Every year at Christmas
time my mother’s family would gather at our home for the “Bell Family Reunion”.
She had eleven brothers and sisters and since the family believed in being
fruitful and multiplying we would have close to sixty guests for the multi-day
festivities. Approximately, a week before each gathering my father would visit
with each of our neighbors to forewarn them and to humbly ask if we could use
part of their trash cans (in the alley) because the consumption of Coors beer
would be staggering. Of course, we had one tea-toting neighbor who would
annually give permission for any kind of non-alcohol trash but simply refused
to allow a beer can in her garbage. After enduring the annual temperance
lecture my father would assure her that he would personally examine the trash
before it left our house.
The family
reunion also served as a great learning tool. Apparently one of my personality
flaws is that I would badger people, usually against their better judgement,
into doing things they normally would not do. This was definitely the case
surrounding my first and only use of snuff. My Uncle Fred had always dipped
snuff. At the reunion of my 5th year I would continually ask Uncle
Fred for a “pinch” of what had to be a miracle concoction. Finally, he gave in
and to the best of my knowledge, within seconds after the snuff hit my tongue I
was running through the house screaming for water. A lesson learned.
With the number
of children in the family the Christmas Eve present opening event would last
for hours. Likewise, we always had a visit from Santa Claus. Uncle Fred always
had car trouble on Christmas Eve and would miss the event. Anyway, this is the
story that they gave us until the year that Uncle Fred exceeded his tolerance
level for great quantities of beer and ended up on our roof looking for a
chimney to slide down. Since we didn’t have a fireplace the angry Santa didn’t
play close attention to the fact that we had a rather steep roof and he slipped
and fell off the roof into my mother’s flower bed. A disheveled Santa stumbled
into the house with a string of colorful words coming from his mouth. In what
seemed like a few seconds he was led back to his sleigh by several of my uncles
as Uncle Floyd explained to us that since Santa had so many houses to get to that
night he could only make a brief appearance at our place. Soon with the gifts
flowing around the room the Santa incident was out of our minds for the rest of
the reunion. On the 26th the families started pulling out to return
to their homes that ranged from Texas to Illinois to Colorado to other towns in
New Mexico.