partly to get their help and partly because we were so excited we
just had to tell someone.
Thanksgiving came and with it brought the after Thanksgiving
sale ads. We found bicycles we could afford at Kmart
and arranged for our grandmother to take us to Fresno and buy
them, that next Friday. I think that day was as memorable as
Christmas. We shared our excitement with my grandparents and
they became part of our grand scheme. Our grandmother made
up a reason for my sister and I to spend the day with her. We
arrived at our grandmothers with the old cigar box, which was
pretty worn by this time, in it was two-hundred dollars worth of
one dollar bills, quarters, dimes, nickels and a few pennies. Our
grandmother took one look at the box of money and suggested
we go to the bank and change it for larger bills. I remember our
grandfather as a nervous, excitable kind of guy that never was
a very good driver. He ran a stop sign on the way to the bank
and cut off at least two other cars. Suddenly he realized that we
couldn’t go to the bank my mother worked at and made an illegal
u-turn in the middle of the street, in order to go to the only
other bank in town. We finally made it there, got our money
exchanged and made it back to our grandparent’s house. Luckily,
we lived in a small town with not much traffic and where everyone
knew our grandfather and how bad of a driver he was. To
my relief, our grandmother drove us to Fresno, where the nearest
Kmart was located. We picked out two dark green bicycles,
a men’s bike for my dad and a matching woman’s bike for my
mother. We had enough money to purchase the bicycles and a
little left over to buy two big red bows. “I am very proud of you
two girls,” our grandmother told us on the way home. “You’ve are
both very caring and giving.”
“Thanks, but it was really Cindy’s idea, I just helped with the
money,” I confessed. But I felt pretty good about my part, just
the same.
We celebrated Christmas with my grandparents on Christmas
Eve every year and it was during that time when we received
our gifts from Santa. My sister and I were told that with all the
places Santa had to go, he needed to start early and we were on
the early list. Every year on Christmas Eve, we would eat dinner
and then go for a ride around town to look at the lights, when we
returned Santa would have came to our house. For some reason
it took so long for all the adults to get in the car. It seemed someone
always had to go to the bathroom or forgot something they
had to go back into the house and get. This year was different;
we knew why our grandfather had to run back into the house
while everyone waited in the car. We had employed him to set
out the bicycles and we were to keep our parents from going back
into the house. As in all the years before, we couldn’t wait for
our sight seeing trip to be over, however it was for a different reason.
When we came home there were two new bicycles waiting
for my parents. They were so surprised, my mother cried and my
dad was just in shock. “You girls did this by yourselves?” our dad
asked for the third time. They could hardly believe we had saved
and bought the bicycles.
I think back and I can still feel myself smiling, we were so
happy and proud of ourselves. With all the excitement I hardly
even thought about what I had received for Christmas. It didn’t
seem to be as important as it had been in previous years, when I
couldn’t wait to open presents. Something was different that year
and it would change how I felt about Christmas forever.
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