The True Story of Christmas - EP 135 cover art

The True Story of Christmas - EP 135

The True Story of Christmas - EP 135

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Christmas , the lights, the tree, the star on top, caroling, decorations everywhere the second Thanksgiving ends. But how many of us actually know where any of that came from?

In this episode, we start pulling at the threads behind some of the most familiar Christmas traditions — the ones we rarely question because they’ve become so normal. Why do we bring evergreen trees into our homes every December? Why do we cover them in lights? Why does a star almost always end up at the very top? And how did caroling become a thing in the first place?

As it turns out, a lot of these traditions didn’t start together, didn’t start quietly, and didn’t always mean what they mean now. Some were once considered dangerous. Others were controversial. A few were even banned outright at different points in history. And many of them changed shape as they moved from country to country and century to century.

Along the way, we look at how symbolism, religion, folklore, technology, and even marketing quietly influenced how Christmas is celebrated today — often in ways most people have never heard about. From candlelit trees to early electric light displays, from medieval winter rituals to Victorian reinventions, the holiday we recognize now is the result of a long, messy evolution.

This isn’t a retelling of the Christmas story, and it’s not an attempt to ruin anyone’s holiday. It’s a look behind the curtain at how familiar traditions come to feel ancient, unquestionable, and universal — even when they aren’t.

If you’ve ever wondered why Christmas looks the way it does, this episode might change how you see the season… or at least make you think twice the next time you plug in the lights.

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