Just moccasins

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It’s only Dec. 1, and already, the question has arrived ...

“What do you want for Christmas, Terri?”

I hear those words, and inevitably, my head begins to swim. What do I want for Christmas? The word, “Nothing,” usually floats out of my mouth without any thinking involved. Really ... I don’t need anything, and if I want something, I’ve probably already gone out and bought it ... short of that Mercedes convertible that dances in my head like a sugarplum of days gone by.

Needless to say, my Christmas list is far shorter than it was when I was a girl growing up on a farm north of Princeton. From the time the Sears Roebuck Wish Book arrived through Dec. 24, I’d add item after item to the list, which comprised several pages of a spiral-bound notebook. I’d also circle every item I thought I had to have in the catalogue. It was just what we did.

From the time I actually understood about Christmas and the gifts that would arrive, the word “PONY” always led the list. Yep ... I wanted a pony, and I knew I would get one. Every year after the Christmas stockings had been emptied, I’d find myself grabbing my winter coat and boots and slipping out of the old farmhouse by myself. I’d head straight to the barn, where I just knew that pony would be hiding ... It never was. Instead, the Etch-A-Sketch under the tree would have to do.

When I was about 8 or 9 and finally was smart enough to realize the pony wasn’t coming to Rural Route 2, Princeton, the first thing on my list changed to “MOCCASINS.” OK, I know that’s a bit nutty, but years ago, there was a Stuckey’s along the interstate in Peru, and we used to beg to stop there. Occasionally, Grandpa would pull the old, green Chevy into Stuckey’s, and I’d spend the whole time looking at their leather moccasins. It was a place in time when the word “Indian” was still politically correct, and for some reason, I felt like a pair of moccasins would be the perfect gift. Like the pony ... they never came, but the red rubber boots under the tree were probably much more appropriate for a kid who could find every puddle or snowbank in Bureau County.

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