Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Christmas Ennui


  • The cards are all written (earlier than usual this year - thanks to my medical leave from work). 
  • The cookies are baked -- and the kids loved them so much I had to bake second (and third!) batches of each type of cookie.
  • The presents are all wrapped...but in truth that's because our 13 year old LOVES to wrap presents. I prepared them sealed in a box so she can't guess the contents, she carefully (especially with her own gifts) and artistically wraps them & places them under the tree. Woo hoo! No more Christmas Eve marathon wrapping sessions for me!
We will celebrate with our extended family like every year on Christmas Eve, open presents on Christmas morning (there are fewer this year) and then we'll partake in our newest family tradition - the Christmas Afternoon Movie with the kids and my in-laws.
We started doing this a couple of years ago when we decided that one big meal on Christmas Eve was really quite enough, thankyouverymuch.
As much as I enjoyed getting out my only real china (with a pine cone pattern perfect really only for this time of the year - handed down from my maternal grandmother)...we decided a couple of years back to skip cooking for a second day in a row and instead just relax at a movie.
We all prefer this - and I think it also helps to transition from the excitement of new "things" on Christmas morning..to the fact that December 26th will come and it will be "just another day".

All of the kids are looking forward to different things this year - particular gifts, seeing their (corrected gender) name on a package, specific things they had on their wish list... but as the kids get older we sure get a lot of this scenario:

They ask for a gift card (or receive one from a family member) and they hand it to us and say: "Can I give you this $30 Amazon/iTunes/Target gift card for $30 cash?" It's especially nonsensical/annoying when the gift card has come from us in the first place.

And this year, as for us, we're doing a rather..low key or minimal Christmas. The kids know the budget is tight, we're all on board - things are okay..but after 6+ weeks of medical leave.. I'm starting to feel more than anything a sort of ennui for the days (quickly) leading up to the holiday.
Each day runs into another...and my to-do list is still there, but it's shorter.
Should I go quilt? Should I binge-watch another few episodes of 'Orange is the New Black'? Should I pull out some Thank You notes and pre-address them so the kids can send off notes right away to their Grandparents and other kind family members who are providing the vast majority of their gifts?

So, don't get me wrong..I'm immensely grateful. I'm happy for the food, the family, the traditions and the good times we are all about to have (as it's the eve of Christmas Eve today)...but for me, I feel a little less jolly and a little more excited for the next week, and the next week thereafter. For me, the coming of the New Year is what I'm looking forward to a bit more than this years' Christmas.


Friday, December 05, 2014

The Christmas Letter I Will Never Send

One of the things I used to do when the kids were smaller and I was traveling to more exotic locations (like Cape Town, South Africa and Zagreb, Croatia) was summarize the highlights of our year, insert a few cute photos and mail it off to a few (not everyone) folks on our Christmas card lists.

This year I decided: let's get real. Crap happens - and no one mentions the bad stuff.
We've had a particularly rough year in many ways.. For example this is the first time ever we've maxed out our medical plan out-of-pocket costs (I think it was $8,000 or so?) for the entire family. On the one hand, I'm kinda getting used to these $0 co-pays for all our medications at the pharmacy and not paying any co-pays when we visit doctors, even specialists!
It'll be a bit of a bummer when January rolls around and we go back to paying the usual amounts..but then again, one would hope we all have better health next year.

Anyways, partially joking I wrote up a "Christmas Family Newsletter" using a typical MS Word provided Christmas Template. I included pictures and updates on each member of the family - what we've been up to this year and I.WAS.REAL. I put in both the good and the bad.

I showed Jeff - and his instantaneous reaction after reading it was: Burn it.

Yep, 2014 has been an interesting year... and no, I won't be sending out any Christmas Letters. Just smiling photos that show we survived this eventful year.

What I Learned at Age 42

I haven't wanted to write for a long time - and in fact, over the last year despite having been a voracious reader for my entire life I struggled to even read a book.

My beautiful middle child (who I must remember to never compare myself to - because as a teenager NO ONE wants to hear how their mom was 'just like you' at that age) who is also a voracious reader found this excellent idea on Pinterest where each time you finish a book you write it on a slip of paper and put it in a jar. She made, and decorated beautifully, a jar for 2014 and it's jam packed with slips of paper. She's looking forward to dumping the contents of the jar out on December 31st to count how many books she's read and remember and perhaps rank her favorite books of the year.

Recently I made tentative steps back to being able to read. I found I couldn't go back to my Kindle. I needed the tactile sensation of turning pages, holding the weight of the book in my hands.. So far I've completed 6 books. (And to be honest, one was just a 90 page ode to friendship and poetry.)

I'm also making tentative strides back to quilting. I finally finished the quilt top for my now 11 year old nephew. The GUILT I felt at every family gathering when he asked how it was coming will finally be over. (All the other nephews, niece and my children got their quilts as toddlers or infants.)

However, because I love lists, I must list for you what I learned this year (I can't believe it took me until age 42 to learn many of these things!):
I'll give you the short version -- and then my usual verbose version.

Short version:
 1. How to do my makeup
 2. That you don't have to pee after sex to prevent UTIs, you can't get them from sitting on dirty toilet seats and despite what you've always been told it's not even about wiping the wrong direction. I have this VERBATIM from the best Urologist in town. FOR.REAL.
 3. I love running.
 4. I love yoga.
 5. That sometimes you shouldn't jump in to solve a problem, just listen and sit back and wait. Key word there is: LISTEN. (Not solution-mode)

Okay, my lengthier version (and skipping the bit about UTIs - but adding something I learned about marriage):
 1. I finally learned how to put on makeup. Properly. That I should have been lining my entire upper eyelid all along. Seriously, how did it take me 42 years to walk into a cosmetics store and get an hour long lesson?

2. That I love running. This is one that shocked me the most. I used to say I wouldn't run unless something was chasing me. This year I learned that sometimes running can clear your mind of things that are figuratively chasing you - and it's not only good for you, it's cathartic. Especially when you're listening to your preferred sick beats on your headphones.

3. I love yoga - maybe even more than running. I gave it a try because I worried about preventing running injuries and wanted to improve my balance (much needed!) and flexibility. I thought it'd be a relaxing stretch-out class. I was mistaken in all the best ways. It's like hitting an internal reset button - you come out glowing and floppy like a happy noodle (usually) and your mind is at rest.

 4. (Married, or long time) Love is about showing up, not showing off.
This one I partially knew.. I couldn't help but observe that women who got flowers regularly or gifts of jewelry are the ones whom, over time, ended up divorced because their mates were cheating. I knew that grand romantic gestures weren't for me. This much I'd pretty much figured out long before I got married. What I hadn't figured out was the unconditional love part. I think I always assumed that if I was broken, unworthy, unattractive or didn't pull my own weight...that I was replaceable. (Children of divorce, can I get an amen here?)

For my marriage... love has always been more of a quiet gesture. That he constantly tops off my windshield washer fluid - I don't even have to ask or look, it's just always taken care of..out of love. That each time I walk through the kitchen adjoining his work area I lean over and give him a small kiss. That we do things for each other that just make our home run smoothly. Many times without asking - just small acts of love.
These small loving gestures can get overlooked or taken for granted especially among the occasional harsh words, small hurts or the dumb squabbles over inconsequential things.
So occasionally you need to step back and look...and notice.
It's the showing up. Everyday. Even if last night you told him he was a crap bag. You wake up, start his coffee maker and quietly unload the dishwasher.
(Purely a hypothetical example - because I am absolutely the last one up at our house about 95% of the time.)
Being there - because you love, respect and care so much for this person who is everything. Family, best friend, love, co-parent... the first person you want to tell anything that tickles/appalls/shocks you and the last person you want to see before you shut your eyes each day.

5. Listening is a skill we should all cultivate. For someone who has always wanted to "fix" the problem...it's a more difficult skill to master, but I'm starting to learn: Listen, listen, listen - ask a question to make sure you've understood, then ASK if they want your thoughts or not. Sometimes people are just telling you their problems. (This is true even in my professional life as I meet with CIOs and IT Directors!) They don't necessarily want you to jump to a solution - even if you have the perfect fix right in your pocket. They just want you to understand their current pain points.