Twenty-two
more days and counting until Christmas…
When
I was younger, I looked forward to Christmas.
Not because of decorating the Christmas tree or picking out Christmas
cards. Not because of picking out
presents to give others. It was because
of the memories associated with the time and the true meaning of what Christmas
is was
all about.
The
reason I put “was” is because it doesn't feel like that anymore. Christmas doesn't have that same ambiance of
peace. That same spirit of giving and
being grateful. It seems like it has
been de emphasized and/or replaced.
When
I was growing up, I was grateful for whatever gift I received, even if it wasn't the one I asked for.
Now, you have some
kids pitching a hissy fit if they can’t have the latest toy, a new cell phone,
or the same things their friends have.
My
grandparents had limits on what they could spend financially for my having a
Christmas gift. I understood that and
accepted it. I didn't try to push the
issue just to get my way.
However, I
have witnessed parents bowing down to what the kids want just by the kids
whining or making their parents feel guilty, even if this puts a financial
strain on their own pockets.
For
me, the spirit of Christmas was about getting together with family. I remember helping Grandma out with the
cooking and baking, eventually being old enough to take over baking the
desserts. There were people chipping in,
interacting with each other, followed by sitting around the dinner table to
enjoy their meal.
Things
seem different.
More often than not,
people come by, just to see whether the food is done, not to really
interact. Even if there is a situation
where people are asked to bring a plate, some people don’t even want to do
that. They want to receive but did
nothing in terms of giving. On top of
that, they don’t even stay to socialize but just walk on off. Things just seem more stressful than they
have to be.
The
energy I used to feel towards the holidays isn't the same. I try to hold on to the feel good of old, but
there’s just so much foolishness out there that my spirit feels very sad. The move out to New Jersey was a tough one, but at the time when I did, I was placed in a better predicament financially,
plus I was with someone who was into that type of togetherness as much as I
was. It was easy for me to hold on to
the ambiance on those holidays when I couldn't get down South to see my family
because I was around a family type feel.
Then,
once that relationship disintegrated, I had to reset. I haven’t really made enough friends out here
in NJ, particularly in the area where I reside in now, to bring back that
holiday feel. Then, on top of that, my
grandfather passed away about a year ago to cancer, and Christmas was one of
his favorite holidays.
I've never been big on the whole Black Friday shopping. If I was to shop for anyone, I’d do it on
either before Black Friday or online, so I won’t have to deal with the
crowds.
I used to buy a lot of gifts for
different people, but as time went on, I realized I was doing a lot of giving
to people who were just content on doing nothing but receiving. Once I stopped doing that, the number of
people I did Christmas shopping for decreased significantly.
I also decided for people who are hard to buy
for just to arm them with cash or a gift card of some sort.
Grandpa
was one of the main people I shopped for as it pertained to gifts. Last year was hard—I found myself picking out
things for him and then I had to stop myself because by that time, he had been gone
for about seven months. Yet, my mind was
still plotting shipping costs and how to get the things in the mail on
time. Or having a left over Christmas
card with sentiments for a Grandfather.
It took a lot for me not to start boo hooing in the store.
Fast
forward to the present…and I still have good days and bad days.
Yesterday,
since I didn't get a chance to last weekend, I finally decided to bake some
pumpkin pies. Grandpa could eat a whole
pie by himself. Sometimes, he’d barely
wait until they were cooled off before slicing one. I could always tell when it was him verses
Grandma because Grandpa would always cut the pie kind of funny. Then, Grandma and I would have to compensate
for the uneven slicing.
I
found myself getting teary eyed when eating a slice of the pie. I would always eat a slice last, since I was
the one baking it. I just kept imagining
Grandpa had already had a slice of pie and would be back up and down through
the night, eating a piece at a time until there was an empty aluminum plate
where the pie had been.
My
depression this year isn't as bad as it was last year. I am going to try to create a new tradition
with the person I’m with—to capture the feel good, the true spirit of the
Christmas holidays, even if it ends up just being the two of us.
Peace.
1 comment:
Bah humbug.
I used to really enjoy Christmas too, as a child and as a parent. But now that my children are 23 and 21, it's just not the same. I would get a lot of joy out of watching them unwrap their gifts.....now, not so much. I'm not even gonna put up a tree this year. What's the point?!?
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