And so it is Christmas, again.
Depending upon where you live the winds may have grown decidedly colder with front porches and backyard patios forced to shed their hospitable design.
From the facing window at my drawing table, I look out and see the wrought iron furniture laced with icy tendrils of frozen white, as if they were spun to crystalized symmetry by some Nordic god.
Still, I have no desire to linger under the sky in this blue cold.
The snow-laden clay pots, stacked against disorder in a dormant corner of the yard, hold the grayed, brittle remnants of summer's blooms; and seeing them I am drawn to consider the benefits of hibernation and the power of seasonal glee as it arises through music and song.
There are only a handful of Christmas songs I look forward to hearing-Songs whose notes resonate with an earlier version of my life and can entice my heart to linger a while amidst the memories of simpler days .
Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas is perhaps my favorite, and I willingly revel in the sentimental chords that place the wounds of the present into festive, wrapped boxes decorated with bells and bows and delivers them to a place where I am able to open them as the gifts that they inherently are.
I know that there is no such thing as useless suffering if wisdom is valued above discomfort. The dual meaning of the word present is not lost on me in this season or in any other. It is a gift I wish I could help more people understand and accept and one whose value I must continually reassess myself.
Still, it is not hard to become morose when caught in the lyrical grip of Silent Night or The Christmas Song while your own nights may feel anything but silent, and far from helping to make the season bright, a turkey and some mistletoe only remind you of those who are missing from the table and why.
But that is the perfect time to open one of those festooned boxes of unresolved emotion and try it on for size. Turning ill-fitting grief into a bright garment of resolution and illumination is the most incredible gift you can own; and once it is yours, you have the option of re-gifting that wisdom to someone else. It is the gift that keeps on giving.
And so it is Christmas, again.
A few days ago I stumbled upon an old home video. It was taken by my husband on a Christmas morning sixteen years ago and featured the very young editions of my three children. At first I watched it with bemused interest, laughing at the stridency of my youngest who at age three was already managing our household with the conviction of a five-star general and at the lithe and dreamy character of my middle daughter and her relentless determination to float above the chaos of the morning bundled in little more than optimism and her new sweater.
What parent would not be moved by the delight of an enchanting moment held in the celluloid grasp of a better time?
Then the camera panned to my son. At twelve years old he struggled mightily to subdue his obvious elation at the gift he received of a pair of roller blades, no doubt believing that because he stood on the precipice of his teens, any marked outburst of joy would betray the serious estate of young adulthood.
But however much he tried to neuter his outward response he could not conceal the truth of it in his eyes, and as the camera lens closed in upon them, I saw what I have not seen in them for the better part of the past ten years. I saw happiness and I saw peace.
As the camera recorded him eagerly fitting his feet into those cumbersome wheeled boots, my mind quickly flashed to the young man today where he resides in a state penitentiary and to the addiction, diffidence and collapse of integrity and hope that brought him there one ill-fated choice at a time.
Immobilized and almost unable to breathe I stood before the television screen and watched the grace and strength of his movements as he exercised his new gift in the driveway along with his sisters; the three of them laughing with the unbridled giddiness known only to the young as they circled the lumbering body of our ever-patient Newfoundland, Frodo.
It is difficult to imagine such darkness could evolve from what seemed such brilliantly privileged beginnings. Privileged not in wealth or in trappings but in love and belief - in family and intentions.
Yet it can and it did, and as long as he has remained in this state of broken, these sentimental songs of Christmas have not been easy to hear.
But some part of my soul still craves them, and I have to assume that it is the same part that holds out hope for a happy ending; the part that is willing to unwrap these pretty boxes of pain and model the contents until they fit like velvet robes of acceptance and peace.
The part that thrives in every season and simply will not give up-
Until it is fully Christmas, again.
I know I am not the only one jousting with a few dark gods this holiday season. Here's to finding that the best days are only an attitude away.
Merry Christmas, One and All!




Salon.com
Comments
It's people like you, Susan, who keep the light shining. Thank you.
HUGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
One of my favorites is O Holy Night and my view out the window today is dead brown plants and grass, crushed under 19 degree weather in the night. I'd rather have snow!
xoxo
Kim
I am mesmerized by the eyes on that old woman in your painting. You really have a talent for putting real life in the faces.
Lezlie
You are well loved by all - there is no doubt,
that long-recalled joys are merely a sign,
of future splendid Christmas times.
When I was small I believed in Santa Claus
Though I knew it was my dad
And I would hang up my stocking at Christmas
Open my presents and I'd be glad
But the last time I played Father Christmas
I stood outside a department store
A gang of kids came over and mugged me
And knocked my reindeer to the floor
They said:
Father Christmas, give us some money
Don't mess around with those silly toys.
We'll beat you up if you don't hand it over
We want your bread so don't make us annoyed
Give all the toys to the little rich boys
Don't give my brother a Steve Austin outfit
Don't give my sister a cuddly toy
We don't want a jigsaw or monopoly money
We only want the real McCoy
Father Christmas, give us some money
We'll beat you up if you make us annoyed
Father Christmas, give us some money
Don't mess around with those silly toys
But give my daddy a job 'cause he needs one
He's got lots of mouths to feed
But if you've got one, I'll have a machine gun
So I can scare all the kids down the street
Father Christmas, give us some money
We got no time for your silly toys
We'll beat you up if you don't hand it over
We want your bread so don't make us annoyed
Give all the toys to the little rich boys
Have yourself a merry merry Christmas
Have yourself a good time
But remember the kids who got nothin'
While you're drinkin' down your wine
Father Christmas, give us some money
We got no time for your silly toys
Father Christmas, please hand it over
We'll beat you up, so don't make us annoyed
Father Christmas, give us some money
Don't mess around with those silly toys
We'll beat you up if you don't hand it over
We want your bread, so don't make us annoyed
Give all the toys to the little rich boys
Love and peace to you and all your family.
rated with love
I wish you peace this holiday season.
Brilliantly done as always.
May a new Christmas memory brighten the whole heart of your family, and may your son soon find release form his misery with new life ahead to enjoy.
Rated
Beautifully expressed.
Best Wishes,
Blittie
such a beautiful piece of mixed emotions.
thinking aloud for all of you from here
x ( so good to see your card on the cover )
.... Here, here!
Bless you. Merry Christmas, Susan.
I hope, even with the troubles on your mind, that something happens THIS year that will bring you some real Christmas joy.
Rated
None the less, we all joust from time to time, and to those who do, the opportunity becomes the improbable wins that occur from time to time, where meaning and reason collide with opportunity and fate to produce nothing short of miracles!
I wish these miracles for you this Christmas my friend. We chat from time to time, and I have always envisioned you as one to whom the fates might play their magic.
Never stop believing in what could be Susan.
And never stop writing and placing your amazing art where all can see. You have a gift of the Gods.
r-
"I willingly revel in the sentimental chords that place the wounds of the present into festive, wrapped boxes decorated with bells and bows and delivers them to a place where I am able to open them as the gifts that they inherently are."
Beautiful artwork as always. I love to stop and gaze at it and notice all the details.
Merry Christmas to you and yours and a Healthy, Happy New Year