Some people believe holidays change people, but I think they’re far more likely to bring out what’s already inside — for good or for bad. Holidays that center around family frequently tell me who someone really is.
I pay more attention to children than most adults do. I watch families. I talk with children when I can. I take them seriously and I play with them frivolously. I love their world and I love the ways in which they can change how I see my own world.
That’s never more true than around Christmas.
Whether children are from families which are religious or not, there seems to be something magical that takes over around this time. (I presume the same is true in cultures where there are other religious and cultural traditions, but my experience is in an American Christian cultural context.)
Something I experience in these children at this time changes me — or at least brings out something in a stronger way that’s always there.

Federal checks are destroying incentive to take entry-level jobs
FRIDAY FUNNIES
Love & Hope — Episode 6:
How can I share what’s obvious when nobody will listen or see?
Politicians sometimes lie even when they know they’ll be caught
Opening a business? It’s easier to do in Rwanda than in U.S. today
Assassin or patsy? How can you trust any of the players in this case?
It can take a lifetime of work to overcome abusive ‘programming’