Once when I was young, about 8 years old, I went along with a spontaneous gang of kids through the streets in my neighborhood. It was an ad hoc collection of kids ranging from my age to high schoolers. We went house to house knocking on doors up and down several streets, and sang Christmas carols.
I don't know how it happened, exactly, or how I was able to wander around after dark at that age. I was playing outside with kids on my street. In those days and on my street, if the wrong mix of kids were out and had nothing to do, I could end up having a lousy time. My parents mostly kept me off the street through activities and playing organized sports. When I did join the kids outside on my street there seemed to be a lot of fights.
But this night I was drawn out by my own boredom and desire to hang out with other kids, and it was the holidays. I couldn't have expected what that night would promise, or that I'd remember it 40 years later.
I recall there were 10 or 15 kids in this gang and we started knocking on doors, going to the nearest neighbors with kids that were familiar. We sang Christmas songs, half joking and looking for laughs. It was cheeky. Then we went to another house and sang. Hark! The Herald Angels Sing. Frosty the Snowman. Santa Clause is Coming to Town. Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer. The ones we all knew, often jumbling the words. This was not an organized choir.
I remember being in the rear of this group as we knocked on doors. People started giving us money, which one of our group collected. Soon there was a wad of cash.
We finished my street and went further down another and then another. We stopped at a house where many of the older kids had a friend. We conspired in the event that the friend opened the door, and when he answered we began to sing "Another One Bites the Dust" by Queen, a contemporary hit at the time. The friend got a big kick out of it and we all laughed.
Then he had a request. "Sing something for my mom," he asked. "Something nice."
His mother appeared at the door. We were arrayed below on the steps leading up to the door. The gang got quiet for a moment then conferred to choose a song.
We began tentatively to sing "Silent Night." We were encouraged by the words and picked up some volume and confidence. We sang all the verses we could remember. No one would ever confuse this rabble with the Vienna Boys Choir, but it was heartfelt, and surprising considering the singers. A true serenade.
Now after dark, I wondered what kind of trouble I'd be in when I got home.
The group discussed what to do with the funds we collected. There was talk of taking it to a church or hospital. Then we realized that Marion Manor Nursing Home, a retirement home run by Catholic nuns, was located at the end of our street. It was decided that the nuns would get the cash.
I vividly recall this scene from 40 years ago. A dozen or more kids knocked on the door after dark at a nursing home. One of the sisters opened the door halfway and leaned out, surveying the gang.
"What do you want?" she asked pointedly. It took courage for her to open the door. As an 8 year old, I was struck by the fear in her tone of voice and movements. I was in this group and I knew our intentions were genuine, but clearly she did not.
The gang's spokesman pulled out the wad of cash and offered it to her.
"Where did you get this money?" she asked.
The spokesman replied: "We collected it from the neighborhood."
We then sang "Silent Night." As we sang a few other sisters came to the door, marveling at this unexpected scene.
We sang a few more songs for the nuns and then the gang splintered into smaller factions and we made our way home. I walked up the street to my house and my parents didn't blink when I entered. The TV was on, my mother was in the kitchen. I told them what we'd done and they were surprised to hear about it. But the event was never repeated, and it faded from memory.
Today it seems more like a dream. I recall this spontaneous act of giving and marvel at the simplicity of what happened. A bunch of kids with nothing to do, used a few hours to make a meaningful expression of Christmas cheer. And I like to think that we all experienced joy that night.
Merry Christmas!