This American Life - 255: Our Holiday Gift-Giving Guide
Episode Date: December 14, 2025The vexing difficulty of finding the perfect gift. Visit thisamericanlife.org/lifepartners to sign up for our premium subscription.Prologue: Host Ira Glass goes to a busy Target store one week before... Christmas. Most shoppers he talks to don't think any of their gifts will be returned. (3 minutes)Act One: Ian Brown tries, after decades of failure, to give his mother the perfect Christmas gift. He and his brother attempt something they haven't done since they were kids: Rehearse and sing her a program of Christmas carols. (19 minutes)Act Two: We play a 1959 original recording of Truman Capote reading his holiday story A Christmas Memory. (18 minutes)Act Three: Caitlin Shetterly reports on a true-life holiday fable from rural Maine, complete with a misunderstood recluse with a heart of gold, a deserving family in need, and a very special Christmas tree farm with secrets of its own. (16 minutes)Transcripts are available at thisamericanlife.orgThis American Life privacy policy.Learn more about sponsor message choices.
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One week before Christmas, the Target store on Chicago's West Side, middle of the day, people are rolling shopping carts full of toys and games through the aisles, teenagers and single people, parents from every income.
and I don't really understand this
but if you talk to them
is incredibly diverse group
there's one question
that always seems to get exactly the same answer
of all these things that you have in this basket
what do you think is the most likely to get returned
actually
none of it
not my style
no I'd say no not mine
actually I'm not worth at all
actually I did a pretty good job
majority of the stuff that I'm buying is really
for my kids so they definitely ain't
going to return anything.
So,
not my stuff.
Yeah, I made a list
of what I was getting everyone in.
Pretty confident in it.
When I report their bravado, their confidence
to the store manager, Lee Krum,
business is response.
Oh, well,
the day after Christmas is the busiest day in refunds.
So I don't know what,
I don't know how true
that statement is nobody ever returns my gifts.
Of course, everybody has sunglasses and rubber noses on that day
when they're returning stuff, so nobody sees them.
It's really funny when the media is here the day after Christmas
and they're filming the return center, everybody's kind of like...
He hides his face behind his arm.
Nobody wants their picture taken.
Like criminals.
Yes.
If you haven't had at least one drama, one stumper,
one gift that has been so difficult to figure out this year
that you want to cry,
and you are a very unusual person
leading a very charmed life, my friend.
And as proof, we offer you
three stories today of Christmas
and Christmas presents.
From WBEZ Chicago, it's This American Life.
I'm Ira Glass.
Our show in three gift-wrapped little acts for you today,
all tied up pretty with a bow.
Act one, make a joyful noise
unto your mom,
in which two sons try once and for all
to give their mother a gift
that she will actually enjoy.
Act two, a Christmas member
In that act, Mr. Truman Capote, recorded in 1959.
Act three, Secret Santa, a very, very secret Santa.
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it's this American Life from Ira Glass
today shows a rerun act one
make a joyful noise into your mom
there was one other thing
that everyone at the Target store I talked to agreed on
and that is that parents are usually the hardest people to shop for
they have everything already
they want nothing they're used to
doing the giving themselves. In Toronto, Ian Brown has had it. I know, I know, decked the halls
with boughs of holly tis the season to be jolly. Unfortunately, I keep having a certain
conversation at this time of year with my 88-year-old mother. For a Christmas present, would you
like a new pressure cooker? No, no, I've got a pressure cooker. What about a sweater?
I've got at least 20 sweaters.
What about some jewelry?
I have more jewelry than I shall ever wear.
I don't like jewelry.
The whole spirit of Christmas is gone.
I hate Christmas.
Do you know there are more people commit suicide at Christmas
than any other time of the year?
I didn't know that.
Well, that's true.
I don't have this problem with everyone.
I like to think I'm actually quite good at giving gifts.
I am.
I put a lot of effort.
into it. I remember what so-and-so said, or he or she wanted last October. I write it down a notebook.
I buy things my chosen recipients will like but wouldn't buy for themselves. But with my mother,
all bets are off. She's what's known as hard to buy for. I'm not sure why. There are a million
possible reasons. Maybe it's generational, all those depression-raised mothers, not wanting to be
dependent on the kindness of others. Maybe.
maybe it's a power play, and as long as she doesn't like what you give her, you remain properly
behold, and I realize a lot of mothers are like this, but my mother is an especially hard case.
She might say in October, this Christmas, all I want is a tablecloth.
Then, when she unwraps said tablecloth on Christmas Day, she'll look at it without even
taking it out of the package, say, very nice, and roll her eyes as if no one can see her.
Then, when you point out that she said she wanted a tablecloth,
she'll say, matter-of-factly, I never said anything of the sort.
And if, by some miracle, she manages not to totally despise what you've given her,
you're still not off the hook, because then she likes the gift too much and feels embarrassed.
My brother and I long ago decided we'd buy one gift between us.
That way, at least you split the pain.
we bought her a fur coat she opened the box sat there with her hands in the fur and started to cry this is too much she said through her tears in a strangled voice then ran upstairs and locked herself in her bedroom for four hours on christmas day the last thing my brother his name is tim bought my mother that she liked that is was a wooden napkin ring it was hand-painted with flowers
very pretty. That was
40 years ago. He was
six years old. It cost him a nickel
at a fair.
Sometimes I think the whole gift
giving experience has scarred him for
life. I heard,
no, no, who told me, but you're not giving
gifts this year, right? You yourself.
I am not giving gifts, except to children.
And
I think that, you know, giving
gifts to parents in this sort of
desperate search for
approval,
You know.
Or is that what you think it's for?
Absolutely.
Really?
Absolutely.
Yeah.
You think we're seeking approval?
Yes.
It's a bit late.
I mean, and her disdain for gifts.
When you give them, it's pretty bad, don't you think?
Here, Mom, here's a beautiful new spring hat.
I hate this.
What sort of a gift is this?
Where do you expect me to wear that?
It's really horrible.
I mean, do you think she's a good gift giver?
I mean, here we are sort of, you know, trying to get a perfect gift.
Yes, no, I think she is.
She is.
Very good gift.
Very generous.
I mean, she's almost blind.
She's got a cataract.
She's knitting socks for people.
I told her I wanted a pair of argyl socks last year.
She made a pair of, that's very difficult, argyl socks.
You asked her for argyle socks?
Yeah.
Well, I like the hand-knit socks.
I like the hand-knit socks.
I'm sure you do.
That was on the 6th of December,
and still we had no clue
what to give Mum for Christmas this year.
But then I had this idea,
a potentially brilliant idea,
maybe after all this time,
the perfect Christmas present.
When my brother and I were kids in school,
we sang in the choir.
Tim was talented. He was a treble and then a tenor. I was a tenor, then a bass.
And when we came home from school for the holidays and we're doing the dishes after Christmas dinner,
say, we'd sing Christmas carols. We'd get my sisters, Maude and Daisy to sing melodies,
and we'd sing the harmonies. We liked doing it. Better still, our mother liked it.
She started to ask us to do it every time we came home. We were pretty good, too.
Our choir had even cut a record, which my mother owned about 17.
copies of and played all the time.
And that's what gave me the idea.
Instead of buying her something she'll hate,
my brother and I will drive out to our parents' place,
something neither of us does enough.
And as grown men, we will sing her some carols in harmony.
The sheer sound of our soaring voices will, as
They say in the Anglican hymn book, lift up her heart
and transport her back to those days when we were her boys.
Neither my brother and I have sung in a choir in years,
but we harmonize now and then.
We even make harmonies up.
And I've always been very impressed.
And how do you think the singing is going to sound?
I think that
I think it might be
fairly putrid.
Poutred?
Yeah.
Really?
I've had this impression
that we sang
we sound great singing harmonies.
Yeah.
Oh, little turn up
that line.
Oh, God.
Above their deep
and read must leave
I hear my brother
and I think it's all up to me.
Of all the years of all the years
I've met in thee tonight.
Oh, my God, that was an idiotous.
Was it a hideous?
Is it sound bad?
Bad?
We sounded like people who'd been lost in the woods.
But how could we fix it?
The 24-hour emergency carol-singing repair
isn't a service listed in the yellow pages where I live.
So I did the only thing I could think of.
I called Eric Hanbury.
Hanbury had been at boarding school with my brother and me.
He was in the choir, too.
He was an eccentric character even then,
very serious and strict, almost terrifying.
He knew how to play the organ, for starters.
That was an unusual skill for a teenager to have
back in the days when Led Zeppelin were releasing their first album.
Hanbury's musical taste stopped at Gershwin and favored Bach.
Plus, he was 6'2, even then, and had full mutton shop sideburns at the age of 12.
I hadn't seen him in nearly 35 years.
Hello?
Eric Hanbury?
Yeah, here. Come on 12.04.
All right.
But by 10.30 on Saturday morning, the very day we're to sing for our mother.
We're in Eric Hanbury's two-bedroom apartment on the 16th floor of a high-rise in the northwest end of the city.
The spare bedroom, the one we're all packed into it,
is mostly taken up by a church organ
the size of a Ford Taurus,
complete with foot pedals.
Now,
Let the nature sing,
and hell and nature sing.
I'm terrible.
Let's do verse three,
and I'll just play really loudly.
It doesn't take long for Eric to lose hope,
which is more depressing than I anticipated.
Oh, silent.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
How silently, it means that you don't yet.
How silently, how silently.
We're so desperate.
We consult three other experts.
The only helpful advice we get is from the greatest of them,
John Tuttle, the choir master at St. Thomas's Anglican Church,
which everyone around here knows is one of the two or three best choirs in the city.
He's famous for his high standards, its hours of practice.
He gives us a few phrasing tips to make it sound like we actually mean the words we're singing.
You wouldn't say, and heaven and heaven and heaven and nature sing.
And it works.
And heaven and nature sing.
And have and heaven and nature sing.
But it doesn't last.
because just as this thin ray of hope peeps forth,
just as we feel good for the first time all day,
we stop for lunch at a restaurant,
and my brother checks his cell phone for messages.
There's one from my father.
He sounds pretty frosty.
And this is when I find out
that my brother has had a fight with my mother.
They haven't spoken in three weeks,
which is why my father's making the call for my mother.
I mean, it's really bad.
You can hear my mother in the background telling my old man what to say.
Timmy, my dad says, and I can hear the edge of displeasure in his voice.
I understand you're coming out here.
We have to go out in 15 minutes.
We don't know where you are, so there's no use you coming out.
We're not going to be here.
We're not going to wait around for Ian.
And incidentally, incidentally, we will not be coming to your Christmas dinner party next.
Sunday night. And then he hangs up. He doesn't even bother to say goodbye. But then he never does.
And we did down. They've got to get some gas.
It's a 40-minute drive to my parents. They live in a small house in the country beside a river.
All the way out, we practice, trying to hone the edge we picked up from John Tuttle.
There is no gas station over here.
I apologize.
You must have left to get into it.
Would you let me go ahead?
Thank you very much.
What a nice guy.
We finally pull up to my parents' house.
It's cold outside, around zero Fahrenheit.
It's one of those filing cabinet gray Canadian days.
that feels colder than it would if there was snow on the ground.
We walk up to the front door.
Where's the doorbell?
There's no door.
They'll know we're here.
They'll know we're here.
How will they know?
Okay, ready?
We've got to get a quick.
Okay, ready?
Joy, joy, joy, joy to the world.
Joy to the world, the Lord is come.
Let earth receive her.
As weeper king, let every heart prepare him room,
And hell man nature sing,
And as we sang, I thought to myself,
So, it has come to this, the bottom of the barrel.
Two grown men in their forties standing outside in the sub-freezing winter,
singing to a closed door.
begging essentially
Thank you very much
That was very nice
Should we come in
Can we come in? It's freezing outside
Can we come in?
What's that?
Don't bring your germs in here
Don't bring your germs in here
That's nice, sorry, here we go
Oh little town of Bethlehem
How still we see thee lie
Above thy deep and dreamlessly
My mother moves from the doorway to a dining room chair and sits down
She's looking at the floor
But I think she's ever so slightly crying
My brother can see it too
I don't want her to cry
But then it doesn't seem to last
Our Lord Emmanuel
This is your Christmas present
Thank you very much
That was very nice
reminded me of when you were nice boys
went to school
and sang in the choir
and why were you applying that we're not like that anymore?
I don't know, you don't even come to see me
unless you want something, so
do you want a cup of tea?
Yes, that would be nice, this is coming to tea.
We go into the kitchen.
So how does that compare
with other presents we've given you?
Very nice. Very acceptable.
Thank you very much.
What's the best present we've ever given?
given you.
Where's help.
What, help?
Do you know what I would really like?
I would like you all to come in the spring.
Help me clean up the garden.
Help me clean up the house.
Repaper the house.
That would be lovely.
Repaper the house?
Repaper the living room?
The living room, the bar, anywhere.
So this has been my problem, gift-wise, all along.
Here I was trying to satisfy my mother with some $60 blouse.
What she really wanted was an $8,000.
dollar wallpapering job.
I'm so distracted by this revelation that I don't notice her trying to reverse the gift-giving
polarity in her favor.
Even before the carol is over, before we finish giving her our gift, she starts reciprocating,
giving us items she's harvested from all over the house, not just our Christmas presents,
you know, two envelopes of cash, but other stuff, a calendar of coupons.
half a round of Swiss cheese.
And what's this?
A beautiful cashmere scarf.
The same one I'd given to my brother
at Christmas last year.
Oh my God, where did you get that?
It's been up in the cupboard for how long?
That's a cashmere scarf I gave you that
for Christmas last year.
I know.
And you left it here, you haven't even...
Oh, God, you know, why do I bother?
So much for my famous gift-giving abilities.
No one in my family appreciates my effort.
And this was true, it suddenly became
clear, of this gift of song as well.
Should we do one more?
Yeah.
No, I haven't got time.
You hear that?
She hasn't got time.
Go in there and do it.
We're doing it for you.
It's your Christmas present.
You want to watch the TV?
That's enough.
You've done enough.
All right.
You don't want to hear it blessed our other pure and heart?
No, she was not interested in the pure and heart.
And you know why?
Because she was about to miss her favorite TV program.
She was giving us the Bum's Rush.
Very nice. Thank you both very much indeed.
You're missing your TV program.
Lovely seeing you.
Yes, lovely to see it.
What's the name of the program?
Pie in the Sky.
Pie in the Sky.
Goodbye. See you, Dad.
Bye, Ma.
Love you.
So we drove the 40 miles right back to the city.
We devoted a whole day to giving our mother the perfect gift,
only to get kicked out of her house after 26 minutes
in favor of Pie in the Sky,
an English TV series about a country to take.
who makes the best steak and kidney pie in the world.
Actually, my mother used to make excellent steak and kidney pie herself
and give it away his Christmas presents.
Of course, no Christmas story is complete without a grand final realization.
And on the way home, I had mine.
We'd been going about it all wrong.
We'd been trying to find the perfect Christmas present,
but the perfect gift was a terrible idea.
because the perfect gift upsets the delicate truce of failure and imperfection
that holds every family together like a trust bridge.
You move one timber, the whole thing can come crashing down.
Whereas if you leave that rickety old span as it has always been,
with a little too much need over here and a little too much eagerness to please over there,
all offset by an overhang of standoffishness,
then everyone's happy.
The secret, obviously, is to give an imperfect gift
that lavishes enough attention on your old ma that she knows he still care,
but that's also fundamentally flawed
so that no one goes home feeling indebted or beholden or lonely.
Instead, they can go home reassured.
Nothing changes.
That's a Christmas present even a mother could love.
Ian Brown, the great iconic Canadian broadcaster
These days is a feature writer of the Globe and Mail.
Next to a Christmas memory.
We heard about this next recording because the in-laws of one of our producers play at every Christmas
when the family gets together.
And every Christmas?
They all cry.
It's Truman Capote's story, a Christmas memory,
about his own childhood growing up in rural Alabama in the 1920s and 30s.
It's simultaneously this intimate and complicated portrait of somebody that he loved,
but it's also a picture of Christmas
and of a time and place in America, which almost feels like another country.
I think you'll hear what I mean.
It's just a kind of life that does not exist many places here now.
This is an abridged version of the story, short and a midfid for the radio.
imagine a morning in late november a coming of winter morning more than twenty years ago a woman with shorn white hair is standing at the kitchen window oh my she exclaims her breath smoking the window pain it's fruitcake weather
the person to whom she is speaking is myself i am seven she is sixty-something we are cousins very distant
ones and we have lived together well as long as I can remember. Other people inhabit the house,
relatives, and though they have power over us and frequently make us cry, we are not, on the
whole, too much aware of them. We are each other's best friend. She calls me Buddy, in memory of a boy
who was formerly her best friend. The other Buddy died in the 1880s when she was still a child. She is
still a child. I knew it before I got out of bed, she says, turning away from the window with a
purposeful excitement in her eyes. Help me find my hat. We've 30 cakes to bake. In addition to never
having seen a movie, she has never eaten in a restaurant, traveled more than five miles from home,
received or sent a telegram, read anything except funny papers and the Bible, worn cosmetics,
cursed, wished someone harm, told a lie on purpose, let a hungry dog go hungry.
Of the ingredients that go into our fruitcakes, whiskey is the most expensive, as well as the
hardest to obtain. State laws forbid its sale. But everybody knows you can buy a bottle from
Mr. Haha Jones. And the next day, having completed our more prosaic shopping, we set out for
Mr. Haha's business address, a sinful, to quote public opinion,
fish fry and dancing cafe down by the river.
We've been there before and on the same errand.
But in previous years, our dealings have been with Haha's wife.
Actually, we've never laid eyes on her husband,
a giant with razor scars across his cheeks.
They call him Haha because he's so gloomy, a man who never laughs.
As we approach his cafe, a large log cabin festooned inside and out with chains of garish gay naked light bulbs
and standing by the river's muddy edge under the shade of river trees where moss drifts through the branches like gray mist,
our steps slow down. Even Queenie stops prancing and sticks close by.
People have been murdered in Ha Ha's Cafe, cut to pieces, hit on the head. There's a case coming up in court next month.
I knock at the door, Queenie barks, my friend calls,
Mrs. Ha-ha, ma'am, anyone to home?
Footsteps. The door opens. Our hearts overturned.
It's Mr. Ha-ha Jones himself.
And he is a giant. He does have scars. He doesn't smile.
No, he glowers at us through Satan tilted eyes and demands to know
what you want with ha-ha.
for a moment we are too paralyzed to tell
presently my friend half finds her voice
a whispery voice at best
if you please Mr. Ha ha ha
we'd like a quart of your finest whiskey
his eyes tilt more
would you believe it
ha ha is smiling laughing too
which one of you is a drinking man
it's for making fruit cakes
Mr. Ha ha cooking
This soberes him
He frowns
That's no way to waste good whiskey
We pay him with nickels and dimes and pennies
Suddenly jangling the coins in his hand
Like a fistful of dice
His face softens
Tell you what he proposes
Pouring the money back into our bead purse
Just send me one of them fruitcakes instead
Well my friend remarks on our way home
There's a lovely love
man. We'll put an extra cup of raisins in his cake. The black stove stoked with coal and firewood
glows like a lighted pumpkin. Egg beaters whirls, spoons spin round in bowls of butter and sugar,
vanilla sweetens the air, ginger spices, melting, nose tingling odors saturate the kitchen, suffuse the
house, drift out to the whirl on puffs of chimney smoke. In four days our work is done. 31 cakes,
dampened with whiskey, basked on windowsills and shelves.
Who are they for?
Friends.
Not necessarily neighbor friends.
Indeed, the larger share are intended for persons we've met maybe once,
perhaps not at all.
People who've struck our fancy, like President Roosevelt,
like the Reverend and Mrs. J.C. Lucy,
Baptist missionaries de Borneo, who lectured here last winter,
other little knife grinder who comes through town twice a year
other young wistons a california couple whose car one afternoon broke down outside the house
and who spent a pleasant hour chatting with us on the porch
young mr wistin snapped our picture the only one we've ever had taken
now a new december fig branch grates against the window
the kitchen is empty the cakes are gone yesterday we carded the carded
the last of them to the post office, where the cost of stamps turned our purse inside out.
We're broke. That rather depresses me, but my friend insists on celebrating, with two inches of
whiskey left in Ha Ha's bottle. Queenie has a spoonful and a bowl of coffee. She likes her coffee
chicory flavored and strong. The rest we divide between a pair of jellyglasses. We're both
quite awed at the prospect of drinking straight whiskey. The taste of it brings screwed up expressions
and sour shutters. But by and by, we begin to sing. The two of us singing different songs
simultaneously. I don't know the words to mind. Just come on along, come on along to the dark town
strutters ball. But I can dance. That's what I mean to be, a tap dancer in the movies. My dancing
shadow rollocks on the walls. Our voices rock the chinaware. We giggle as if unseen hands were
tickling us. Queenie rolls on her back. Her paws plow the air. Something like a grin stretches
her black lips. Inside myself, I feel warm and sparky as those crumbling logs. Carefree as the wind
in the chimney. My friend waltzes round the stove, the hem of her poor calico skirt pinched
between her fingers as though it were a party dress.
Show me the way to go home, she sings,
her tennis shoes squeaking on the floor.
Show me the way to go home.
Enter, two relatives, very angry,
potent with eyes that's gold, tongues that scald,
listen to what they have to say,
the words tumbling together into a wrathful tune.
A child of seven, whiskey on his breath,
are you out of your mind?
Feeding a child of seven must be loony,
road to ruination.
cousin Kate, Uncle Charlie's brother-in-law, shame, scandal, humiliation.
Pray, beg the Lord.
Queenie sneaks under the stove.
My friend gazes at her shoes, her chin quivers.
She lifts her skirt and blows her nose and runs to her room.
Long after the town has gone to sleep and the house is silent except for the chimings of clocks
and the sputter of fading fires, she is weeping into a pillow, already
as wet as a widow's handkerchief.
Don't cry, I say, sitting at the bottom of her bed and shivering, despite my flannel nightgown
that smells of last winter's cough syrup.
Don't cry, I beg, teasing her toes, tickling her feet.
You're too old for that.
It's because she hiccups.
I am too old.
Old and funny.
Not funny.
Fun.
More fun than anybody.
Listen, if you don't stop crying, you will be so tired to me.
tomorrow, we can't go cut a tree. She straightens up. Queenie jumps on the bed, where Queenie is not
allowed, to lick her cheeks. I know where we'll find real pretty trees, buddy, and Holly, too,
with berries big as your eyes. It's way off in the woods, farther than we've ever been.
Papa used to bring us Christmas trees from there, carry them on his shoulder. That's 50 years ago.
Well, now I can't wait for morning. Morning.
Spented acres of holiday trees, prickly-leafed holly, redberry's shiny Chinese bells, black crows swoop upon them screaming.
Having stuffed our burlap sacks with enough greenery and crimson to garland a dozen windows, we set about choosing a tree.
It should be, muses, my friend, twice as tall as a boy, so a boy can't steal the star.
The one we pick is twice as tall as me.
a brave handsome brute that survives 30 hatchet strokes
before it keels with a creaking, rending cry.
After weaving and ribboning holly wreaths
for all the front windows,
our next project is the fashioning of family gifts.
Tie-dye scarves for the ladies,
for the men a home-brewed, lemon, and licorice,
and aspirin syrup to be taken
at the first symptoms of a cold and after hunting.
But when it comes time,
for making each other's gifts. My friend and I separate to work secretly. I would like to buy her
a pearl handle knife, a radio, a whole pound of chocolate-covered cherries. We tasted some once,
and she always swears. I could live on them, buddy. Lord, yes, I could, and that's not taking
his name in vain. Instead, I am building her a kite. She would like to give me a bicycle. She said so,
on several million occasions.
If only I could, buddy,
it's bad enough in life
to do without something you want,
but confounded what gets my goat
is not being able to give somebody
something you want them to have.
Only one of these days I will, buddy,
locate you a bike, don't ask how to steal it, maybe.
Instead, I'm fairly certain
that she is building me a kite.
The same as last year and the year before.
The year before that,
we exchange slingshots, all of which is fine by me,
for we are champion kite flyers who study the wind like sailors.
My friend, more accomplished than I,
can get a kite aloft when there isn't enough breeze to carry clouds.
Christmas Eve afternoon, we scrape together a nickel
and go to the butchers to buy Queenie's traditional gift,
a good, knowable beef bone.
The bone wrapped in funny paper is placed high in the tree,
of the Silver Star.
Queenie knows it's there.
She squats at the foot of the tree,
staring up in a trance of greed.
When bedtime arrives,
she refuses to budge.
Her excitement is equal by my own.
I kick the covers and turn my pillow
as though it were a scorching summer's night.
Somewhere a rooster crows, falsely,
for the sun is still on the other side of the world.
Buddy, are you awake?
It is my friend,
calling from her room, which is next to mine.
And an instant later, she is sitting on my bed holding a candle.
Well, I can't sleep a hoot, she declares.
My mind's jumping like a jackrabbit.
Buddy, do you think Mrs. Roosevelt will serve our cake at dinner?
We huddle in the bed, and she squeezes my hand, I love you.
Seems like your hand used to be so much smaller.
I guess I hate to see you grow up.
When you're grown up, will we still be friends?
I say always, but I feel so bad, buddy. I wanted so bad to give you a bike. I tried to sell my
cameo papa gave me. Buddy, she hesitates as though embarrassed. I made you another kite.
Then I confess that I made her one too, and we laugh. The candle burns too short to hold.
Out it goes, exposing the starlight. The star spinning at the window like a visible caroling
that slowly, slowly daybreak silences.
Possibly we doze.
But the beginnings of dawn splash us like cold water.
We're up, wide-eyed and wandering
while we wait for others to waken.
Quite deliberately, my friend drops a kettle on the kitchen floor.
I tap dance in front of closed doors.
One by one the household emerges,
looking as though they'd like to kill us both,
but it's Christmas so they can't.
first a gorgeous breakfast just everything you can imagine from flap jacks and fried squirrel to hominy grits and honey in the comb which puts everyone in a good humor except my friend and i frankly we're so impatient to get at the presents we can't eat a mouthful well i'm disappointed who wouldn't be with socks a sunday-school shirt some handkerchiefs a hand-me-down sweater and a years
subscription to a religious magazine for children, the little shepherd. It makes me boil. It really
does. Buddy, the wind is blowing. The wind is blowing and nothing will do till we've run to a pasture
below the house where Queenie has scooted to bury her bone, and where, a winter hence,
Queenie will be buried too. There, plunging through the healthy waste high grass, we on real our
kites, feel them twitching at the string like skyfish as they swim into the wind.
Satisfied, sun warmed, we sprawl in the grass and peel satsumas and watch our kites kovort.
Soon I forget the socks and hand me down sweater.
I'm as happy as if we'd already won the $50,000 grand prize in that coffee naming contest.
My, how foolish I am, my friend cries, suddenly alert.
Like a woman remembering too late, she has biscuits in the oven.
You know what I've always thought, she asked in a tone of discovery,
and not smiling at me, but a point beyond.
I've always thought a body would have to be sick and dying before they saw the Lord.
And I imagine that when he came, it would be like looking at the Baptist window,
pretty as colored glass with the sun pouring through.
Such a shine, you don't know it's getting dark.
and it's been a comfort to think of that shine
taking away all the spooky feeling
but I'll wager it never happens
I'll wager at the very end
a body realizes
the Lord has already shown himself
that things as they are
her hand circles in a gesture
that gathers clouds and kites and grass
and queenie pawing earth over her bone
just what they've always seen
was seeing him
as for me
I could leave the world
with today in my eyes
this is our last Christmas together
life separates us
those who know best
decide that I belong in a military
school and so
follows a miserable succession
of bugle-blowing prisons
grim revelry-ridden summer camps
I have a new home too
but it doesn't count
home is where my friend is
and there I never go.
And there she remains,
puttering around the kitchen,
alone with Queenie, then alone.
Buddy dear, she writes in her wild, hard-to-read script.
Yesterday, Jim Macy's horse kicked Queenie bad.
Be thankful she didn't feel much.
I wrapped her in a fine linen sheet
and rode her in the buggy down to Simpson's pasture
where she can be with all her bones.
For a few November,
she continues to bake her fruit cakes single-handed,
not as many but some,
and of course she always sends me the best of the batch.
But gradually in her letters,
she tends to confuse me with her other friend,
the buddy who died in the 1880s.
A morning arrives in November,
a leafless, birdless coming of winter morning
when she cannot rouse herself to exclaim,
oh my, it's fruitcake weather.
And when that happens, I know it.
A message saying so merely confirms a piece of news some secret vein had already received,
severing from me an irreplaceable part of myself, letting it loose like a kite on a broken string.
That is why, walking across the school campus on this particular December morning,
I keep searching the sky, as if I expected to see,
rather like hearts, a lost pair of kites hurrying toward heaven.
Truman Capote, recorded in 1959,
a Christmas memory was broadcast with the permission of the Truman Capote Literary Trust
Alan U. Schwartz, Trustee. This version of the story was abridged for radio.
Coming up, more proof that the perfect gift, like the perfect crime, is an elusive thing.
In a minute from Chicago Public Radio, when our program continues.
It's this American Life in my redlass.
It's our guide to holiday gift giving, in which we guarantee you will find no practical advice for your last-minute shopping.
Instead, we have stories of holiday presents.
Today's show was first broadcast in 2003.
We're in Act 3 of our show.
Act 3, Secret Santa.
Caitlin Chatterley has this story about one gift leading to another, leading to another, leading to another, and then stopping.
I grew up in a small town called Surrey on the coast of Down East.
Maine. At Christmas, most everyone in our town bought their trees at Jordan's tree farm.
$5 per tree cut at your own risk. Thinking back, it seems funny to me now, since after all, this
is rural Maine, the pine tree state, and you'd think everyone could cut their own trees on their
own land. And it's not like the trees that the Jordan farm were so special. Pretty much everyone
called them Charlie Brown trees. People came because of Robert Jordan. They were loyal to him,
and they figured he could use the money.
Every year the drill was the same.
You'd get out of your car with your family,
trudge for what seemed like miles in sub-zero wind
searching for the perfect tree,
drag your prize back through the snow,
and then, finally, you'd go find Robert.
This was one of the only times of year
most of us saw Robert.
He seemed to live an entirely reclusive life
in his ramshackle house perched above the road
and bordering the thick trees that fanned out behind his barn.
Many of us know someone like Robert, our own Boo Radley,
a poor old man who's lived with his parents his entire life until one and then the other died.
Here's what we knew about Robert from these short yearly transactions.
He had a very strange voice.
He wore Coke bottled glasses, an orange hunting cap,
and in my memory a red and black buffalo plaid jacket.
But somehow Ron Hamilton and his wife Brenda came to know Robert better than most people did.
Here's Ron.
A lot of people thought Robert was retarded
because his father was hard hearing,
and he kind of talked like this, you know.
And I kind of minimum of him a little bit,
but every now and then he'd say something like,
well, how are you today?
And I'd say, pretty good, Robert.
Well, what are we going to do today?
You know, and it kind of reminded me of Catherine Hepburn,
is it, that's got that same kind of broken spot.
in a voice. But he never knew he'd done that until later in life, because his father was
almost death, Claude, he'd have to look at you and went, what, what, and Robert would bellow it
right out. The farmhouse and the Jordan's lifestyle on the farm was primitive. The house had no
hot water. Clyde and Robert ate canned cold beans for breakfast. Their porch was overflowing with
junk and cats and smelled like cat food and urine. Robert slept in a chair in the living room,
and Clyde slept on a small cot next to the wood stove in the kitchen.
Robert's mother, Bessie, had passed away in 1987,
in one of the small bedrooms upstairs.
Since then, the two men were on their own.
About 15 years ago, Ronnie Hamilton and his wife Brenda met Robert and Clyde.
Brenda was making and selling Christmas rees,
and when Robert saw them,
he invited the Hamilton's first to get brushed from the farm to make their rees
and later to sell them at the farm.
They ended up spending a lot of time together.
Despite the Christmas tree farm, Robert and his late mother were Jehovah Witnesses,
and so the family didn't actually celebrate Christmas.
But Ronnie and Brenda wanted to include them into their holiday.
One day Ron noticed Clyde was wearing two different boots and that on the coldest days,
they weren't keeping his feet warm.
So I bought him a pair of boots, and we bought Robert a pair of sneakers,
because I knew Robert liked the ones that you didn't have to lace up, they just had the Velcro.
Anyway, we got several little things in a Christmas docking.
Well, day before Christmas, I'd come over and I said, knock on the door and I said, Santa's here.
And they'd come in, and he said, what did you do that for?
I says, because I want to.
And I said, just because you'd like to do things for people.
And I asked what did you do that for?
And he says, because he wanted to.
So I kind of put it right back to him that way.
And, you know, he liked Christmas.
After that first Christmas, Robert began exchanging gifts each year with Ron and Brenda.
As Clyde got older and started to rely on Robert, Robert started to rely on the Hamilton's.
Late one night, Clyde got so sick, Robert called Ron for help.
He says, Father's sick. Can you come get him?
This was like 11, 30, 12 o'clock at night, and snowy and stuff.
I went over and got him, picked him up and put him in the truck and took him in the Blue Hill Hospital.
Well needless to say he had cancer and then went on for about a year and finally Robert's
father was in the hospital real bed there and Robert called me out and he said do you take
me over and see dad and I said yeah went in and doctor this just a matter of time and I
says to Robert I says you know if you want to say something to your father you want
to say it down we got to check
kick out of this because we chuckled about it afterwards.
He said, but I can't get him awake.
I says, I can't get him awake.
He says, you can?
He says, how?
And I says, you watch.
I says, Clyde, there's somebody in your Christmas trees.
He opened up one eye and he looked at me.
He said, I'm not dead yet.
I said, to Robert.
I says, you want to say something to your father?
You want to talk to him now?
So they talk a few minutes, and then Clyde dozed off.
and Robert called me next morning
and told me his father died.
Robert asked Ron to take care of the burial arrangements.
So Ron dug the hole for Clyde's remains,
gathered some friends and said a few final words.
Then Robert asked Ron if when it came time,
he would do the same for him.
Ron said yes.
Robert was 65 when his father.
died. He had struggled with diabetes for most of his life. He had had heart problems, and he was
in and out of the hospital. He stayed with Ron and Brenda for a couple of months in the winter of
2000 because he couldn't take care of himself. He loved the hot showers and the television
with remote control they had at their house. Eventually, Robert went back to the farm and to his
independence. He started walking four miles a day and lost some weight. Then in mid-April of 2001,
Ron went over early one morning to pick Robert up to take him into town.
He found Robert lying on the floor.
He was dead.
Ron kept his promise to Robert and held a small ceremony on a sunny April afternoon.
He scattered Robert's ashes out back of the farm among the Christmas trees.
A few days later, the Hamilton's were contacted to come to a reading of Robert's will,
along with representatives from five local non-profit organizations.
As the lawyer started to read out the will, people were stunned.
It turns out Robert Jordan was a millionaire.
Robert had inherited a couple hundred thousand in AT&T stock from three neighbors,
wealthy sisters who had a summer place across the road.
When Robert was growing up, he had mowed lawns and run errands for the sisters,
and when they got older, he had taken care of them.
When the last sister Betty died in 1984, she left Robert the stock and her house.
Robert sold the house, and as for the stock, his timing was perfect.
It boomed.
Robert had divided up his money between local organizations he was interested in or had been kind to him.
But the largest gift was left to Ron and Brenda Hamilton.
Robert Jordan had left them the farm.
Well, I was flabbergasted.
I mean, I couldn't believe it.
I just, you know, to this day, I don't believe it,
because I didn't look for nothing for nobody.
We were so excited, so we packed up our stuff
and started cleaning on the farm
and fixing the farm up a little bit in the barn and stuff
and moved in, and, you know, it was just a lovely sport.
The tree farm, Robert left to Ronnie and Brenda
sits on top of a hill looking.
over Route 172.
It has 66 acres of trees in a natural spring.
The house is white and from the road it looks bigger than it really is.
The only sink was in the kitchen and the house had no heat besides the wood stove.
In August of 2001, Ronnie and Brenda moved in.
They were excited, not daunted by the task that lay ahead of them.
A year later, I went to visit Ronnie and Brenda.
It was the first time I'd actually been able to walk onto the porch.
The clutter was gone.
a small gray kitten lay curled on a couch,
and three dogs met me at the door.
It was as if Ronnie and Brenda's world had opened up.
Ron told me that Robert's gift had completely changed his life.
I don't have so much tension on me, you know, thinking that,
what am I going to do?
Now I know what I'm going to do.
I'm going to work on these Christmas trees most of the rest of my life
and enjoy it like he did.
When I left that night, Ron walked me to my car.
That's great. Thank you so much.
Well, thank you, dear.
I think I'll come back at Christmas.
Okay. You're going to get your tray?
Yeah, I'm definitely going to come get a train, for sure.
Thank you.
Thank you, yeah.
Test, test.
Four months later, it's Christmas Eve, and I'm back at the tree farm.
Hi.
Hi, morning there.
How are you?
Wow, your house looks great.
It's coming together.
Oh, look at the tree.
Um, is it going well, though, living here?
Are you feeling good about it?
I had nothing but trouble there all some along.
Tell me why.
Some people broke into my pickup truck and taken my pills and come in here.
After the Hamilton's moved in, things got complicated.
The house and the barn needed a lot of work,
and the Hamilton's needed money they didn't have to do that work.
Tending to 66 acres of farm that stretched over a mile back from the road was hard for Ron.
One day he fell while surveying the land,
and he pulled the muscles and tendons in his neck.
Ron went to the hospital and was given painkillers, which he brought home,
and a day later, some kids broke into his truck and stole his medicine.
Then, believe it or not, things took a turn for the worse.
They tried to arrest me and chas me with growing marijuana, which wasn't mine.
Where was the marijuana?
Somebody planted out back in Christmas trees, two or three different parts of it.
The police came?
A whole helicopter and a whole nine yards.
Who planted that?
Do you think?
I don't know.
I have no idea.
Ron had to hire a lawyer to prove that the plants weren't his, putting him into even
more debt.
And on top of all that, Ron had a heart attack.
This all happened within four months.
Finally, Ron and Brenda decided to sell the farm.
With the money they got from selling the farm to their neighbor Bill Cadoo, they built a
they built a small one-level house
on seven acres of land
over closer to Ellsworth on a busy road.
Ron has been back a few times
to cut brush for Brenda's rees.
But when I asked Ronnie to take me back to the farm,
he refused, saying it was just too painful.
Well, yeah, it kind of bothers you.
Why does it bother you?
Hmm.
I don't know.
Just thinking it was mine and...
You know, I wish that I could have kept it.
This is Brenda, Ronnie's wife.
It was nice in the summer you'd go out and sit on the porch there
and we'd watch traffic go by.
It didn't tell it was real dark because it was all screened in.
It was nice out there, nice porch.
Oh, yeah.
When we first moved to the farm, jeez, just like we were remarried and everything was, you know,
cozy and
you know
and the colder it got the more we snuggled
you know and
you know it was different
it was better
it was more
it's a country life
and you know
every morning she'd get up and have a coffee park
going and take a cup of coffee
with them to dogs and
she'd walk out back
and she'd say well we've got
several deer crossings out there
or you ought to see the turkey tracks
There's coyote droppings out there.
And we had visions.
We talked about, and we wanted to take this little pond,
and it would make a beautiful ice skating pond.
And we thought, well, we'd have the kids come over
and they could ice skate over there, get them off the streets, you know.
And then eventually that we could have a horse and a sleigh
and give sleigh rides over there.
But it didn't turn out that way.
But we dreamt of it, didn't we do it?
Later, Brenda tells me that she doesn't like the new house they've built.
She says it doesn't feel like a home and she doesn't want to decorate for Christmas this year.
Their whole idea of Christmas is still tied up in the dreams they had for the farm.
In the Dylan Thomas poem, a child's Christmas in Wales, there's a point toward the end where the narrator and his child,
childhood friends go caroling in the dark.
They walk up a long driveway to a large house, and although they are afraid, they soldier on.
And as they begin to sing, a voice joins theirs from behind the dark door.
Thomas writes, A small dry voice like the voice of someone who has not spoken for a long time
joined our singing.
A small dry egg shell voice from the other side of the door.
A small dry voice through the keyhole.
The boys run and never finished their song.
When I was little, I used to go with the Surrey Elementary School to sing carols outside
Robert Jordan's house, and I always confused the voice in the poem with the real life Robert
Jordan, someone isolated, someone people don't stick around for.
But that wasn't really who he was.
He reached out to people.
He helped out his neighbors across the street without asking for anything.
In return, they made him a millionaire.
and when Ronnie and Brenda
helped him without asking for anything
in return he gave them the farm
so much of his life
was about a kind of selfless
giving
and sometimes it didn't work out sure
Ronnie and Brenda are definitely going
to miss the farm this Christmas
but Ron still has hoped for the holidays
he thinks their house won't feel so much like a motel
once they get the tree up put some lights outside
and have some family over
already Brenda's nearly
They sold all her rees.
And when I called this week, Ron was already ahead of the game.
His shopping's all done, and he was busy wrapping presents for his wife.
Caitlin Chatterley, the latest book is Pete and Alice in Maine.
Our program is produced today by Jane Marie and myself with Alex Bloomberg, Diane Cook, and Starly Kine,
senior producer for the show, Julie Snyder, production help from Todd Bachman and Kelsey Diltz.
Help on today's rewrite from Susan Gabbar and Stone Nelson.
Special thanks today to Elizabeth and Ron and Adam Beckman
to Mr. Gary Stewart, Sarah Meyer, Dimitri Schube,
David Weiss, Peter Krinsky, Bill, and Gail Cadoo.
Jane, thanks Rick for the ring.
Our website, Thisamericanlife.org.
You can stream our archive of over 850 episodes for absolutely free.
Right now, if you sign up to be a life partner, this week's bonus episode,
we try something new.
We bring you a story that is just an early draft in progress.
This is a personal story with some funny moments that I told on stage.
As I was working it out, I'm still working it out.
It may or may not end up on the radio show.
If you want to hear that and all of our bonus episodes and lots of other stuff,
go to this Americanlife.org slash life partners.
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Thanks as always to our program's co-founder, Mr. Troy Malatia.
Or, as he likes to be known,
Our Lord Emmanuel.
I'm Ira Glass.
Back next week with more stories of this American life.
Jingle bells, jingle all the way.
Oh, what fun of history right in a heartproof and say.
Jingle bell, single bell, jingle all the way.
Next week on the podcast of This American Life.
Nearly every night in Portland, left-wing protesters and right-wing streamers face off in the streets.
But it's not like you think.
They know each other really well.
These are right-wing streamers at the apartment of one of the protesters.
That's next week on the podcast.
We're in your local public radio station.
Thank you.
