Christmas Memories
A Memoir of our Christmas Traditions and Most Memorable Christmases During our First Fifty Years of Marriage.
by
Book Details
About the Book
This book is a memoir of the Christmas traditions plus a collection of short stories embodying the most memorable Christmases of Edmund and Virginia Hansen during their first fifty years of marriage.
The short stories include:
Christmas 1956
Our first Christmas together and we baked the Christmas Tree.
Christmas 1959
We knew we weren’t in
Christmas 1963
Family Christmas activities are always planned to the minutest detail. Having a baby on Christmas day wasn’t planned, but it happened.
Christmas 1979
Suddenly, right after Thanksgiving, a family of Southeast Asian refugees arrived at our airport without sponsors. The five little girls with ages between 3 and 11 stole our hearts and our family increased by seven.
Christmas 1987
The Christmas wedding of our youngest son was planned but thieves almost ruined the occasion. It was rescued by the magic-of-Christmas.
Christmas 1992
How do you spend Christmas 1992 with your sick son knowing he will not live to see Christmas 1993? We faced this dilemma and see how is was handled.
Christmas 1993
One son dead and another critically wounded in combat. How do you survive all this and still celebrate Christmas?
Christmas in July 2005
The occasion was the wedding of an Asian granddaughter. As patriarch of the family my toast speech was: Remembrances, Dreams and the Fourth of July.
Christmas in June 2006
Our 50th wedding celebrations, all of them.
About the Author
Both Edmund and Virginia were born at the same hospital in
They met in high school and started dating in early 1954 at the ages of 17 and 15 and married
Ed’s teaching career spanned 35 years with four years of teaching secondary mathematics in the communities of
The Hansen’s were blessed with four sons born in 1958, 1959, 1963 and 1967. All four boys are now college graduates. Virginia, who passed up college to marry Edmund, got her opportunity at age 37 and graduated magna cum laude four years later while still mothering the boys.
The Hansen family sponsored Southeast Asian refugees starting in 1979 including three related units totaling seventeen individuals which they considered family when the relationship matured.
Dean, the third son, contracted HIV in 1985 and after it progressed to AIDS Edmund and
The stress of the fifteen months was too much for Edmund’s health which spiraled out of control forcing him to retire as a physically handicapped person at the age of 57 within eight months of Dean’s death. The stress was exacerbated when Lee, the oldest son and a career Army officer, was seriously combat wounded in
With Dean’s death and the remaining three sons having their own families Edmund and Virginia took the opportunity to relocate to where they wanted to spend their retirement years.
Since