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SeattleK8

SeattleK8
Location
Seattle, Washington,
Birthday
July 28
Bio
I'm a nurse, living near Seattle, WA.

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DECEMBER 21, 2010 1:03AM

Holiday Letters

Rate: 9 Flag
Christmas Letter Collage

 

            Tech bloggers and Facebook fanatics tell me that the Christmas letter is, like, “so over.”  A quaint, antiquated, useless custom.  Or worse yet, déclassé.  They use phrases like “back in the day” or “retro,” and they don’t mean charming or hip.  They imply that my holiday letters will go the way of polyester leisure suits or the Bumpit – straight to the I-can’t-believe-we-ever-did-that bin.

            Yesterday, in the midst of printing out my annual letter, writing notes on cards, licking envelopes and correcting labels, I asked myself, “Okay. Why?  Every year it’s the same thing.  Why do you do this to yourself?  You could be spending your time finishing up that alpaca scarf or watching reruns of Frasier – time honored holiday customs.  But no, here you are again, writing and stamping and checking your watch.  It’s late.  You’re tired.  Is this really *&$#ing worth it?”

            From the foggy, all-but-atrophied holiday area of my brain came a resounding, “Yes!” And then, “Leave me alone to finish my cards.”

            Why DO I do this to myself?  Most of my friends send eCards or, more commonly, nothing.  There are a few diehards like myself who send cute greetings, or a family photo.  A couple even include a holiday letter.  But no one expects it anymore. Printing out letters isn’t “green.”  Writing one that doesn’t put people instantly to sleep takes effort.  Who really cares?

            Answer:  I do.

            In 1980 I moved halfway across the country from New York to Minnesota.  Six months pregnant, newly married and desperately lonely.  By Christmas I had a month-old colicky daughter, a C-section scar, and no visible friends.  Looking out my apartment window into a frigid St. Paul afternoon I needed perspective; I needed companionship; I needed to write. 

            When my daughter found enough comfort to fall asleep, I opened a box of Christmas cards and started writing. I think I sent about twenty cards that year, and every one of them contained some version of my hand-written tale of hospitals, diapers, gratitude and hope.  With each one I felt a little better.  A little less alone. 

            It took me three days to finish those twenty cards – frequent interruptions to breastfeed, marvel at the perfect child in my lap, and turn up the thermostat slowed the process to a disjointed crawl.  But I finished them.  I enclosed a picture of my daughter in most of them.  Mailed them.  Rested in the comfort of having connected to the people I sorely missed.

            Since that year I have looked forward to writing my Christmas letter as a sacred rite of winter.  Like the solstice or the New Year, it is a tiny hatch mark on my timeline.  Subsequent letters were written by hand and Xeroxed, then on a typewriter, then on various computers.  I abandoned the card-by-card sagas in order to tell a larger story to everyone:  We’re here; we’re fine; we miss you; we love you.

            There were some years that weren’t really so fine – when it was hard to write.  Could I really stand to hear about other people’s children headed for Stanford when my own daughter had spent a night in juvie?  How do you tell people you’ve left your husband for the love of your life without seeming like a selfish gadfly?  Will anyone care about these things?  And who will want to know that my daughters have turned into glorious young women with lives and families of their own? 

            Answer again: I will.

            What I realized as I sat down to write the holiday letter this year is that I write it for myself.  I realize that it probably goes directly into some recycle piles.  But I also know that it gets passed to others and read aloud.  I know that people laugh at the funny parts and understand the hard parts without having to suffer all the details.  Over the years friends have told me, “Yours is the letter I wait for every year.” Or, “I loved that part about your dad being the ‘hydro-engineer’ when he waters your garden.”  Or, “That picture of you with the girls is tucked into my Bible to remind me to pray for you.”

            When I revisit letters from previous years, I read again between the lines.  Like photos of a vacation when everyone fights between stops, but smiles for the camera, it looks a little happier than it actually was.  But that is the privilege of the artist, isn’t it?  To decide which details to magnify, which to delete.  The final product reveals what the creator wants to share, nothing more or less.

            And what I realize most of all is how much I still need to do this.  I need to sit down and capture twelve months of drama and calm.  I need to draw the whole crazy picture and then use literary Photoshop to soften the edges, color up the good parts, and sharpen the focus on what matters most.  By the time I’m done, I don’t need a dorky Christmas movie to remind me how very lucky I am to have such riches to describe.  In the end I have an elegant snapshot of my life and year.  A colorful synopsis of mishaps and blessings; details and impressions.  I have the chapters of a life, one December at a time.

            These cards, then, are my tidings of comfort and joy.  I send them out like little reindeer notes in bottles.  Some of them will wash up on shores to be read and cherished.  Some will be so much holiday flotsam in people’s mailboxes.  I don’t concern myself with their fate. 

What washes back in the surf is a feeling of completion.  The writing itself brings me hope, perspective, and what the holidays are supposed to deliver to every one of us: 

Peace.

 Winter Writing

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christmas, letters, writing

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Im glad to see a positive take on the Christmas letter activity. I have long since quit and for awhile sent Valentine cards instead as it helped me ease the bleakness of February. But my mother really loves her cards. She tells me about each one she gets and she works hard on all her cards. She is 92 and still gets about fifty cards in the mail. They are her celebration in a life that is pretty isolated right now. Her friends and family and connections are there for her to see in those cards strung on a string in her house. They make me a little dizzy but I respect that they are important to her and I try to oh and ahh over each one and ask questions about who these people are who still send her cards after all these years.
I like that collage! Did you do it?
K8!!! So good to see you. This was great - almost persuaded me to write a Chirstmas letter of my own. I know what you mean by t he " literary Photoshop". that's so true. Hope all is well - Have a very Merry Christmas.
From one Christmas letter writer to another, best wishes for the holiday season and a happy new year!

I have written the annual Christmas letter for years and look forward to it each December. I take time to pick out the cards -- something artistic that I find inspiring or some wintery landscape. The Christmas letter goes through several drafts, as I try to capture the essence of the year and, as you say, the good and the bad in a concise but entertaining way. It's a holiday tradition. And this year, I received a Christmas card from a friend that said "So nice to get your newsy letter at Christmas time!" That made it all worthwhile. Thanks for your piece.
Thank you for this positive take on a tradition that I still honor as well. When my mom passed away 4 years ago, I took on her List (along with my own friends and "business" list) as a tribute to her. We were immigrants before the dawn of Facebook -- or even cost effective long distance were available -- and the Christmas Card list (and its connection) is all I have of my entire heritage and family in Germany. We don't brag with photocopied letters (though there is nothing wrong with that) but we've connected about 40 years after I immigrated here with just my immediate family. They don't Facebook. They are Luddites. And so, I guess, am I.
And look at you - coming back to write after so long and an EP on the cover. Congratulations!
I don't Facebook, either-I disagree with their privacy policy there. Not a tight enough ship, if you ask me. While I would agree it can't be green enough anymore, I still send cards, often hand doing the whole lot from start to finish, writing by hand, the whole 9 yards. I don't do it because I can see anybody keeping what I make, but because the gesture alone will make people stop and breathe for a minute: "It's a handmade card! So different from the others." Just the thought they might do that makes me repeat the process year after year.
Happy Holidays, K8. I'm glad you are on our cover so that I might know you are here.
Rated
A Holiday Letter to Family and Friends is a Memento of the Time Gone By...and a Recollection of Our Lives Through Time, Space, Physical Presence and Beyond...
@Zanelle: I can see why your mom is 92! (And yes, I did the collage...)
@Trilogy -- thanks for the nice welcome. :-)
@Jennifer -- yep, that's how it happens...
@smokeysmom: cool story. Just think how well you'll know each other if you ever FB!
@Celebration: Handmade cards, no less. Whoa!
@Ghung: Agree.
K8!!! Lovely to see a post from you. I enjoy getting them but never enjoy writing them, precisely because I am so direct and honest.

I love the idea that you have kept all your Xmas letters you've written like an album of your life. What a wonderful record to hold.

Happy Holidays to you and yours!
"A colorful synopsis of mishaps and blessings; details and impressions. I have the chapters of a life, one December at a time.

These cards, then, are my tidings of comfort and joy."

Your family & friends are fortunate to receive your letters each year. Keep writing!
A lovely piece. I agree with what you say about writing the annual letter more for yourself. I feel much the same way about all the long letters I used to write before email and the long emails I write now. I've never been one to keep a journal as I found I only wrote well and wrote more meaningful stuff if I was writing for others. My journal entries sucked so I basically stopped. I found writing letters to be so much more therapeutic, interesting and just plain fun!

I'm so glad I found you on OS. I loved your post about your "dirty little OS secret". Whatever happened with that? I would love to read your memoir.
Lovely, K8; it´s so good to read you again.
Love,
Marcela