Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Christmas Tree Oh Christmas Tree Your Ornaments are History


My mother wasn’t much for holidays, and I only recall seeing our scraggly, 1960-something Christmas tree once or twice before I was eight. Most of my youth is fairly hazy, though I’m not sure why, but I remember one present clearly, because I kept it well into my adulthood: a little radio with turntable that I received when I was eleven or so. It was the gift that pissed my sister off the most. But with a birthday on January 10th, apparently it was thought that combing Christmas and birthday would…what? Fool me? Save my mom time? Maybe I had even been given a choice to get one big gift instead of two smaller ones. Regardless, it was a wonderful and thoughtful gift that made me happy, guilty, and sad all at the same time. The combination of emotions I struggled with for many years.

Even at an early age I was independent and wanted to make others happy. There were ramification to independence in my family. If I wanted something done I’d have to do it myself; if I wanted something, I’d have to find a way to get it myself. This may be why I started working so young.

After those gullible Santa years, I braved the cold dark garage, climbing the wood ladder, and somehow retrieving the damn tree – and the box of ornaments – from the attic myself several times. Bugging and reminding my parents never worked, and they didn’t seem to notice when things just appeared and got done.

Holidays didn’t fare much better when I was married. Christmas and thanksgiving were spent at my in-laws, because soliciting my husband’s help meant an argument and frustration. Much like my youth, I learned to do most things myself if I wanted them done. So any tree at home was up to me.  

It wasn’t just holidays, though, it was keeping my brother, sister, mom and I together through all the drama and the fights, making sure my husband and I did things with his friends, getting us to and from my in-laws, making sure presents were bought and wrapped, and calling my dad a few weeks or months after my birthday so he could wish me well. Pleasing and doing becomes a burden when it’s one-sided, though. Thirty-three years of one-sided got old after a while.

In observation of myself and of others, I’ve come to believe that when we’re accustomed to something and know nothing else, that something becomes the norm.  In reading John Dewey, my thoughts were affirmed; we can either hold on tight to old truths or discover new truths. In hindsight, I believe that I was perpetuating old habits when I went from my parents to husband.

In divorcing my husband, I created new norms and built new habits. Got past and through things that no longer hurt me. In divorcing my husband, I created Christmas for myself; funny thing is, though, I’m now Agnostic.