MEDIUM RARE

Seven days to go before October gives way to November. Thirty days in November. Then it’s December, the merriest month.
Peru, a Catholic nation like ours, jumped the gun on us by declaring Christmas officially opened on Oct. 1. One supposes their season ends just like ours on the 12th day of Christmas, Jan. 6, feast of the Three Kings. Whatever, for in every Filipino home Christmas begins as soon as the tree is pulled out of storage and installed in the living room, or when the star-shaped lantern is dusted off and hung on the largest window in the house.
It’s usually the youngest member of the family who decides when the tree is to be inaugurated in all its glory — tinsel, lights, ornaments, pretend gifts under its needles. A boy I knew — he’s now past middle age —used to declare the start of Christmas on July 1, as soon as the first half of the year was over.
Today in our household of three, it’s Cook who’s the most eager to set up the tree. So here it comes, Christmas even before Halloween can step in with its spooks, witches, and goblins.
Legend goes that Martin Luther started the Christmas tradition of putting up a tree at home and illuminating it with lights. He was walking home one night in the wintry cold when he picked up a fallen branch and decided it would look good as a symbol of Christmas. His family lighted candles around the “tree” and voila, a beautiful tradition was born.
What is Christmas without traditions? Every family has their own. Every December, Papa Gabriel would convert the huge dining table into a Christmas village, using little figures he had bought in Spain to tell the story from the time Mary and Joseph looked for an inn to the glory of the birth of the Baby in a manger, surrounded by sheep and angels singing on high.
In UST, home of centuries of traditions, our college, which was the smallest, boasted of a glee club with a repertoire of exactly five songs, three of them carols. Of the two non-carols, one was Summer Love, which became our anthem for its heart-achingly simple melody. Our conductor was the legendary Joe Burgos Jr.