Showing posts with label kris kringle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kris kringle. Show all posts

Thursday, December 6, 2018

Lachrymose – Wordplay Wednesday™ 12/05/18


Yes, my one New Year's resolution is to post all of my articles on time in 2019 ... in the meantime, enjoy this week's Wordplay Wednesday, day late, and $$ short!
 
Grab Popcorn & Tissues for Holiday Tearjerkers 

During the Holiday Season, between charity fundraisers and classic seasonal TV movies, the tissue companies make a LOT of dough, and we’re not talkin’ cookies. 

This season, the television cable channels must have bought stock in the tissue companies. They appear to have launched a slew of new tearjerkers hoping to challenge the likes of It’s a Wonderful Life (1946) and A Christmas Story (1983; never lick a frozen pole!). Will this spawn a new awards show for …
 
LACHRYMOSE (lakʹri mōs’) adj. 1) inclined to shed many tears, tearful; 2) causing tears, sad. [WW #193]

The Hallmark Channel even has an app to track your list of watched vs. not watched lachrymose movie titles in their Countdown to Christmas presentation of premiered movies. Of course … there’s an app for everything.

While generally embodying the Christmas spirit, often combined with romance and a healthy dose of sentimentality, I haven’t yet seen a new lachrymose film that matches the staying power of the classics. Has anyone portrayed a more convincing Kris Kringle than Edmund Gwenn in 1947’s A Miracle on 34th Street?

And there isn’t a classier lachrymose Holiday classic than White Christmas, starring Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Vera-Ellen, and Rosemary Clooney (1954). It sends us reeling through the gamut from sweet to touchingly amusing to playful … and of course back to love found, love lost, and love rekindled. Sniffle, sniffle.

What is it about the lachrymose Holiday movies that we can’t seem to get enough of? Perhaps we’re so wrapped up in our own emotional lives the rest of the year that we don’t see others’ depth of emotional experiences. Until the Holidays. When giving, sharing, and loving are daily buzzwords, sprinkled with a little Christmas Magic

Grab a yummy eggnog and a fresh box of tissues. Enjoy.
 
Word Challenge: LACHRYMOSE. Count the times a movie, charity story or news event causes you to reach for a tissue, as you fit lachrymose into your week of sensitive writings.

Learning knows no prejudices or boundaries, and it isn’t fattening! Expanding your mind is a no-cost, simple joy. Do you feel that way too? What’s your inspiration? Share your creative genius and Wordplay Wednesday comments below.

Write first for yourself … only then can you write for others. (L.Rochelle) 

                       


LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and an author by way of Rock & Roll. She has published two books (of three) in her Blast from Your Past series about pioneering R&R Radio DJs. The true behind-the-mic tales make GREAT Holiday Gifts available on Amazon (eBook and print): Book 1Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The First Five Years 1954-1959; and Book 2Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The Swinging Sixties. Coming soon … The Psychedelic Seventies!

E-N-Dzzzzzzzz

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Gorp – Wordplay Wednesday™ 12/20/17



Mixing it Up for the Holidays 

This week’s Wordplay Wednesday is not for the Scrooges of the world. Offered for your Holiday enjoyment … it’s Christmas!

Let’s spark some merriment and tweak the story of Santa Claus, with a twinkle in the eye, plate of milk, and cookies by the tree.

Oh, wait, there’s no time to bake or buy the cookies, and we’re out of milk! Hmmm, there must be something around here …

GORP (gôrp) n. trail mix. [And we’ll add a yummy hot toddy to take the chill off his whiskers; WW #143]

The stockings were hung by the chimney with care, 
In hopes that St. Nicholas soon would be there

I know, I know … poor substitute for soft-baked chocolate chip cookies and mustache-coating milk. Gorp is a mostly American term to describe a nutritious snack of good ol’ raisins and peanuts (for a healthier Santa), along with a little granola and dried fruit. Well, we could jazz it up with a few M&M’s. Mmmmmm …

After munching on gorp, of course, Santa’s only going to take a couple sips of the tummy warming Toddy … after all, we don’t want him to get a DUI while driving the sleigh around the world!

Fantasy mixed with fact has always been a part of life. From the myths and legends of ancient cultures, to the urbanization of modern tech tales. Try as you might, you can’t dampen the spirits of those who want to enjoy their cultural traditions. Even if they’re tweaked with gorp.

Engaging stories tinged with truth, permeate history. They’ve been re-told for centuries, with personal spins added—like switching cookies for gorp—to the delight of children in every culture. Santa Claus among the most endearing.

From St. Nicholas, to Father Christmas, Kris Kringle, to Santa Claus, traditions may differ, but the pleasure is universal.

No matter the name, the meaning is the same. Joy, generosity, laughter, and love. With a wink, a nod, and a whistle, Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good night!

Word Challenge: GORP. Munch, munch, crunch …  as you fit gorp into your week of traditional writing.

Write first for yourself … only then can you write for others. (L.Rochelle) 

                       



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