For the next few days I will indulge myself a look back at
the first few years of my life in Jordan. Here is an excerpt from my Christmas
blog from that first year in Jordan, way back in 2007. It is interesting to
re-read that excitement about the first
flight back to Cincinnati from Jordan. I have since made that trip many times,
but it is charming to remind myself of that first year of the school. Have a
Merry Christmas Eve, blog readers!
From 2007:
The sun is shining,
the grass is green;
The orange and palm trees sway,
There's never been such a day
[except] In Beverly Hills, L.A.
The orange and palm trees sway,
There's never been such a day
[except] In Beverly Hills, L.A.
Thus begins the somewhat obscure verse to the immortal
“White Christmas” anthem written by Irving Berlin in 1942. In that year Berlin was Christmas-ing in California ,
writing songs for movies, far away from his beloved New York . This verse holds a special
resonance for me this year—indeed, I would only have to change a word or two to
reflect my new situation! Let’s change the “orange and palm trees,” to “olive
trees,” and move Beverly Hills to Jordan and the
picture is quite accurate! A s I look
outside the window right now at KA ,
we have the perpetually blue skies (a title of another Irving Berlin number by
the way—Blue skies, nothin’ but blue
skies, from now on…) I have come to expect in my five months in Jordan, and
it is about 60 degrees out there in this corner of the Middle East. In spite of
the lovely day, I concur with Irving Berlin’s next line: I am longing to be up north… and of course, in the next measure
the world heaves a nostalgic, sentimental sigh as Bing Crosby’s baritone
plaintively muses,
I’m dreaming of a white Christmas,
Just like the ones I used to know…
When Berlin
penned this ditty 65 years ago, many people were serving in the armed forces
overseas for the second A merican
Christmas of World War II. I can only imagine the millions of lumps in throats
as people yearned to be back home, yearned to see their loved ones, and dreamt
of those Christmas pasts of bountiful blessings. I understand that feeling better
this Christmas than maybe ever before.
Thirty hours after I left my apartment at KA, my dad met me
at the Cincinnati airport. I got the best greeting you could imagine: “You’re
skinny!” (It’s funny—people say this to me when they haven’t seen me for
awhile. I rarely lose much weight, but maybe I am remembered as, what, more
“solid” in their memories??)
The next few hours were fun as I padded my feet on
wall-to-wall-carpeting again, and had cold milk, and a BLT, felt the weight of
a quarter again in my palm, brushed my teeth from tap water, and drove a car.
Ahhhh. Pretty good stuff.
We headed over to my niece and nephew’s school to pick them
up—they didn’t know I would be in yet, so I got to surprise them. Jack’s jaw
dropped, and he went silent, and Emma’s eyes widened and screamed out, “King!” We spent the afternoon playing hide-and-go-seek, eating gingerbread cookies, wondering what Santa might bring.
Guess what was on TV last night as I began addressing the
Christmas cards? I kid you not—the movie White
Christmas—one of those movies I can watch over and over again, and I tear
up every time when the old army guys show up for the General toward the end of
the movie. A nd while addressing
cards to friends in Dobbs Ferry, A tlanta ,
Charlotte , San Diego ,
Columbus , et cetera, I was reminded of another Berlin ballad to savor:
When you’re tired, and
you can’t sleep, I count my blessings instead of sleep.
So I fall asleep,
counting my blessings.
Thanks Irving
for the reminder…
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