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    <title>Small Scale Life Podcast - Episodes Tagged with “Tradition”</title>
    <link>https://smallscalelife.fireside.fm/tags/tradition</link>
    <pubDate>Thu, 23 Aug 2018 00:15:00 -0500</pubDate>
    <description>Welcome to The Small Scale Life Podcast!  The Small Scale Life Podcast is focused on gardening; homesteading/DIY projects; wellness; financial freedom and minimalism; and connecting to nature.  The podcast focuses on providing real-life stories and experiences from the hosts and guests, often encouraging listeners to take small, practical steps toward self-reliance and sustainability. 
Learn, do, grow, and be a little better everyday!  That, my friends, is a good thing (and where the magic is)!  
You can find more about Small Scale Life at our website https://smallscalelife.com. 
</description>
    <language>en-us</language>
    <itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type>
    <itunes:subtitle>Learn, do grow and be a little better everyday!</itunes:subtitle>
    <itunes:author>Tom</itunes:author>
    <itunes:summary>Welcome to The Small Scale Life Podcast!  The Small Scale Life Podcast is focused on gardening; homesteading/DIY projects; wellness; financial freedom and minimalism; and connecting to nature.  The podcast focuses on providing real-life stories and experiences from the hosts and guests, often encouraging listeners to take small, practical steps toward self-reliance and sustainability. 
Learn, do, grow, and be a little better everyday!  That, my friends, is a good thing (and where the magic is)!  
You can find more about Small Scale Life at our website https://smallscalelife.com. 
</itunes:summary>
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    <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
    <itunes:keywords>Gardening, Homesteading/DIY Projects, Wellness, Community, Nature</itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:owner>
      <itunes:name>Tom</itunes:name>
      <itunes:email>realsmallscalelife@gmail.com</itunes:email>
    </itunes:owner>
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  <itunes:category text="Home &amp; Garden"/>
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<itunes:category text="Education">
  <itunes:category text="Self-Improvement"/>
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<itunes:category text="Health &amp; Fitness">
  <itunes:category text="Fitness"/>
</itunes:category>
<item>
  <title>Homesteading for Beginners: Definition of Homesteading - Part 2</title>
  <link>https://smallscalelife.fireside.fm/107</link>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 23 Aug 2018 00:15:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Tom</author>
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  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Tom</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>Greg Burns Jay and I discuss the definition of homesteading, how to build experiences and how to cultivate people while building community.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>1:03:34</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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  <description>This week, Greg Burns, my friend Jay and I finish Homesteading for Beginners by discussing the Definition of Homesteading.  This is the last part of a 2-1/2 hour conversation that focused on the start of our own individual homesteading journeys.  This is a philosophical discussion about the definition of homesteading, how to build experiences and how to cultivate people while building community.
If you are new to Small Scale Life or missed Part 1 of the Homesteading for Beginners podcast (http://www.smallscalelife.com/homesteading-for-beginners/), I recommend that you take a listen.  In that podcast, Captain Lumbersquatch Greg Burns, my friend Jay and I discuss starting our own Homesteading journeys by asking why.
For more links, photos and extensive show notes, please go to Small Scale Life to get more information (https://wp.me/p6NX1f-TY)! 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>Definition of Homesteading</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>This week, Greg Burns, my friend Jay and I finish Homesteading for Beginners by discussing the Definition of Homesteading.  This is the last part of a 2-1/2 hour conversation that focused on the start of our own individual homesteading journeys.  This is a philosophical discussion about the definition of homesteading, how to build experiences and how to cultivate people while building community.</p>

<p>If you are new to Small Scale Life or <a href="http://www.smallscalelife.com/homesteading-for-beginners/" rel="nofollow">missed Part 1 of the Homesteading for Beginners podcast</a>, I recommend that you take a listen.  In that podcast, Captain Lumbersquatch Greg Burns, my friend Jay and I discuss starting our own Homesteading journeys by asking why.</p>

<p>For more links, photos and extensive show notes, <a href="https://wp.me/p6NX1f-TY" rel="nofollow">please go to Small Scale Life to get more information</a>!</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>This week, Greg Burns, my friend Jay and I finish Homesteading for Beginners by discussing the Definition of Homesteading.  This is the last part of a 2-1/2 hour conversation that focused on the start of our own individual homesteading journeys.  This is a philosophical discussion about the definition of homesteading, how to build experiences and how to cultivate people while building community.</p>

<p>If you are new to Small Scale Life or <a href="http://www.smallscalelife.com/homesteading-for-beginners/" rel="nofollow">missed Part 1 of the Homesteading for Beginners podcast</a>, I recommend that you take a listen.  In that podcast, Captain Lumbersquatch Greg Burns, my friend Jay and I discuss starting our own Homesteading journeys by asking why.</p>

<p>For more links, photos and extensive show notes, <a href="https://wp.me/p6NX1f-TY" rel="nofollow">please go to Small Scale Life to get more information</a>!</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Homesteading for Beginners: Start with Why - Part 1</title>
  <link>https://smallscalelife.fireside.fm/105</link>
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  <pubDate>Wed, 15 Aug 2018 14:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Tom</author>
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  <itunes:subtitle>Many of us dream of creating productive homesteads and breaking free of our urban or suburban existence.  Where do you start?  My friends Greg Burns and Jay return to the podcast and we discuss Homesteading for Beginners. Greg recommends we start our journey with a different question before we begin: why.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>1:16:45</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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  <description>As I drove through southern Minnesota this week, I saw a lot of great farms and homesteads on my journey.  Some of these folks lived on Century Farms (100-year old family farms) while others were just starting to homestead.
My friend Jay and I can relate to those new homesteaders: we both purchased properties in 2018.  We want to create new homesteads on our respective properties, and we figured it would be great to talk with someone who actually had a homestead and was further down the rabbit hole on this journey.
Fortunately, I know a few people who do some great things due to this little podcast and blog!  I called on my friend Captain Lumbersquatch Greg Burns, and he agreed to bring his contrarian perspective (and jar full of fermented goodness) to the discussion.
For more information, show notes and links to other podcasts and information, check out the post on Small Scale Life! (https://wp.me/p6NX1f-Tm) 
</description>
  <itunes:keywords>homesteading for beginners</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>As I drove through southern Minnesota this week, I saw a lot of great farms and homesteads on my journey.  Some of these folks lived on Century Farms (100-year old family farms) while others were just starting to homestead.</p>

<p>My friend Jay and I can relate to those new homesteaders: we both purchased properties in 2018.  We want to create new homesteads on our respective properties, and we figured it would be great to talk with someone who actually had a homestead and was further down the rabbit hole on this journey.</p>

<p>Fortunately, I know a few people who do some great things due to this little podcast and blog!  I called on my friend Captain Lumbersquatch Greg Burns, and he agreed to bring his contrarian perspective (and jar full of fermented goodness) to the discussion.</p>

<p>For more information, show notes and links to other podcasts and information, check out the post on <a href="https://wp.me/p6NX1f-Tm" rel="nofollow">Small Scale Life!</a></p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>As I drove through southern Minnesota this week, I saw a lot of great farms and homesteads on my journey.  Some of these folks lived on Century Farms (100-year old family farms) while others were just starting to homestead.</p>

<p>My friend Jay and I can relate to those new homesteaders: we both purchased properties in 2018.  We want to create new homesteads on our respective properties, and we figured it would be great to talk with someone who actually had a homestead and was further down the rabbit hole on this journey.</p>

<p>Fortunately, I know a few people who do some great things due to this little podcast and blog!  I called on my friend Captain Lumbersquatch Greg Burns, and he agreed to bring his contrarian perspective (and jar full of fermented goodness) to the discussion.</p>

<p>For more information, show notes and links to other podcasts and information, check out the post on <a href="https://wp.me/p6NX1f-Tm" rel="nofollow">Small Scale Life!</a></p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Twas the Night Before Christmas</title>
  <link>https://smallscalelife.fireside.fm/66</link>
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  <pubDate>Sun, 24 Dec 2017 13:00:00 -0600</pubDate>
  <author>Tom</author>
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  <itunes:subtitle>We are establishing our own tradition on today’s episode of the Small Scale Life Podcast!  For the second year in a row, I am reading “Twas the Night Before Christmas” for you and your family. </itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>23:15</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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  <description>Merry Christmas, everyone!  I hope you are spending lots of quality time with your family and friends this season.  We certainly will be doing just that over the next week!  In this post and podcast, I wanted to establish a tradition here on Small Scale Life by rebroadcasting my reading of the poem “Twas the Night before Christmas.”  My dad used to read it to my family when we were young, so in that fine tradition, I am posting it for you and your family to enjoy.
Reading this poem brought so many memories back from when I was young. This time of year was always a lot of fun for us: we would go sledding, make snow forts, have snowball fights, cross country ski and spend all day out in the snow.  We would come home wet and cold, and warm up in the living room near the wood burning stove while drinking hot chocolate.  Our wet boots, hats, gloves, and snow suits hanging in the basement laundry room (or wadded up in a ball near the laundry room - our boys come by it naturally).
Nothing says the holidays more than some of the classic songs from bygone eras.  I have added three of my favorite songs to the end of the podcast.  These songs are "White Christmas" by Bing Crosby, "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" by Frank Sinatra and "The Christmas Song" by Nat King Cole.  In this age of techno-modified singers, it is excellent to listen to these songs from the Golden Age of our country: when times and living were a little more simple.
In this day and age when we are so caught up with shopping, presents, dinners, parties and technology like our phones and social media, it is important to take a little time to stop and enjoy the people around us and the  moments we share with them.  That is my hope for you this season.
Show Topics
During this episode of the Small Scale Life Podcast, I discuss the following topics and play the following songs:
list text hereIntroduction
list text hereHistory
list text hereTwas the Night before Christmas Poem
list text hereA Visit from St. Nicholas Wikipedia
list text hereTwas the Night before Christmas – UK Carols Blog
list text hereReading the Poem
list text hereClosing Remarks
list text hereTraditional Holiday Songs:
list text here"White Christmas" by Bing Crosby
list text here"Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" by Frank Sinatra
list text here"The Christmas Song" by Nat King Cole
list text hereClosing Song
Putting It All Together
From my family to you, we wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!  Always continue to strive to live simply: grow, explore and be healthy!  May your 2018 surpass your expectations!
</description>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Merry Christmas, everyone!  I hope you are spending lots of quality time with your family and friends this season.  We certainly will be doing just that over the next week!  In this post and podcast, I wanted to establish a tradition here on Small Scale Life by rebroadcasting my reading of the poem “Twas the Night before Christmas.”  My dad used to read it to my family when we were young, so in that fine tradition, I am posting it for you and your family to enjoy.</p>

<p>Reading this poem brought so many memories back from when I was young. This time of year was always a lot of fun for us: we would go sledding, make snow forts, have snowball fights, cross country ski and spend all day out in the snow.  We would come home wet and cold, and warm up in the living room near the wood burning stove while drinking hot chocolate.  Our wet boots, hats, gloves, and snow suits hanging in the basement laundry room (or wadded up in a ball near the laundry room - our boys come by it naturally).</p>

<p>Nothing says the holidays more than some of the classic songs from bygone eras.  I have added three of my favorite songs to the end of the podcast.  These songs are &quot;White Christmas&quot; by Bing Crosby, &quot;Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas&quot; by Frank Sinatra and &quot;The Christmas Song&quot; by Nat King Cole.  In this age of techno-modified singers, it is excellent to listen to these songs from the Golden Age of our country: when times and living were a little more simple.</p>

<p>In this day and age when we are so caught up with shopping, presents, dinners, parties and technology like our phones and social media, it is important to take a little time to stop and enjoy the people around us and the  moments we share with them.  That is my hope for you this season.</p>

<h3>Show Topics</h3>

<p>During this episode of the Small Scale Life Podcast, I discuss the following topics and play the following songs:</p>

<ul>
<li>list text hereIntroduction</li>
<li>list text hereHistory</li>
<li>list text hereTwas the Night before Christmas Poem</li>
<li>list text hereA Visit from St. Nicholas Wikipedia</li>
<li>list text hereTwas the Night before Christmas – UK Carols Blog</li>
<li>list text hereReading the Poem</li>
<li>list text hereClosing Remarks</li>
<li>list text hereTraditional Holiday Songs:</li>
<li>list text here&quot;White Christmas&quot; by Bing Crosby</li>
<li>list text here&quot;Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas&quot; by Frank Sinatra</li>
<li>list text here&quot;The Christmas Song&quot; by Nat King Cole</li>
<li>list text hereClosing Song</li>
</ul>

<h3>Putting It All Together</h3>

<p>From my family to you, we wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!  Always continue to strive to live simply: grow, explore and be healthy!  May your 2018 surpass your expectations!</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Merry Christmas, everyone!  I hope you are spending lots of quality time with your family and friends this season.  We certainly will be doing just that over the next week!  In this post and podcast, I wanted to establish a tradition here on Small Scale Life by rebroadcasting my reading of the poem “Twas the Night before Christmas.”  My dad used to read it to my family when we were young, so in that fine tradition, I am posting it for you and your family to enjoy.</p>

<p>Reading this poem brought so many memories back from when I was young. This time of year was always a lot of fun for us: we would go sledding, make snow forts, have snowball fights, cross country ski and spend all day out in the snow.  We would come home wet and cold, and warm up in the living room near the wood burning stove while drinking hot chocolate.  Our wet boots, hats, gloves, and snow suits hanging in the basement laundry room (or wadded up in a ball near the laundry room - our boys come by it naturally).</p>

<p>Nothing says the holidays more than some of the classic songs from bygone eras.  I have added three of my favorite songs to the end of the podcast.  These songs are &quot;White Christmas&quot; by Bing Crosby, &quot;Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas&quot; by Frank Sinatra and &quot;The Christmas Song&quot; by Nat King Cole.  In this age of techno-modified singers, it is excellent to listen to these songs from the Golden Age of our country: when times and living were a little more simple.</p>

<p>In this day and age when we are so caught up with shopping, presents, dinners, parties and technology like our phones and social media, it is important to take a little time to stop and enjoy the people around us and the  moments we share with them.  That is my hope for you this season.</p>

<h3>Show Topics</h3>

<p>During this episode of the Small Scale Life Podcast, I discuss the following topics and play the following songs:</p>

<ul>
<li>list text hereIntroduction</li>
<li>list text hereHistory</li>
<li>list text hereTwas the Night before Christmas Poem</li>
<li>list text hereA Visit from St. Nicholas Wikipedia</li>
<li>list text hereTwas the Night before Christmas – UK Carols Blog</li>
<li>list text hereReading the Poem</li>
<li>list text hereClosing Remarks</li>
<li>list text hereTraditional Holiday Songs:</li>
<li>list text here&quot;White Christmas&quot; by Bing Crosby</li>
<li>list text here&quot;Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas&quot; by Frank Sinatra</li>
<li>list text here&quot;The Christmas Song&quot; by Nat King Cole</li>
<li>list text hereClosing Song</li>
</ul>

<h3>Putting It All Together</h3>

<p>From my family to you, we wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!  Always continue to strive to live simply: grow, explore and be healthy!  May your 2018 surpass your expectations!</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Our Five Christmas Traditions</title>
  <link>https://smallscalelife.fireside.fm/65</link>
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  <pubDate>Sat, 23 Dec 2017 09:30:00 -0600</pubDate>
  <author>Tom</author>
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  <itunes:author>Tom</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>As we ramp up for the holidays, family and friends gather together to celebrate the holidays. Out of ideas for something to do? How about trying one of our Five Christmas Traditions this year?</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>47:43</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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  <description>This time of year, we gather and celebrate the holidays with family and friends. For members of our family, this is a particularly meaningful Christmas: this is the first Christmas without Barb Taylor and without Mary Cicero.  Two great ladies that made our world a brighter and better place.  While these wonderful women left us too soon, we continue to practice Holiday and Christmas Traditions that bring family and friends together.  We will build on these Christmas Traditions in the future as we celebrate each other, our lives, our history and our heritage.  In this post, I will discuss Five Christmas Traditions that we practice, and if you don't have your own Christmas Traditions, maybe that will inspire you to give some of them a try!
Just to be completely honest with you, I am late with this post.  I originally wanted to post it earlier this week.  Given the mix of emotions this year, I found that this was a particularly difficult post for me to write.  I struggled with how to frame and write it as I have been working on it all week.  I want to thank my sister-in-law Kelly Domres for helping me "get over the hump" on this post. As she said eloquently, "Do not dwell on the negative; you have a lot to be thankful for this year."  She is absolutely correct.  This post is dedicated to my sister-in-law, Kelly.
1. Decorating the Christmas Tree
We moved from our house in St. Louis Park in July, and most of our stuff is still in a storage locker.  This is by design because we moved into a furnished house, and we were planning to move our gear when we finally purchased our house.  The drawback to this strategy, however, is that all of our holiday decorations (Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter) is buried deep in the storage locker somewhere.
Fortunately for us, Julie's parents had an artificial tree, lights and ornaments stored in the basement of this house.  Christmas was Julie's mom Barb's favorite holiday, and she always tried to make it special for the family.  Using her tree, lights and decorations is comforting and special for all of us.  Julie and I set up the tree and the lights, and then we all took turns adding ornaments to the tree.  There are some special ornaments from the past, some that are funny and some from relatives long since passed. Inspired, I even decorated the outside of the house with lights and ornaments.
Barb might not be with us in body this year, but her spirit and her memory lives on for all of us.  Her decorations, lights and trees remind us of what a great and generous woman she was.
2. Favorite Christmas and Holiday Movies
https://youtu.be/4fyS5CLBgyM
I have really made a conscious effort to NOT watch much television and movies in 2017.  Sure, I watched Taboo (and even did some podcasts about the show Taboo earlier this year), Game of Thrones and The Punisher, but overall, I have done a pretty good job limiting my time in front of a television or movie screen.
This time of year, however, I make an exception.  With Ryan home from college, we gathered together as a family to watch some classic Christmas and Holiday movies.  There have been some great ones over the years, and the following movies are our family favorites:
• Planes, Trains and Automobiles (I seriously know almost every line of this movie)
• Christmas Vacation
• Elf
• A Christmas Story
We have watched two of the four movies so far this season, and we will have to find the time to watch the last two. It is easy to forget how funny these movies actually are, so if you need a break and want a good belly laugh this time of year, check out these classics.  You won't even shoot your eye out, kid!
https://youtu.be/9jyCfRHumHU
3. Wooddale Church Christmas Program
For the past few years, we have gone to Wooddale Church in Eden Prairie, Minnesota.  This year, Julie, Danny, Ryan, David and Jenny (brother and sister-in-law) went to Wooddale's Christmas Program.  The church is massive, and they had a full orchestra, choir, organ and even interpretive dancers.   The program consisted of the following songs:
• Overture "Canticle of Glorias"
• Gloria in Excelsis Deo
• O Come, All Ye Faithful
• White Christmas
• How Great Our Joy
• Pat a Pan
• Noe! Noe!
• Fum, Fum, Fum
• The First Noel
• Angels We Have Heard on High
• The Christmas Story
• Ecolgue for Piano and Strings Opus 10
• No Eye Had Seen/All is Well
• Amazing Grace
It was very profession and extremely inspirational.  Some of the songs had a Celtic feel to them, and the grand finale included a Scottish man playing bagpipes in traditional dress. It was amazing to hear, especially since it was my dad's and Barb's favorite hymn.
If you have a chance to go to a church program, you should.  It is a chance to decompress, tune out the commercialism of the season, sing carols and hymns, and share in the Christmas message with family and friends.
https://youtu.be/euWfTiYwRB0
4. Decorating Christmas Cookies
When Julie and I were in high school, we would decorate sugar cookies with Julie's family, her cousin, her aunt and her uncle every year.  It was a lot of fun (and it tasted good too)!
This year, we gathered once again to decorate Christmas cookies.  It was a team effort: we made dinner, Julie's dad and fiance Sue made the sugar cookies, and Julie made the frosting.  We had a great dinner, and then we got down to business decorating the cookies.  It was a lot of fun, and we had a bunch of laughs as some of our "artists" got creative with gingerbread men and Santa cookies.  In fact, you can see one of those cookies in the picture above (just don't point it out to your kids).  
I am sure eating tons of cookies covered in the world's best frosting didn't help my healthy lifestyle goals, but it was worth it!  We'll have to do it again next year!
5. Christmas Eve Meal
My ancestors on my mother;s side came from Poland and Czechoslovakia.  This year, I did a little research about Polish Christmas traditions.  In Polish households, Christmas Eve is an extremely important day.  The Polish people celebrate Christmas by preparing a big meal called "Wigilia."  This traditional meal is a big deal.  According to the Polish Women's Alliance of America, the wigilia consists "of twelve meatless dishes, and includes many kinds of fish, beet or mushroom soup, various dishes made from cabbage, mushrooms, or potatoes, pierogi, followed by dried fruit compote and pastries for dessert."  The meal does not start until the first star is seen in the sky.
Like Polish homes, we traditionally have a big meal on Christmas Eve.  Unlike the Polish dinner, we eat meat (and lots of it).  We have adopted something my side of the family started doing years ago: fondue.  We will cook shrimp, beef, and vegetables in boiling oil or broth (we have tried both).  We will make a cheese fondue and dip bread into it (big hit around Green Bay Packer fans), and we will have a dessert fondue with chocolate, marsh mellows, strawberries and pound cake.
The beauty of the Christmas Eve fondue is the social aspect of the meal. It takes time to cook the food, and it is a lot of fun to talk with everyone, joke around a bit, and yes, steal someone else's meat or shrimp (accidentally, of course)!  It takes some time to prep: cutting the meat, breads, pound cake and vegetables; preparing the various fondue pots; and gathering the various dipping sauces for the cooked food.
A few words of caution before you do fondue:
list text hereThe oil, cheese and chocolate are VERY hot.  Be careful around the fondue pots!
list text hereThings splatter and spill, so use a disposable table cloth.
list text hereBe careful using the fondue forks.  Someone usually ends up spearing their finger by accident.
list text hereThere usually is a lot of clean-up after the meal, so be prepared for that!
This year, we are planning on a smaller meal on Christmas Eve, but we will eat very well.  We will celebrate Christmas Eve dinner with Julie, Danny, Ryan and me, and we are eating steak, shrimp, twice baked potatoes and salad.  It will be a great dinner!
How about you?
What are your Christmas Traditions?  What do you do with your friends and family?  I would love to know, and maybe we will incorporate some of your traditions into our Christmas and Holiday Celebrations.  Feel free to share your Christmas Traditions as a comment on this blog post.
This is a busy time of year.  Before we let the moment get away from us, I would like to thank you for following Small Scale Life.  We wouldn't be here if it wasn't for you and your support.  Please be safe this holiday season. Enjoy each moment, and be kind to someone.
In case we haven't said it yet, Julie, Danny, Ryan and I wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
</description>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>This time of year, we gather and celebrate the holidays with family and friends. For members of our family, this is a particularly meaningful Christmas: this is the first Christmas without Barb Taylor and without Mary Cicero.  Two great ladies that made our world a brighter and better place.  While these wonderful women left us too soon, we continue to practice Holiday and Christmas Traditions that bring family and friends together.  We will build on these Christmas Traditions in the future as we celebrate each other, our lives, our history and our heritage.  In this post, I will discuss Five Christmas Traditions that we practice, and if you don&#39;t have your own Christmas Traditions, maybe that will inspire you to give some of them a try!</p>

<p>Just to be completely honest with you, I am late with this post.  I originally wanted to post it earlier this week.  Given the mix of emotions this year, I found that this was a particularly difficult post for me to write.  I struggled with how to frame and write it as I have been working on it all week.  I want to thank my sister-in-law Kelly Domres for helping me &quot;get over the hump&quot; on this post. As she said eloquently, &quot;Do not dwell on the negative; you have a lot to be thankful for this year.&quot;  She is absolutely correct.  This post is dedicated to my sister-in-law, Kelly.</p>

<h3>1. Decorating the Christmas Tree</h3>

<p>We moved from our house in St. Louis Park in July, and most of our stuff is still in a storage locker.  This is by design because we moved into a furnished house, and we were planning to move our gear when we finally purchased our house.  The drawback to this strategy, however, is that all of our holiday decorations (Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter) is buried deep in the storage locker somewhere.</p>

<p>Fortunately for us, Julie&#39;s parents had an artificial tree, lights and ornaments stored in the basement of this house.  Christmas was Julie&#39;s mom Barb&#39;s favorite holiday, and she always tried to make it special for the family.  Using her tree, lights and decorations is comforting and special for all of us.  Julie and I set up the tree and the lights, and then we all took turns adding ornaments to the tree.  There are some special ornaments from the past, some that are funny and some from relatives long since passed. Inspired, I even decorated the outside of the house with lights and ornaments.</p>

<p>Barb might not be with us in body this year, but her spirit and her memory lives on for all of us.  Her decorations, lights and trees remind us of what a great and generous woman she was.</p>

<h3>2. Favorite Christmas and Holiday Movies</h3>

<p><a href="https://youtu.be/4fyS5CLBgyM" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/4fyS5CLBgyM</a></p>

<p>I have really made a conscious effort to NOT watch much television and movies in 2017.  Sure, I watched Taboo (and even did some podcasts about the show Taboo earlier this year), Game of Thrones and The Punisher, but overall, I have done a pretty good job limiting my time in front of a television or movie screen.</p>

<p>This time of year, however, I make an exception.  With Ryan home from college, we gathered together as a family to watch some classic Christmas and Holiday movies.  There have been some great ones over the years, and the following movies are our family favorites:</p>

<p>• Planes, Trains and Automobiles (I seriously know almost every line of this movie)<br>
• Christmas Vacation<br>
• Elf<br>
• A Christmas Story</p>

<p>We have watched two of the four movies so far this season, and we will have to find the time to watch the last two. It is easy to forget how funny these movies actually are, so if you need a break and want a good belly laugh this time of year, check out these classics.  You won&#39;t even shoot your eye out, kid!<br>
<a href="https://youtu.be/9jyCfRHumHU" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/9jyCfRHumHU</a></p>

<h3>3. Wooddale Church Christmas Program</h3>

<p>For the past few years, we have gone to Wooddale Church in Eden Prairie, Minnesota.  This year, Julie, Danny, Ryan, David and Jenny (brother and sister-in-law) went to Wooddale&#39;s Christmas Program.  The church is massive, and they had a full orchestra, choir, organ and even interpretive dancers.   The program consisted of the following songs:</p>

<p>• Overture &quot;Canticle of Glorias&quot;<br>
• Gloria in Excelsis Deo<br>
• O Come, All Ye Faithful<br>
• White Christmas<br>
• How Great Our Joy<br>
• Pat a Pan<br>
• Noe! Noe!<br>
• Fum, Fum, Fum<br>
• The First Noel<br>
• Angels We Have Heard on High<br>
• The Christmas Story<br>
• Ecolgue for Piano and Strings Opus 10<br>
• No Eye Had Seen/All is Well<br>
• Amazing Grace</p>

<p>It was very profession and extremely inspirational.  Some of the songs had a Celtic feel to them, and the grand finale included a Scottish man playing bagpipes in traditional dress. It was amazing to hear, especially since it was my dad&#39;s and Barb&#39;s favorite hymn.</p>

<p>If you have a chance to go to a church program, you should.  It is a chance to decompress, tune out the commercialism of the season, sing carols and hymns, and share in the Christmas message with family and friends.<br>
<a href="https://youtu.be/euWfTiYwRB0" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/euWfTiYwRB0</a></p>

<h3>4. Decorating Christmas Cookies</h3>

<p>When Julie and I were in high school, we would decorate sugar cookies with Julie&#39;s family, her cousin, her aunt and her uncle every year.  It was a lot of fun (and it tasted good too)!</p>

<p>This year, we gathered once again to decorate Christmas cookies.  It was a team effort: we made dinner, Julie&#39;s dad and fiance Sue made the sugar cookies, and Julie made the frosting.  We had a great dinner, and then we got down to business decorating the cookies.  It was a lot of fun, and we had a bunch of laughs as some of our &quot;artists&quot; got creative with gingerbread men and Santa cookies.  In fact, you can see one of those cookies in the picture above (just don&#39;t point it out to your kids).  </p>

<p>I am sure eating tons of cookies covered in the world&#39;s best frosting didn&#39;t help my healthy lifestyle goals, but it was worth it!  We&#39;ll have to do it again next year!</p>

<h3>5. Christmas Eve Meal</h3>

<p>My ancestors on my mother;s side came from Poland and Czechoslovakia.  This year, I did a little research about Polish Christmas traditions.  In Polish households, Christmas Eve is an extremely important day.  The Polish people celebrate Christmas by preparing a big meal called &quot;Wigilia.&quot;  This traditional meal is a big deal.  According to the Polish Women&#39;s Alliance of America, the wigilia consists &quot;of twelve meatless dishes, and includes many kinds of fish, beet or mushroom soup, various dishes made from cabbage, mushrooms, or potatoes, pierogi, followed by dried fruit compote and pastries for dessert.&quot;  The meal does not start until the first star is seen in the sky.</p>

<p>Like Polish homes, we traditionally have a big meal on Christmas Eve.  Unlike the Polish dinner, we eat meat (and lots of it).  We have adopted something my side of the family started doing years ago: fondue.  We will cook shrimp, beef, and vegetables in boiling oil or broth (we have tried both).  We will make a cheese fondue and dip bread into it (big hit around Green Bay Packer fans), and we will have a dessert fondue with chocolate, marsh mellows, strawberries and pound cake.</p>

<p>The beauty of the Christmas Eve fondue is the social aspect of the meal. It takes time to cook the food, and it is a lot of fun to talk with everyone, joke around a bit, and yes, steal someone else&#39;s meat or shrimp (accidentally, of course)!  It takes some time to prep: cutting the meat, breads, pound cake and vegetables; preparing the various fondue pots; and gathering the various dipping sauces for the cooked food.</p>

<p>A few words of caution before you do fondue:</p>

<ol>
<li>list text hereThe oil, cheese and chocolate are VERY hot.  Be careful around the fondue pots!</li>
<li>list text hereThings splatter and spill, so use a disposable table cloth.</li>
<li>list text hereBe careful using the fondue forks.  Someone usually ends up spearing their finger by accident.</li>
<li>list text hereThere usually is a lot of clean-up after the meal, so be prepared for that!</li>
</ol>

<p>This year, we are planning on a smaller meal on Christmas Eve, but we will eat very well.  We will celebrate Christmas Eve dinner with Julie, Danny, Ryan and me, and we are eating steak, shrimp, twice baked potatoes and salad.  It will be a great dinner!</p>

<h3>How about you?</h3>

<p>What are your Christmas Traditions?  What do you do with your friends and family?  I would love to know, and maybe we will incorporate some of your traditions into our Christmas and Holiday Celebrations.  Feel free to share your Christmas Traditions as a comment on this blog post.<br>
This is a busy time of year.  Before we let the moment get away from us, I would like to thank you for following Small Scale Life.  We wouldn&#39;t be here if it wasn&#39;t for you and your support.  Please be safe this holiday season. Enjoy each moment, and be kind to someone.<br>
In case we haven&#39;t said it yet, Julie, Danny, Ryan and I wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>This time of year, we gather and celebrate the holidays with family and friends. For members of our family, this is a particularly meaningful Christmas: this is the first Christmas without Barb Taylor and without Mary Cicero.  Two great ladies that made our world a brighter and better place.  While these wonderful women left us too soon, we continue to practice Holiday and Christmas Traditions that bring family and friends together.  We will build on these Christmas Traditions in the future as we celebrate each other, our lives, our history and our heritage.  In this post, I will discuss Five Christmas Traditions that we practice, and if you don&#39;t have your own Christmas Traditions, maybe that will inspire you to give some of them a try!</p>

<p>Just to be completely honest with you, I am late with this post.  I originally wanted to post it earlier this week.  Given the mix of emotions this year, I found that this was a particularly difficult post for me to write.  I struggled with how to frame and write it as I have been working on it all week.  I want to thank my sister-in-law Kelly Domres for helping me &quot;get over the hump&quot; on this post. As she said eloquently, &quot;Do not dwell on the negative; you have a lot to be thankful for this year.&quot;  She is absolutely correct.  This post is dedicated to my sister-in-law, Kelly.</p>

<h3>1. Decorating the Christmas Tree</h3>

<p>We moved from our house in St. Louis Park in July, and most of our stuff is still in a storage locker.  This is by design because we moved into a furnished house, and we were planning to move our gear when we finally purchased our house.  The drawback to this strategy, however, is that all of our holiday decorations (Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter) is buried deep in the storage locker somewhere.</p>

<p>Fortunately for us, Julie&#39;s parents had an artificial tree, lights and ornaments stored in the basement of this house.  Christmas was Julie&#39;s mom Barb&#39;s favorite holiday, and she always tried to make it special for the family.  Using her tree, lights and decorations is comforting and special for all of us.  Julie and I set up the tree and the lights, and then we all took turns adding ornaments to the tree.  There are some special ornaments from the past, some that are funny and some from relatives long since passed. Inspired, I even decorated the outside of the house with lights and ornaments.</p>

<p>Barb might not be with us in body this year, but her spirit and her memory lives on for all of us.  Her decorations, lights and trees remind us of what a great and generous woman she was.</p>

<h3>2. Favorite Christmas and Holiday Movies</h3>

<p><a href="https://youtu.be/4fyS5CLBgyM" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/4fyS5CLBgyM</a></p>

<p>I have really made a conscious effort to NOT watch much television and movies in 2017.  Sure, I watched Taboo (and even did some podcasts about the show Taboo earlier this year), Game of Thrones and The Punisher, but overall, I have done a pretty good job limiting my time in front of a television or movie screen.</p>

<p>This time of year, however, I make an exception.  With Ryan home from college, we gathered together as a family to watch some classic Christmas and Holiday movies.  There have been some great ones over the years, and the following movies are our family favorites:</p>

<p>• Planes, Trains and Automobiles (I seriously know almost every line of this movie)<br>
• Christmas Vacation<br>
• Elf<br>
• A Christmas Story</p>

<p>We have watched two of the four movies so far this season, and we will have to find the time to watch the last two. It is easy to forget how funny these movies actually are, so if you need a break and want a good belly laugh this time of year, check out these classics.  You won&#39;t even shoot your eye out, kid!<br>
<a href="https://youtu.be/9jyCfRHumHU" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/9jyCfRHumHU</a></p>

<h3>3. Wooddale Church Christmas Program</h3>

<p>For the past few years, we have gone to Wooddale Church in Eden Prairie, Minnesota.  This year, Julie, Danny, Ryan, David and Jenny (brother and sister-in-law) went to Wooddale&#39;s Christmas Program.  The church is massive, and they had a full orchestra, choir, organ and even interpretive dancers.   The program consisted of the following songs:</p>

<p>• Overture &quot;Canticle of Glorias&quot;<br>
• Gloria in Excelsis Deo<br>
• O Come, All Ye Faithful<br>
• White Christmas<br>
• How Great Our Joy<br>
• Pat a Pan<br>
• Noe! Noe!<br>
• Fum, Fum, Fum<br>
• The First Noel<br>
• Angels We Have Heard on High<br>
• The Christmas Story<br>
• Ecolgue for Piano and Strings Opus 10<br>
• No Eye Had Seen/All is Well<br>
• Amazing Grace</p>

<p>It was very profession and extremely inspirational.  Some of the songs had a Celtic feel to them, and the grand finale included a Scottish man playing bagpipes in traditional dress. It was amazing to hear, especially since it was my dad&#39;s and Barb&#39;s favorite hymn.</p>

<p>If you have a chance to go to a church program, you should.  It is a chance to decompress, tune out the commercialism of the season, sing carols and hymns, and share in the Christmas message with family and friends.<br>
<a href="https://youtu.be/euWfTiYwRB0" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/euWfTiYwRB0</a></p>

<h3>4. Decorating Christmas Cookies</h3>

<p>When Julie and I were in high school, we would decorate sugar cookies with Julie&#39;s family, her cousin, her aunt and her uncle every year.  It was a lot of fun (and it tasted good too)!</p>

<p>This year, we gathered once again to decorate Christmas cookies.  It was a team effort: we made dinner, Julie&#39;s dad and fiance Sue made the sugar cookies, and Julie made the frosting.  We had a great dinner, and then we got down to business decorating the cookies.  It was a lot of fun, and we had a bunch of laughs as some of our &quot;artists&quot; got creative with gingerbread men and Santa cookies.  In fact, you can see one of those cookies in the picture above (just don&#39;t point it out to your kids).  </p>

<p>I am sure eating tons of cookies covered in the world&#39;s best frosting didn&#39;t help my healthy lifestyle goals, but it was worth it!  We&#39;ll have to do it again next year!</p>

<h3>5. Christmas Eve Meal</h3>

<p>My ancestors on my mother;s side came from Poland and Czechoslovakia.  This year, I did a little research about Polish Christmas traditions.  In Polish households, Christmas Eve is an extremely important day.  The Polish people celebrate Christmas by preparing a big meal called &quot;Wigilia.&quot;  This traditional meal is a big deal.  According to the Polish Women&#39;s Alliance of America, the wigilia consists &quot;of twelve meatless dishes, and includes many kinds of fish, beet or mushroom soup, various dishes made from cabbage, mushrooms, or potatoes, pierogi, followed by dried fruit compote and pastries for dessert.&quot;  The meal does not start until the first star is seen in the sky.</p>

<p>Like Polish homes, we traditionally have a big meal on Christmas Eve.  Unlike the Polish dinner, we eat meat (and lots of it).  We have adopted something my side of the family started doing years ago: fondue.  We will cook shrimp, beef, and vegetables in boiling oil or broth (we have tried both).  We will make a cheese fondue and dip bread into it (big hit around Green Bay Packer fans), and we will have a dessert fondue with chocolate, marsh mellows, strawberries and pound cake.</p>

<p>The beauty of the Christmas Eve fondue is the social aspect of the meal. It takes time to cook the food, and it is a lot of fun to talk with everyone, joke around a bit, and yes, steal someone else&#39;s meat or shrimp (accidentally, of course)!  It takes some time to prep: cutting the meat, breads, pound cake and vegetables; preparing the various fondue pots; and gathering the various dipping sauces for the cooked food.</p>

<p>A few words of caution before you do fondue:</p>

<ol>
<li>list text hereThe oil, cheese and chocolate are VERY hot.  Be careful around the fondue pots!</li>
<li>list text hereThings splatter and spill, so use a disposable table cloth.</li>
<li>list text hereBe careful using the fondue forks.  Someone usually ends up spearing their finger by accident.</li>
<li>list text hereThere usually is a lot of clean-up after the meal, so be prepared for that!</li>
</ol>

<p>This year, we are planning on a smaller meal on Christmas Eve, but we will eat very well.  We will celebrate Christmas Eve dinner with Julie, Danny, Ryan and me, and we are eating steak, shrimp, twice baked potatoes and salad.  It will be a great dinner!</p>

<h3>How about you?</h3>

<p>What are your Christmas Traditions?  What do you do with your friends and family?  I would love to know, and maybe we will incorporate some of your traditions into our Christmas and Holiday Celebrations.  Feel free to share your Christmas Traditions as a comment on this blog post.<br>
This is a busy time of year.  Before we let the moment get away from us, I would like to thank you for following Small Scale Life.  We wouldn&#39;t be here if it wasn&#39;t for you and your support.  Please be safe this holiday season. Enjoy each moment, and be kind to someone.<br>
In case we haven&#39;t said it yet, Julie, Danny, Ryan and I wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Wrapping Up Christmas 2016</title>
  <link>https://smallscalelife.fireside.fm/31</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">6b9d610b-0b8a-4473-a2ee-28449117cdef</guid>
  <pubDate>Mon, 26 Dec 2016 07:30:00 -0600</pubDate>
  <author>Tom</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/b0fd18a6-4edd-4b76-b0fd-8c7916d10787/6b9d610b-0b8a-4473-a2ee-28449117cdef.mp3" length="33690941" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Tom</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>In this episode, I wrap up Christmas 2016.  This was a lost track that I am posting as a listener appreciation podcast.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>19:51</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/b/b0fd18a6-4edd-4b76-b0fd-8c7916d10787/episodes/6/6b9d610b-0b8a-4473-a2ee-28449117cdef/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>In this episode, I wrap up Christmas 2016.  This was a lost track that I am posting as a listener appreciation podcast.  I talk about what is important during the holidays. 
</description>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, I wrap up Christmas 2016.  This was a lost track that I am posting as a listener appreciation podcast.  I talk about what is important during the holidays.</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, I wrap up Christmas 2016.  This was a lost track that I am posting as a listener appreciation podcast.  I talk about what is important during the holidays.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
</item>
<item>
  <title>Twas the Night before Christmas</title>
  <link>https://smallscalelife.fireside.fm/30</link>
  <guid isPermaLink="false">647ba074-e2e6-46d9-a98d-93461f63f6d7</guid>
  <pubDate>Sat, 24 Dec 2016 10:30:00 -0600</pubDate>
  <author>Tom</author>
  <enclosure url="https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/b0fd18a6-4edd-4b76-b0fd-8c7916d10787/647ba074-e2e6-46d9-a98d-93461f63f6d7.mp3" length="18189954" type="audio/mpeg"/>
  <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
  <itunes:author>Tom</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>When I was young, my dad used to read "Twas the Night before Christmas" to our family on Christmas Eve, so in that fine tradition, I read and recorded it for you and your family on this episode.
</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>13:41</itunes:duration>
  <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
  <itunes:image href="https://media24.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/b/b0fd18a6-4edd-4b76-b0fd-8c7916d10787/episodes/6/647ba074-e2e6-46d9-a98d-93461f63f6d7/cover.jpg?v=1"/>
  <description>Merry Christmas, everyone!  As I mentioned in Season 1, Episode 21 Winter Driving and Survival Tips, I wanted to do something fun for Christmas that the whole family could enjoy.  My dad used to read "Twas the Night before Christmas" to the family when we were young, so in that fine tradition, I read and recorded it for you and your family.
Reading this brought so many memories back from when I was young. In this day and age when we are so caught up in shopping and presents and packages and dinners and parties, it is important to take a little time to stop and enjoy the moment.  As my brother reminded us this week:
[tweetthis]"Life is but a mist; we are only on this earth for a short time. Enjoy life, family &amp;amp; friends! Merry Christmas!"[/tweetthis]
From our family to yours, have a Merry Christmas!  Please enjoy your family and friends and make some new memories.
Links for "Twas the Night before Christmas"
[caption id="attachment_1436" align="aligncenter" width="3264"] Merry Christmas, everyone![/caption]
 
During this episode of the Small Scale Life Podcast, I mention the following links:
Twas the Night before Christmas Poem
A Visit from St. Nicholas Wikipedia
Twas the Night before Christmas - UK Carols Blog
 The closing song was borrowed from this YouTube video:
 
https://youtu.be/yGVZBpzh47I
 
Rate on iTunes
Since we are now on iTunes, please rate and review the Small Scale Life Podcast.  Ratings and reviews help us grow the podcast and the blog, and I appreciate your reviews.
You can leave a review by following these simple steps:
Click on this link or the image above.
Go to ratings and reviews.
Click on the number stars.
Subscribe to the podcast (optional, but appreciated)!
You can also write a quick review or some words of encouragement (optional, but GREATLY appreciated)!
You can also write a longer review, though it’s not necessary.  Again, thank you for listening and your review! 
</description>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>Merry Christmas, everyone!  As I mentioned in Season 1, Episode 21 Winter Driving and Survival Tips, I wanted to do something fun for Christmas that the whole family could enjoy.  My dad used to read &quot;Twas the Night before Christmas&quot; to the family when we were young, so in that fine tradition, I read and recorded it for you and your family.</p>

<p>Reading this brought so many memories back from when I was young. In this day and age when we are so caught up in shopping and presents and packages and dinners and parties, it is important to take a little time to stop and enjoy the moment.  As my brother reminded us this week:</p>

<p>[tweetthis]&quot;Life is but a mist; we are only on this earth for a short time. Enjoy life, family &amp; friends! Merry Christmas!&quot;[/tweetthis]</p>

<p>From our family to yours, have a Merry Christmas!  Please enjoy your family and friends and make some new memories.</p>

<p>Links for &quot;Twas the Night before Christmas&quot;<br>
[caption id=&quot;attachment_1436&quot; align=&quot;aligncenter&quot; width=&quot;3264&quot;] Merry Christmas, everyone![/caption]<br>
 <br>
During this episode of the Small Scale Life Podcast, I mention the following links:<br>
Twas the Night before Christmas Poem<br>
A Visit from St. Nicholas Wikipedia<br>
Twas the Night before Christmas - UK Carols Blog<br>
 The closing song was borrowed from this YouTube video:<br>
 <br>
<a href="https://youtu.be/yGVZBpzh47I" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/yGVZBpzh47I</a><br>
 <br>
Rate on iTunes</p>

<p>Since we are now on iTunes, please rate and review the Small Scale Life Podcast.  Ratings and reviews help us grow the podcast and the blog, and I appreciate your reviews.</p>

<p>You can leave a review by following these simple steps:<br>
Click on this link or the image above.<br>
Go to ratings and reviews.<br>
Click on the number stars.<br>
Subscribe to the podcast (optional, but appreciated)!</p>

<p>You can also write a quick review or some words of encouragement (optional, but GREATLY appreciated)!<br>
You can also write a longer review, though it’s not necessary.  Again, thank you for listening and your review!</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>Merry Christmas, everyone!  As I mentioned in Season 1, Episode 21 Winter Driving and Survival Tips, I wanted to do something fun for Christmas that the whole family could enjoy.  My dad used to read &quot;Twas the Night before Christmas&quot; to the family when we were young, so in that fine tradition, I read and recorded it for you and your family.</p>

<p>Reading this brought so many memories back from when I was young. In this day and age when we are so caught up in shopping and presents and packages and dinners and parties, it is important to take a little time to stop and enjoy the moment.  As my brother reminded us this week:</p>

<p>[tweetthis]&quot;Life is but a mist; we are only on this earth for a short time. Enjoy life, family &amp; friends! Merry Christmas!&quot;[/tweetthis]</p>

<p>From our family to yours, have a Merry Christmas!  Please enjoy your family and friends and make some new memories.</p>

<p>Links for &quot;Twas the Night before Christmas&quot;<br>
[caption id=&quot;attachment_1436&quot; align=&quot;aligncenter&quot; width=&quot;3264&quot;] Merry Christmas, everyone![/caption]<br>
 <br>
During this episode of the Small Scale Life Podcast, I mention the following links:<br>
Twas the Night before Christmas Poem<br>
A Visit from St. Nicholas Wikipedia<br>
Twas the Night before Christmas - UK Carols Blog<br>
 The closing song was borrowed from this YouTube video:<br>
 <br>
<a href="https://youtu.be/yGVZBpzh47I" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/yGVZBpzh47I</a><br>
 <br>
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