Peering out into the
bustling, crowded street two stories below gave me a slight reprieve from my
three-week-old office job, and my holiday worries. Christmas had become a symbol
of commercialization, a negative impact on humanity. However, it was only three
days away, approaching whether I liked it or not. I had three children ages eight,
seven and four tremendously anticipating the upcoming event; truth of the
matter be told, I was broke. Our recent relocation had been costly and there
wasn't enough money to put food on the table, in addition to presents under the
tree. Observing the mall shoppers across the street scurrying in and out,
reminded me of mice scurrying through a maze looking for cheese. Lucky for them, I thought.
The short
loud ring of the fax machine followed by that all too familiar high-pitched whine
broke the reverie. I stood in front of the sluggish fax machine patiently waiting
for the curled up reminder to get back to work, and without looking at it, I
sat at my desk stretching it out in front of me. As I scoured the memo from the
main office, my heart started to race and my face flushed with disbelief, while
choking back the tears willing to fall. Every employee was going to receive a
Christmas bonus in our paycheck on Friday, Christmas Eve. Although I realized
I'd succumbed to the commercialization of Christmas, an enormous weight had
just been lifted, and it looked like Christmas was going to happen after all.
Shopping on Christmas Eve means
bumper-to-bumper horn-blowing traffic, waiting in endless lines while listening to the mindless chatter of last-minute
shoppers, to the constant blaring of Christmas music on the intercom, and, for
me, a necessity. Although now I had money for gifts, it would be tight to cover
all the expenses required to conjure up Christmas. Selecting gifts for the kids
was easy; they needed everything. As I shopped quickly and deliberately, my
thoughts flew to the abundant Christmas tree merely existing in my small tidy living
room at home, an anonymous gift propped proudly by the back door a few nights
earlier. With the hours melting away, I made a quick decision to bypass the decorations
to try to save the money for the "Santa" gifts, and haphazardly
grabbed a couple skeins of Christmas yarn. A few hours later, loaded down with a trunk
full of delightfully inexpensive presents, I rushed home to tuck them away
before the kids got home.
That evening we settled down in the
cozy, dimly lit living room to decorate the neglected, naked tree together. The
Christmas yarn consisting of intertwined threads of holly green mixed with
Santa-suit red, and angelic white, was to be our tree decorations. It would
just have to do.
The kids, oblivious to the lack of traditional decorations,
chattered enthusiastically as we each tied the Christmas yarn into our own
personal version of bows onto the thick, sticky pine branches, enjoying the strong
pine forest scent permeating the joyful room. Melissa, the surrogate mother of
the family, tied small purposeful tidy bows, while Megan, the quiet follower,
tied big loopy bows with long tails. Cory, the youngest, unable to tie his own
shoes let alone a bow onto the tree, rambunctiously assisted by pulling the
yarn out of the skein for the rest of us. We popped popcorn in hopes of stringing
it for the tree, but hysterically found out it only works in the movies. We
ended up decorating the popcorn too, with oozing warm butter and a whisper of
salt, then ate the rare treat instead.
By the end of the evening, the tree was
adorned in a delicate spray of holiday-colored bows, depicting an old-fashioned
Christmas. Finally, tucking the children into bed, I playfully warned them to
fall asleep fast, so Santa could come. Silently I prayed there would be enough time
for that miracle.
Armed with several rolls of invisible
Scotch tape, even more rolls of cheerful Christmas wrapping paper and a sparkling,
cold bottle of White Zinfandel wine, I opened the bedroom closet to find a huge
pile of toys staring out at me.
A train set, a pink radio, fuzzy purple slippers;
an endless mound of toys demanded my attention. Deciding to bypass the wine
glass, I took a refreshingly large unladylike swig of the wine straight from
the bottle, wiped my mouth and began the task. As the wine washed over the
stress of the day, toy after toy, I began creating Christmas.
Several hours
later the big pile of toys had evolved into a big pile of eager presents strewn
on top of my modest bed. With the weary chore of the wrapping complete, I quietly
opened the bedroom door to listen for any possible stirrings from the kids. The
coast clear, I began tiptoeing down the stairs with armload after armload of
half-priced memories from Santa and placed them carefully under the naked yarn
tree. Upon delivering the final load, I gazed in disbelief that Christmas, even
if it was a Charlie brown Christmas, literally stood in my home.
Maybe it was
the overwhelming relief, perhaps it was the wine, but as I stood glued to the
floor, a tear trickled down my face. Soon torrential sobs of self-pity laced
with pride escaped my heart. I sobbed for everything my children didn't have: purple
bicycles, red tricycles, crisp, new clothes......a father. And I sobbed for all
that we did have: ample food on the table, a sturdy roof over our head.....each
other. Completely spent, I dragged my tired body up the stairs and crawled
under the cool sheets of contentment for a short nap.
Twenty-two years have come and gone
since that Christmas and for me, it still conjures up memories of hardship
rather than joy. Remembering was simply too painful for a long time. It was
just a few years ago, at Christmastime, we sat around the table to reminisce
the past about our favorite Christmas. Much to my surprise, all three grown kids
agreed their favorite was the year we had the "yarn tree."
Not one of
them remembers anything of the gifts that year, just how much fun it was to
have a tree with only yarn bows. My oldest daughter informs me that although
she wasn't aware of the financial strain at the time, in looking back, she
realizes the implication of the yarn now. Sometimes as I realize the
unpleasant, hectic, societal pace at Christmas, I think back to the yarn tree
and remember a simpler time, with a smile on my face.
Copywrited
This was written years ago and was the story that broke the dam of my writing block after The Poetry Place loss. Obviously, it was set in the 80's, but this is our true story.
ReplyDeleteIt's such a wonderful nostalgic story. It does point out where 'Christmas' could put people in life. Sometimes to do this 'Christmas' and be like those mall shoppers scurrying in and out, people take huge dept or commit one atrocity or the other.
ReplyDeleteLove it!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much!
Delete