After I wrote and posted Betty and Fred’s Story: Building a Life Together – Christmas Day 1943 on Sunday morning, I asked my AI-assistant Anthropic Claude to write "The Christmas Letter" from Fred to Betty and promptly forgot to publish it. Here it is:
(Google NotebookLM Infographic -- Fred's 1943 Christmas Letter)
Betty and Fred’s Story: Building a Life Together – Fred’s
Christmas 1943 Letter
The Letter
The envelope was cream-colored, standard
stationery from the box Betty kept in the secretary desk in the
bedroom. Fred had taken two sheets on a Tuesday evening while Betty
was giving Randy his bath, and had sat at the kitchen table with the
overhead light on and written for forty-five minutes, which was
longer than he had written anything since his last examination at
school. He had made one false start and thrown it away. What follows
is what he kept.
For Betty, Christmas 1943
December 14, 1943
Dear Betty,
I am not a man who writes letters well, and you
know that about me, so you will have to forgive what follows if it
comes out sideways. I have been trying to say some of this for a
while now and talking doesn't seem to be the right tool for it. Maybe
writing will do better. We'll see.
I want to tell you about the year.
I know we lived the same year, you and I, but I
think we each saw different parts of it, and there are things I saw
that I don't think you know I saw, and it seems important to tell you
now while the year is still here.
In January, when the weather finally turned and
you suggested we drive down to the bay on a Sunday afternoon, you
wore the blue dress, the one with the small buttons, and your hair
was down, and you looked sideways at me from the passenger seat when
I said something foolish and laughed, and I thought: I am the
luckiest man who ever lived.
I have thought that many times this year. I
want to make sure you know that.
In March, when we found out about Randy, you
came to tell me and you had the most extraordinary expression —
like you were carrying something very fragile and very bright at the
same time and weren't sure you trusted yourself not to drop it. I
know you were frightened. I was frightened too, though I don't think
I said so, which is something I should do better. But underneath the
frightened part there was something else, and I want you to know that
the something else was bigger. I walked around for three days feeling
like I might float off the ground.
I watched you this year carry a pregnancy
through the summer heat and keep the house and write letters to your
mother and worry about the future and never once — not once — ask
me to feel sorry for you. You don't do that. You never do. I notice
that, Betty. I notice it every time.
I want to say something about Rohr, and about
this year of work, because I think it matters and I don't say it
enough.
I go in every morning and I do my job — the
material control, the requisitions, the tracking of parts and
specifications and supply chains — and I know that from the outside
it does not look like much. It is not glamorous work. I am not the
man in uniform. I sit at a desk and I manage the flow of materials
for aircraft that other men will fly and other men will build, and
some days I wonder if I am doing enough, if I am where I ought to be,
if there is something more I should be doing while other men are
overseas.
And then I think about the work itself. The
Rohr parts going into those planes. The planes going up. And I think
about the men who depend on those planes coming off the line right,
and I think: the material control matters. Every requisition matters.
Every part that arrives on time and gets to the right place — that
matters. I have decided to believe that this year, and I am going to
keep believing it.
But I also need to say this plainly: every
morning when I drive to Chula Vista and walk into that plant, I know
that I am coming home to you at night. That is not nothing. That is,
in fact, everything. I am aware every single day that there are men
who are not coming home at night, who have not come home in months or
years, whose wives wait and write letters and listen for the telegram
boy and try not to. I do not take it for granted. I will not take it
for granted.
In September, when Randy was coming, I was not
there for the waiting part, and I am sorry for that. You had your
mother and Georgianna and the others, and I know they took good care
of you, but I know it wasn't the same as having me there, and I
should have been there more than I was, and I am sorry.
And then Randy.
I don't know how to write about Randy without
making a mess of it, so I will just say this: the first time I held
him, I understood something I had not understood before about what a
person is for. I don't mean that I didn't have purpose before. I mean
that I looked at his face and something in me — reorganized. Like
furniture that has been in the wrong arrangement for years and
someone finally moved it and now the room makes sense.
He has your mouth. I think he has your
patience, too, which is either something he was born with or
something he absorbed from proximity to you, and either way I am
grateful, because he did not get it from me.
I have watched you become a mother this fall. I
want to say that plainly. I have watched you do it — not easily,
nobody does it easily, but surely, in the way you do things
when you have decided to do them. I have watched you at three in the
morning, exhausted past what I thought a person could be exhausted
and still function, and you are still there, still all the
way there for him. I know you don't always feel like you know what
you're doing. You've said so. But Betty, from where I stand, you know
exactly what you're doing.
Here is what else I know. I know that this year
has been hard. I know that next year may be harder. I know that there
are things ahead I cannot predict and some of them frighten me and I
would be lying if I said otherwise. The war is not over. Nothing is
certain. There is always the possibility that the draft board will
come to a different conclusion than they have so far, and I will not
pretend that thought doesn't cross my mind, because it crosses my
mind regularly. But I have decided not to live inside that worry. I
have decided to live inside this — inside this house, this street,
this year, this boy, this life with you.
Here is what is certain.
You are the best decision I have ever made. Not
the marriage — though that too — but the decision before the
marriage, the one I made when I looked at Lyle Carringer's daughter
and thought: that one. I would make it again. I would make
it in any year, in any room, under any circumstances. I would always
choose you.
I want us to grow old together, Betty. I want
to be the old man in the chair who embarrasses our children by
telling the same stories too many times. I want to watch Randy grow
up and I want there to be other children if we are lucky, and I want
a house that always smells like something good, and I want Saturday
mornings and the drive to church and your hand in mine when we walk,
and all the ordinary days.
That's what I want. That is the whole list.
Thank you for this year. Thank you for Randy.
Thank you for the blue dress and the laugh in the car and the
expression on your face in March and every ordinary evening you made
into something worth coming home to.
I love you more than I know how to say, so I
have written around it instead and I hope you can see it from all the
different angles.
Merry Christmas, Betty.
All my love, now and forward —
Fred
Betty read it twice after they got
home from Fern Street, once quickly and once slowly, sitting
in the bedroom with the door closed for ten minutes while Fred was in
the kitchen with Randy giving him a bath, and put him in his
chair. When she came out her eyes were bright but she was
composed, and she walked to where Fred stood at the counter and put
her arms around him from behind and held on for a long moment without
saying anything.
Fred put his hand over hers.
Randy, in his chair on the table, observed
this with his usual serious attention.
He would not remember it, of course. But it
happened, and it was real, and that is the same thing.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This story is historical fiction based on real people -- my parents and me -- and a real event in a real place. I don't know the full story of these events -- but this is how it might have been. I hope that it was at least this good! Claude is such a good story writer! I added some details and corrected some errors in Claude's initial version.
Stay tuned for the next chapter in this family story.
====================================
The AI-assisted ABC Biography of my mother, Betty Virginia (Carringer) Seaver, is in ABC Biography of #3 Betty Virginia (Carringer) Seaver (1919-2002) of San Diego, California. I also wrote Betty's Story: The First-Year Art Teacher about the start of her teaching career.
The AI-assisted ABC Biography of my father, Frederick Walton Seaver, is in ABC Biography of #2 Frederick Walton Seaver Jr. (1911-1983) of Massachusetts and San Diego, California. I also wrote Fred's Story: The Three-Day Cross-Country Escape and Fred's Story: "I Need A Girl" about him coming to San Diego, and wanting a girlfriend.
Here are the previous chapters in this story:
==============================================
Links to my blog posts about using Artificial Intelligence are on my Randy's AI and Genealogy page. Links to AI information and articles about Artificial Intelligence in Genealogy by other genealogists are on my AI and Genealogy Compendium page.
Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver
Please comment on this post on the website by clicking the URL above and then the "Comments" link at the bottom of each post. Share it on Twitter, Facebook, or Pinterest using the icons below. Or contact me by email at randy.seaver@gmail.com. Please note that all comments are moderated, and may not appear immediately.
Subscribe to receive a free daily email from Genea-Musings using www.Blogtrottr.com.