47.5 F
Spokane
Tuesday, May 13, 2025
HomeCommentaryLet your imagination run wild at Christmastime and beyond — It’s good...

Let your imagination run wild at Christmastime and beyond — It’s good for you!

Date:

Related stories

First American pope makes strong impression on north Idaho Catholics

Historic American pope inspires hope and unity, leaving Catholics in north Idaho excited, yet cautiously optimistic.

Starting fresh, we aim to transplant stronger roots

Aging couple prepares to move homes, reflecting on change, loss, and hope—transplanting flowers and themselves to new soil.

Unbelievable Mount Fuji ordeal mirrors our repeated mistakes

A student rescued from Mount Fuji returned days later and needed saving again — echoing humanity's habit of repeating its mistakes and the need for compassion.

Five things to know about Pope Leo XIV

Now that the 267th head of the Catholic Church has been chosen, what do we really know about Robert Francis Prevost, now Pope Leo XIV? Here are five things.

FāVS Religion News Roundup: May 9

ICE monitors Spokane immigrant advocate, Washington's Catholic leaders stand firm against child abuse reporting law when it comes to the confessional and the Spokane Hindu Temple offers the community an invitation to participate in a special Hindu ritual and more are featured in this week's FāVS Religion News Roundup.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img

Let your imagination run wild at Christmastime and beyond — It’s good for you!

Commentary by Lisa Ormond | FāVS News

For me, celebrating Christmas is all about recognizing ‘imagination’ still has a place in our society, our lives and especially during the Christmas season. This ‘notice’ came to me recently while wandering around on a poorly marked hiking trail deep in a wooded tree stand area in Hayden, Idaho. Odd, yes, but I’m a person who finds my imagination heightened when wandering aimlessly through any kind of nature spot. 

christmas time imagination
Photo by Lisa Ormond

I was not lost, but I certainly was a bit baffled by where I was and how I was going to get back to the car before the light disappeared. This was because I had checked out from my imagination-gone-wild walk. I was consumed with thinking about the word imagination as I let my mind go rogue, free of home-care-responsibility burdens and task lists. 

While identifying faces in fallen Ponderosa Pine trees in front of me and noticing a stream of blue-colored sap tears on the side of a Larch standing tall on my side and seeing perfectly carved hearts in large rocks near my feet, my imagination was clearly on fire. 

In all this grandeur, my brain quickly switched to thinking about Christmas and what the season really offers and means. Shazam!

Keeping the imagination alive

As Americans, I believe many of us just allow and accept the make-believe of our all-absorbing Christmas season. We share with our children, “Yes! There is a Santa by golly, and he has flying reindeer. You bet!”  Spinning the imagination ribbon around the make-believe package is justifiably fun during Christmas for us adults.

Allowing the myth, the legend and the history of Jolly Saint Nick to continue in perpetuity alongside make-believe and the wonder of our imaginative worlds is something us Americans do well. I call this blending. 

We kind of like being Peter Pan and going back to the Never Never Land time of our childhood where imagination ruled supreme and was the foundation of almost every thought and action of our young being. 

Neurobiology researchers say let it fly!

Imagination is cool and needs to be embraced according to researchers. Go ahead, it’s healthy. It plays a huge role in today’s world from innovation to shaping empathetic leaders. We don’t want to squash it. Without it, we’d be sunk as a species on Earth. Researchers want us to know, too, imagination is a muscle that should be worked and not ignored for the good of society. We don’t have to give it up. That’s where Christmas comes in.

The Christmas story mystery

Christmas straddles imagination in lots of ways — not only with Santa Claus, the elves, the reindeer and the ability of Santa to deliver packages all over the world in stealth mode. But also, in the spiritual and deeply Christian realm surrounding the birth of Jesus Christmas story of 2,000 years ago.

Christ’s birth is well documented in the Bible and in many ways is wrapped in sacred mystery and wonder with the cornerstones being the unexplainable virgin birth of Jesus and that God became human on earth and walked among us from Christmas day forward until his death on the cross. This historical moment is one of if not the most holy and significant time of year for practicing Christians around the world to honor and celebrate.

We can allow

Whether you are Christian or not, you know the story of Jesus’s birth and again imagination influences and provides a backdrop. There are lots of questions and a few answers. Yet, we go in faith to carry forth this incredible Christmas story in our culture. Blending, honoring and peacefully embracing both Santa Claus, his beard and red velvet suit with our minds and hearts along with the birth of a king lying in a manger in Bethlehem in swaddling clothes surrounded by shepherds, animals and angels. 

How beautiful this is. Does imagination have something to do with it? I hope so.       


The views expressed in this opinion column are those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect the views of FāVS News. FāVS News values diverse perspectives and thoughtful analysis on matters of faith and spirituality.

Lisa Ormond
Lisa Ormond
Lisa has a journalism degree from California State University, Northridge. She looks back on her career to date fondly having worked in various California broadcast news organizations, insurance public affairs and at both Washington State University and the University of Idaho. Lisa loves learning and has a passion for helping and giving to others. Born and raised in Northern California, Lisa resides in Post Falls near the Spokane River now. She cherishes the people, the vibe and the beauty the Coeur d’Alene and Inland Northwest region offer. When not caring for her family Lisa tinkers, bikes and hikes, writes poetry, explores the outdoors and watches the world around her with curiosity. Her daily spiritual growth is a priority in her life, and it’s been a pathway for living peacefully with herself and others.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img

1 COMMENT

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest


1 Comment
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Walter A Hesford
Walter A Hesford
4 months ago

A wonderful celebration of the imagination, Lisa, and of the bounce we can get from the natural into the supernatural world…..may we bounce into the New Year with this in our heart.

spot_img
1
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x