Dec 15, 2016
For many people, the season of good cheer is a deeply trying affair. I don't mean unhappy souls who have good reason to be sad-the loss of loved ones, poor health, loneliness-but those who feel let down when Christmas doesn't deliver all the personal gratification they were looking for. The funk they experience is what I call the Christmas Blues.
Thinking of that recently, I recalled an incident related by St. Therese of Lisieux in her marvelous autobiography The Story of a Soul. It happened early on Christmas morning 1886, when Therese was twelve going on thirteen.
Her family had a Christmas Eve custom. They would set out the children's shoes in front of the fireplace, and when they got home from Midnight Mass the shoes were magically filled with gifts. This particular Christmas, though, Therese's father was irritated about something or other, and she overheard him saying of the wonderful shoes, "Thank goodness it's the last time we shall have this kind of thing!"
Therese was a good, pious child, but by her own account an overly sensitive one, often bursting into tears and, when told to stop, crying all the harder just because she was crying. Now her father's words cut her to the quick. When she went upstairs to take off her hat, her older sister Celine, sizing up the situation, told her, "Don't go downstairs again. Taking the presents out of your shoes will upset you too much."