Showing posts with label Silent Night. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silent Night. Show all posts

Sunday, December 21, 2025

The Gift of Quiet

Every December, just when the days grow shortest and the nights longest, the world seems determined to speed up. It’s as if someone pressed a giant holiday “fast-forward” button. People rush here, there, and everywhere coats flying behind them like superhero capes, mittens left behind on counters, and shopping lists held together with hope and tape. Even the air seems to hum with the frantic energy of “must do… must get… must remember…”

I’m not immune. I catch myself thinking, I have to visit everyone on my list, naughty and nice. (And let’s be honest, the naughty ones are far more fun to visit.) Then come the questions that never quite have answers: Where do I get the right present for Sid? What does Sandy even want? Should I buy her something she needs or something she’ll never use but will laugh about?

These questions swirl around my head like snowflakes in a windstorm, except snow eventually lands. My thoughts, however, just keep circling, keeping me focused on doing rather than enjoying.

And that’s when I remember the quiet.

Not the absence of sound that’s rare in December, unless one lives deep in the forest with only the squirrels for company but the kind of quiet that settles inside you. The quiet that arrives when you stop moving long enough to let your shoulders drop, your mind rest, and your breath deepen. The quiet that reminds you that joy doesn’t need to be wrapped, purchased, or delivered before December 25th.

Some of my favourite holiday memories the ones that never fade are made of exactly that kind of stillness.

I think back to childhood evenings when the world outside the window seemed soundless. Snow fell like a gentle curtain, and the only light in the room came from the glowing Christmas tree. My mother, who came from Romania, loved those soft, peaceful evenings. She would stand quietly for a moment, looking at the lights the way some people look at paintings in a museum slowly, reverently, with a little sigh of contentment. Even as children, we knew to tiptoe a bit in those moments, as if we were witnessing something sacred.

The scent of pine, the low crackle from the radiator, the warm hum of someone wrapping presents in the next room those small details created a hush that felt like a gift in itself. A gift you didn’t need to open, only notice.

These days, I look forward to the same thing. I look forward to the rare pockets of silence I can claim during the holidays, like a bird collecting twigs to build a nest: a good book waiting on the side table, a chair that fits my back just right, a hot drink that warms my hands before it warms my insides. The simple luxury of sitting still.

You know the feeling: that moment when you finally sink into your favourite chair and let out a sigh so deep it could deflate a snowman. That moment when the sounds of the world soften into the background, a distant kettle, a neighbour’s laugh, a car hurrying down the street and you realize you’re not missing anything. Not one thing.

Quiet doesn’t mean isolation. It means presence.

And perhaps that’s what makes it such a powerful gift during a season that pushes us toward more errands, more noise, more plans, more expectations. Quiet helps us return to ourselves. It reminds us that our own company can be enough. That appreciation grows best in stillness. That peace is not an accident; it’s a choice.

When we give ourselves the gift of quiet even just a few minutes we become better at noticing the small joys: the way holiday lights reflect in a windowpane, the scent of oranges and cloves, the satisfying crunch of fresh snow under boots, the warmth of a handwritten card. These are the moments we miss when we’re racing.

I’m not saying we shouldn’t celebrate the season in all its glorious bustle. The holiday hustle has its charm too, especially when people overflow with the cup of human kindness. There’s something beautiful in the way friends gather, neighbours share treats, and strangers hold doors with a “Happy Holidays!” that sounds like an invitation to smile.

But quiet is what helps us appreciate the bustle instead of being buried by it.

So, this year, I invite you to create your own small sanctuaries of stillness. Light a candle. Sit beside the tree. Watch the snow fall. Let the world rush while you pause long enough to feel your feet on the floor and your breath in your chest. Choose moments that feel like peace wrapped in a soft blanket.

Because in a season filled with gifts, big, small, practical, sentimental, the greatest one might be the gift we give ourselves: a few precious moments of quiet.

It’s amazing how much joy can grow in silence.