Simplist gift can make all the difference at Christmas

Finished shopping yet?

Me neither.

There are still a few days to go and, as always, I’ll somehow manage to get it done.

I spent most of the past weekend puttering around the house. Changing oil in the cars. Picking up leaves and branches and other yard debris. Doing whatever needed doing.

But, as for the shopping, back in 1972 I learned that it really doesn’t take much to get it right.

At that time, we were still involved in that little exercise in futility called Vietnam. I went over on a destroyer that worked the “gun line.”

What that involved was listening up for a request for fire support, shooting whenever we got one, and repeating that exercise on any day, at any time, until we needed more bullets. When that happened, we’d go find an ammunition ship and re-load. Once we had what we needed, we’d go back and do it all over again.

There was no break for us during the Christmas holidays and, as for the “cease-fires” that the press and politicians used to love to announce, I can only report that it may have been quiet somewhere, but we never seemed to be in that particular location.

In December of 1972, I’d been married all of a year. For much of that year, I’d been doing what’s been described in the paragraphs above and, like the rest of the crew, wondering when (or if) the politicians in Paris would come to an agreement on how to end the whole mess.

Morale wasn’t the best on our ship. No one wanted to be where we were. No one really wanted to be doing what we were doing and, due to some foul-up, we hadn’t received any mail for several days.

I wish I could explain just how important a letter is to a soldier or a sailor. The best I can do is to tell you to ask anyone who’s ever worn a uniform about it.

Ask anyone who’s ever stood some forgotten watch in some foul little place and had to do foul little things what a letter from home could mean. Then, up the ante and ask them about the letters that came at Christmas.

They’ll struggle for words to explain or best describe it, but they’ll come up short. That’s because, for this one, there really aren’t any words. You’d have to have gone through it. And, if you’d have done that, you’d understand, but the words you’d need to explain it to others who hadn’t would still go missing.

Anyway, Christmas Eve came and went with no mail and Christmas Day promised nothing better.

A funny thing happened, though. I was sitting on deck that day talking with a good friend when we heard a helicopter approaching.

Pretty soon, the chopper was hovering over the fantail and, as we watched, they passed about 10 sacks down to the deck. We all knew what was in those sacks — the mail that’d been backed up somewhere for far too long.

It took about an hour to get the sorting done but, later, on Christmas Day, 1972, I had nine letters in my hands. One or two were from my mother. The rest were from my wife.

We went to general quarters shortly thereafter and, pretty soon, we were shooting again.

I didn’t care, though, because I had mail and I taped each letter — one at a time — to the firing panel in front of me and read them while we were shooting. The noise and commotion outside were just background static. They didn’t interfere with my reading at all.

That’s all it took. Little pieces of paper. A bundle of letters from family half a world away reminding me that someone cared.

I’ve never had a better or more simple gift.

Each year, I try — and more often than I care to admit, fail — to remember that.

Merry Christmas.

Larry Simoneaux lives in Edmonds. Send comments to larrysim@clearwire.net.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Opinion

toon
Editorial cartoons for Wednesday, Sept. 3

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

Gov. Bob Ferguson and Rep. Rick Larsen talk during a listening session with with community leaders and families addressing the recent spending bill U.S. Congress enacted that cut Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program funding by 20% on Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025 in Lynnwood, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Editorial: Work to replace what was taken from those in need

The state and local communities will have to ensure food security after federal SNAP and other cuts.

Welch: Blame a math mismatch for county’s budget deficit

The county promised more in pay than revenues now allow. It’s a problem it can avoid in the future.

School board smear campaign: No wrong-doing by school district

As a Jackson High School Robotics Boosters board member from 2018–24 and… Continue reading

Lynnwood wage effort: Compensation differs for reason

What’s fair in the “fair pay” discussion? (“Lynnwood advocates launch campaign for… Continue reading

We’re making America ‘gilded’ again, with all that age’s corruption

The GOP’s goal has been to Make America Great Again. But when… Continue reading

Comment: Justice Barrett splits court on NIH grant funding case

Her decision means those denied grants won their cases, but have to file suit in a separate federal court.

Robotic hand playing hopscotch on a keyboard. Artifical intelligence, text generators, ai and job issues concept. Vector illustration.
Editorial: Keep a mindful eye on government use of AI chatbots

A public media report on government use of chatbots, including by Everett, calls for sound guidelines.

Gov. Bob Ferguson responds to U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi's demands that the state end so-called sanctuary policies. (Office of Governor of Washington)
Editorial: Governor’s reasoned defiance to Bondi’s ICE demands

In the face of threats, the 10th Amendment protects a state law on law enforcement cooperation.

toon
Editorial cartoons for Tuesday, Sept. 2

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

Comment: Green revolution is booming; just not in the U.S.

Global investments in clean energy are hitting record highs, leaving the U.S. in its own exhaust.

Local government use of AI will separate officials from public

I read that our local government officials have begun using artificial intelligence… Continue reading

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.