Tis the season for holiday decorations! Unfortunately while
our parents are enjoying the smell of a fresh Christmas tree in their living
room, our houses smell like stale alcohol covered in febreze air freshener.
Okay so maybe not everyone’s house smells bad, (if it does see here) but most
college students aren’t enjoying the normal holiday sights they are used to
seeing at home.
I like to drive through the neighborhoods in my hometown and
judge all the holiday light displays. My house normally wins first place. And
that is not because I am biased, my house has the best decorations on the
block. Just take a look at the picture, and that’s before my dad finished
wrapping all the bushes with lights.
Harrisonburg doesn’t seem to have the same spirit. Though
there is one house display in Foxhill Townhomes on Devon lane that has gone all
out with its light display. They have JMU written in Christmas lights on their
roof. They have clearly won first place in the light display contest that
doesn’t actually exist.
Though my roommates and I have plenty of Christmas cheer,
neither one of us were going to climb on the roof of our squire townhome. The
risks outweighed the rewards. We went with a JMU Christmas theme of course, but
no ladders were required. Though I can say proudly, that we have the best
decorate house in Squire.
The decorating process started during a much needed study
break. My roommates and I decided enough was enough and our house needed to get
into the Christmas spirit. It didn’t help that our neighbors, who we like to
refer as the “Stoop Kids,” had already placed a string of white Christmas
lights on their railings and over their doors. We couldn’t let them win the
unofficial Squire decorating contest, the one that only my roommates and I knew
existed.
We made our rounds to Wal-Mart and K-mart to get the
following supplies:
- 1 strand each of Purple and gold garland ($6 each)
- 1 Gold bow ($5) it is similar to this
- 2 packages of white lights (200 bulbs each)
- 4 stockings (less than $2 each)
- 1 Package each of assorted green and red ornaments ($9)
- 1 roll of red ribbon
We started by wrapping the tinsel and lights up our railing
and around the door. We had to add some tiny nails around our door to hold the
lights up, but the holes are so small no one will notice. We then added another
strand of lights to wrap around our bush. A task that my father makes look a
lot easier than it really is. After the outside was done we moved to spread the
Christmas tree indoors. I had brought a Christmas tree and calendar from home so those were technically free. We used the ornaments I had brought from home to
decorate the tree and saved the red and green ones for to hang on the
walls.
For the walls, we just strung the ornaments one by one until
we had enough to stretch across our living room. The ones we had left over, we
used to hang from the curtain rod using ribbon. The rooms all became complete when
we tied up our stocking. Then the moment of truth came. We plugged in all the
lights and just marveled at our holiday spirit.
Decorating our house was exactly what we needed to make the
place feel like home. Being away from the holidays is hard enough, but it’s
even harder when your house lacks any holiday spirit. It also is something nice to come home to after spending hours studying for finals!
Happy Holidays!
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