It’s been a little while since I’ve had a good rant on
this blog. I’m not in a chipper mood and I’m feeling really out of sorts, so …
here goes.
I despise Spendmas. With all my heart, mind, soul and
strength.
Twenty years ago, as a carefree bachelor, our most
dreaded of secular holidays didn’t faze me. It was an excuse to exercise some
good holiday cheer, usually at a bar or a club, and swap two or three gifts
among immediate family members and have dinner where I could leave whenever I
wanted to.
Here’s how it went back then:
I would take a personal day off from work, usually on
December 18.
I would make a list of people I wanted to grace with a
present. It was a blessed short list – my mother, stepfather, brother, my
girlfriend (if I had one at the time), and maybe two or three of my close pals.
That was it.
I would withdraw $200 cash from my bank account and
after an afternoon’s shopping I’d still have enough left over to buy myself
dinner.
Oh, and I had all the gifts wrapped in the stores.
Actually, two stores. Barnes and Noble, since all I know about gift-giving is
books. And a “country” store that sold frames and pictures and all sorts of “country”
stuff that my mother liked.
See, I’m terrible at gift giving and gift purchasing.
Just don’t have a head for it. Maybe I lack certain empathetic skills. I don’t
know. Maybe I’m too hung up on being judged based on the gift purchased and the
reaction the unwrapping prompts in the recipient. Again, dunno, and really don’t
care, except briefly during the Panic Days of Late Spendmas.
As far as Christmas cards go, didn’t send any out.
Young single guys didn’t do that.
And as far as decorating the apartment, well, that was
done in an hour. I had an extremely realistic fake tree I’d drag out from the
storage room, and could assemble it, ornaments and all, in a half-hour. Then I
strung a strand of colored lights over the kitchenette area and around my
bulletin board.
Done.
And oh how things have changed.
Nowadays, Spendmas for my family begins the first
weekend in December and runs right up to Christmas Eve. This year that means twenty
days. Forget about taking one afternoon off for shopping. No. Now we need
several strategic planning sessions to see who goes where when for what.
Our list now, now that I’m married with children, is
now somewhere around five parents and in-laws, spouses, children, a half-dozen
friends, children of said friends, children’s teachers, and the wife’s boss and
subordinates. That all totals to around 25 individuals.
And we don’t use a budget. So I really never know how
much blood we sacrifice to the vengeful god of Spendmas every year. Maybe $750?
Maybe more, as each one of our children get around ten presents (that includes
clothes with toys, books, and games). And I never quite know if we got
everybody we have to get. And I never have any idea what the wife wants.
Another secret about the Hopper: He can’t wrap a gift to
save his life. In the past the wife and I’d spend an agonizing Christmas Eve
wrapping thirty presents at the dining room table. Now, since I’m out of work,
I get to wrap ’em all later today, after this blog post is done. Then hide them
in the garage until Santa, the avatar of Spendmas, comes on the night of December
24.
Doesn’t something else happen on the night of December
24?
A week ago the wife came up with a list of 60 names
for our Christmas card list. 60 names! Which got pared down to somewhere around
45 in the long run (mostly due to not having addresses). Most were extended
family and friends, some we haven’t seen in years, and my wife’s work mates. In
the past she would personalize each card, but this year, thank God, we just
sent out cards with the girls’ photo and a generic and bland non-faith message
of goodwill.
Since I am out of work, I helped address the
envelopes, stuff ’em, and mail ’em.
Decorating the house takes a full day and is done the
first weekend in December. We have to buy a real tree. Then I have to bring a
half-dozen boxes down from the attic for the ladies to ornament the tree and put
out the Christmas candles, garland, pillows, etc. Once the sun sets, after the
Giants have lost, I take the girls outside and we string five strands of lights
in our bushes, over our front door, and spiral over a small fir tree next to
the porch.
Then there’s the mandatory viewing of the Christmas tree
at Rockefeller Center in NYC. Never did this until I got married. Most years it’s
okay, but this past year we were forced to meet relatives on a Saturday night
and couldn’t get within 50 yards of the tree due to the immense swarms of
people packed sardine-like in the canyons of midtown Manhattan. The claustrophobic
cattle-car nightmare environment excised any mirth or goodwill from my mind,
and is probably the closest I’ve ever come to a genuine, real-live panic
attack.
We get to the reason for the season on Christmas Eve
for mass. Earlier in the day we’re at my brother’s house for the immediate
family dinner. Then, Christmas Day, the girls burn through their presents in a
half-hour while the wife documents everything on digital video. We go to a friend’s
house that afternoon, and I drink just enough to stave off my utter exhaustion
and my building splitting headache from seeing too many people in too short a
time for too long a duration.
Easter is Hopper’s favorite holiday, followed closely
by Thanksgiving. Spendmas is a distant, distant third.
Hey, Spendmas, this middle finger is for you!
Perhaps I’m being overly harsh. Perhaps if I was
enjoying more success in my life, had more of a financial cushion, was
advancing in a career I loved, had some real meaning and sense of accomplishment,
perhaps if any of these were present I’d be of more cheer. Perhaps if I was in
better health, a better frame of mind, had a better year, this post would be
different.
But not by much.
We are called to be in the world, not of the world.
And it’s so easy to be bitter.
The antidote, for me at least, is to go somewhere
alone, somewhere quiet and peaceful, and just relax. Maybe pray, maybe not.
Maybe think about the big things that matter, maybe just quiet the monkey mind.
Try to remember the fond memories of Christmases past, stay focused on giving
my children similar memories …
… and be thankful they don’t read this blog …
1 comment:
Oh, Hopper! Enjoy the season of giving and receiving and being with family and friends! Merry Christmas!
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