This is a photo of the tree at my grandmother's house, probably 40 years ago. I know it was a very long time ago, because this is a real tree, and for most of my life, I remember them having a very Charlie Brown fake tree that they put away in the attic, decorations and all, under a plastic bag each year.
People get in trouble with depression on Christmas because they think back to their early childhood years with nostalgia and long for the simple joys of being a kid going to Grandma's house on Christmas Day. Who wouldn't want to be a kid on Christmas again, and know that each house you visit has gifts waiting for you, bowls of candy, platters of cookies, and the smell of tomato gravy simmering on the stove.
Well, hold up here now. Who do you think was buying all those gifts, baking the cookies, and making that elaborate dinner that begun with chicken soup, progressed to pasta, morphed into roast beef, was graced with artichokes and salad, segued to fruits and nuts, and then was deliciously ended by more sweets and baked goods than could ever be imagined?
I remind myself that I am on the other side of the fantasy now and I strive to create some of the family magic that I remember and long for. I conveniently forget the fights between my sisters and I, my father's short temper because money is tight, my mother and grandmother and aunt made at us because we wouldn't help with the dishes, and my mother's headaches when she took to her bed the next day.
But that's what life is about. One day you're yelling at your kids like a crazy woman because everyone is watching TV and you're running around like a nut cleaning and cooking, and the next day you're all in a big group hug on the couch with wrapping paper piled up around your feet and presents on your lap.
And that's what being a family is all about. When I am in the kitchen about to cry because there are 7 fish dishes to get on the table to feed 14 people, my sister comes in and takes the skillet away from me and starts sauteing the shrimp herself. When I am lying in bed at 4:00 a.m. with exhaustion induced indigestion, my husband gets up and makes me an alka seltzer. When my mother in law calls and says she fell in her apartment and won't come out for Christmas dinner, my husband, son, and daughter pack up all her gifts and go there for the morning so she can watch DVDs on the player we bought her.
There's really nothing more to life than this. I am extraordinarily grateful for so many things this year and I treasure each one that managed to fall into my lap amidst the bumps and detours of ill health, job troubles, sick relatives, and money issues. So here is my own list of gratitude for this year, and in no particular order of importance:
1. It is Christmas morning, the sun is shining, everyone is happy with their gifts, and my husband is up and walking, and only in moderate pain!
2. My husband and kids. I've been with my husband since I was 16 years old. We are the quintessential old married couple who bark and scrape and yet love each other deeply. I hope that this year brings him more healthy days than not, but regardless of it all, we'd never part because losing him would be losing over half my life, and the best part of it.
3.My Mom. She will be 80 in August and shows few signs of slowing down. She's had a few, small health issues, but she's mainly healthy, independent, outspoken, and dresses better than anyone in the family.
4. My sisters. I have a different relationship with each of my four sisters, but regardless, we are all friends and are there for each other in times of need, whether on the phone or in real time, whether for trips to the hospital, or trips to the diner, or trips anywhere to get away from our families on rainy weekends. They are my best friends and as much as I'd love to move away from here yet again, I'd never leave them.
4. My job - crazy no, since I've bitched and moaned about it repeatedly this past 6 months. My job is changing and my workplace has morphed into a nasty place, but essentially, I love the immediate people I work with and my soon to be ex-boss has been a very kind and gentle person to work with. Most of all, this job has given me back the skills that had turned rusty from 7 years off work raising kids. It put me back into the fray and I am grateful for surviving it because when my husband is lying in the bed with his back, I know that I least make enough to pay for a roof (not this roof, but a roof) over our heads.
5. This year I finally achieved something I've wanted to do for most of my adult life: writing a column about creativity. For that I have to especially thank my editor and publisher (how cool is that!), Leslie Riley and Patricia Boulton. The latest issue of Cloth, Paper, Scissor just came out and I still can't believe it's my art and writing on the inside back cover!
6. Cape Cod. Yes, I am grateful for the whole tourist, overgrown, crazy place. 17 years ago, my husband insisted that we go to Cape Cod for a vacation. I hated to go there, thinking it just a giant tourist trap of baked beans and t-shirts. Instead, I found a soul place by the ocean and fell in love with the waves, the sand, the trails, and the light.
It's become a sacred place for our family, the place that I pray we can return to year after year, and the place I hope my children bring their children to. In addition, it's become a gathering place for my extended family, a chance for us all to be together as girls with my mother, as cousins and friends, and to sit, draw, eat, watch bad movies, burn at the beach, watch the kids boogie board, and shop till we drop. It's expensive and every year we say we can't afford it, but somehow we scrape the money together and know that it is worth every cent.
7. Starbucks. Now that surprised you! I am grateful for Starbucks. Why? I love their coffee and I love having a place to go where I can sit down and write, knit, draw, or just watch the people go by. It represents a freedom to me, a little bit of the day that is just mine, whether I squeeze in a trip on the way back from court, or after work on the way home, or on the weekend. It's a little slice of the real me, the person who would like to spend her days in a slower, more contemplative and sensual way. And hey, I just love lattes, okay?
8. My laptop. If I didn't have this laptop, you'd be getting posts from me about once a week when I had the energy and compunction to drag myself into the cold art room and fire up the ancient desk top. Along wit that, I'd like to thank Optimum on line and Firefox for making blogging so fast and easy. And as long as I'm on the subject, thank you, Amazon.com, for selling used books as I've managed to cut the cost of my book-buying habit by 75% by only buy used books.
9. My cousin Alison. She came to Cape Cod with her three funny, sweet little kids, and she spent the whole time knitting. Really! The woman walked on the beach carrying her three year old and knitting at the same time. What a woman! She made us all scarves while she was there for five days, and she infected me with the bug. From September till today, I've knitted ten scarves and have found a way to spend the money I'm saving on books (sigh).
10. Books. Under this category I put every book I've ever read since I learned to read. A large category and I wish I'd kept track, but more and more I see the differences in people who are Readers and people who are not. Books really did save my life by saving me from the boring sameness of what life could have been, by giving me imagination, inspiration, and pushing me to think that maybe I could do some of those things to. With reading came writing, and with writing, well, my life would be a little plain, brown paper package tied up in string of work and family. Writing takes me away from the stress of Stan's back, my kids' problems, my own problems, my need to control everyone and everything. I love to read, I love to write, I love to draw, I love to paint.
With that I end this long-winded post if you've made it this far. I have to get dressed and go to my sister's to eat more food and she is a fabulous cook. I'm looking forward to having the next 5 days off and I plan to spend it either in the city or in my art room.