Posts Tagged ‘A Christmas Carol’

The Grinch’s notebook

Then the Grinch thought of something he hadn’t before. What if Christmas, he thought, doesn’t come from a store? What if Christmas, perhaps, means a little bit more? — Dr. Seuss

Grinch_santahatA few years ago, one of my editors challenged me to write an essay for the front page of the Christmas Eve edition. He said he wanted a piece as moving and memorable as Francis Church’s famous New York Sun editorial, “Is There A Santa Claus?”

Talk about pressure. I was going through a rough time and had nothing original or inspiring to say about Christmas. But I forged on as best I could. Today I can’t recall much of what I wrote for that assignment, and I’m guessing nobody else does either.

Christmas remains a forced and difficult season for me. Like the chains wrapped around Jacob Marley’s ghostly ankles, the secular pressures of the holiday are sometimes more than I can bear. I resent the marketeers who obligate me to buy gifts I wouldn’t otherwise consider. I resent the magazine editors who suggest that my yuletide performance — decorating, cooking, entertaining, baking — is never quite enough. And I dread the hot waves of guilt that wash over me when I can’t muster expressions of merriment or religiosity on cue.

But I wasn’t always such a Grinch.

Auld Lang Syne

As a kid, I bought into the Santa mythology, and for a short time I believed in magic. In those days, the lyrics to Christmas carols seemed fresh and stirring — partly because my parents never played them until after Thanksgiving. I was even more intrigued by the stories of elves and trolls. I was sure they assisted Santa on his midnight mission throughout the world. I’d stay awake all night on Christmas Eve, listening for them.

Even then, I knew the real wizards behind the Christmas magic were my paternal grandparents and a half-dozen eccentric great-aunts and uncles. Charles Dickens couldn’t top those folks when it came to holiday spirit. All were immigrants from Scotland’s Orkney Islands, and during the 1950s and ’60s, their generous Detroit neighborhood was a rich melting pot representing several nationalities and religious denominations.

My grandparents threw an annual Christmas Eve open house, inviting every relative, neighbor, and friend in the vicinity. The Goodmans, who lived across the street and celebrated Chanukah, always stopped by too. The whole house would expand with the aroma of my grandmother’s cooking and the clamor of jovial visitors — so much so that the windows of their modest brick-and-stone Colonial steamed up and I could print my name with a finger in the watery panes.  At some point in the evening, my Aunt Annie, a chain smoker who outlived the other aunts and uncles, performed a Highland sword dance (using the fireplace tools) in the middle of the living room. Later, someone would pound out a chorus of “Auld Lang Syne” on the piano.

Christmas Eve at my grandparents’ house wasn’t about the presents or decorations. These were practical Scots who gifted each other with new underwear and wasted little money on trimmings. Their Christmas was all about community.

Stuffed with shortbread and happiness — and loaded down with boxes of new pj’s and underwear — I’d always return home late with my parents. And if our timing was just right, my dad and I watched the original A Christmas Carol on TV at midnight in black and white.

Holiday grief and loss

My Scottish grandparents — and crazy Aunt Annie — died many years ago. Since then, I married and had my own family, but as hard as I tried, I could never recreate the old-country Christmas festivities at my grandparents’ home.

ScroogeAnd after my father’s fatal heart attack in 1992, the whole Christmas season felt like an emotional challenge. I couldn’t predict when a bittersweet line from a favorite carol, or another errant ghost of Christmas past, would bring tears. My family and I continued to celebrate our holidays with my dad’s only brother and my cousins. But when my uncle lost his battle with pancreatic cancer over two years ago, we faced yet another empty chair at our holiday table.

Thankfully, I’ve arrived at a quiet harbor of acceptance. But I still hold a special place in my heart for every soul who’s suffering a recent loss at holiday time. For the grieving or the newly divorced, those festive commercials highlighting family togetherness can seem downright cruel. Not to mention all the ads that suggest everyone in town is throwing a party and you’re not invited.

Regardless, like most women of my vintage, I’ve always understood that one of my duties as a wife and mother was to make the holiday bright for my own family. In retrospect, I think I did a fairly good job of it, and, yes, there were many sparks of genuine Christmas spirit when my son was small. The video my husband recorded of our toddler and me making sugar cookies reminds me that holiday traditions needn’t be over-the-top; that the truly sacred moments are the ordinary moments when we are, to borrow from C.S. Lewis, “surprised by joy.”

And those are the moments I’ll hope to recall in years to come.

Watching my widowed mother this year, I wonder if this will be the last Christmas she’ll remember. Last month she was officially diagnosed with early stages of dementia, and already her memories are jumbled. She’s lucid most of the time — yet she knows something is terribly wrong. She’s losing her hearing and is often depressed or confused. And I know she still misses my dad. It is my job to see that she is cared for and loved, and that she is made as comfortable as possible as we navigate another Christmas.

Redefining tradition

My husband comes from a large family of good people, and for years he’s been lucky enough to rehash the same Christmas traditions and memories with most of them, although his own father was moved to a nursing home this summer.

Aside from the fact that my mother-in-law bakes the best pies in the Midwest, it should go without saying that we need to spend some holiday time on that side of the family tree. My son needs the unconditional love of grandparents and extended family — just as I did years ago. My in-laws, bless them all, also invite my mother to their holiday celebrations. Their tables are always expanding to include new partners, nieces, nephews, stepchildren, and grandkids, and I know that my mom and I are always counted as family in their crowd.

candle3And yet. Whenever I’m toasting Christmas with my in-laws, I can’t quite shake the sense that I’m an orphan looking through a window at someone else’s feast; or an obligatory guest at a cocktail party. These people have holiday memories and histories of their own, and I enjoy hearing them. But their nostalgia is not my nostalgia.

My dear husband reminds me that we do honor our own traditions here at our house — and that we have the power to turn off the Christmas Machine.

A few years ago, we started keeping a (mostly) gift-less Christmas, donating money to our favorite charities in honor of loved ones. And now that our son is grown and living out of state, the highlight of our holiday is his return visit. When he’s back in Detroit, his old friends inevitably wind up at our house, so we also get the chance to reconnect with the kids from the neighborhood.

At some point during the holiday rush, we’ll uncork a bottle of wine or two by the fire with other cherished friends who’ve weathered life’s trials and turning points — not just the holidays — with us. That’s when I’ll remember, as my Scottish grandparents taught me, that a real clan includes dear friends and neighbors, not just the people we’re related to. I’ll take a deep breath and it will hit me that everything is just as it should be, even the imperfect and the undone. Or, as Garrison Keillor once said, “A lovely thing about Christmas is that it’s compulsory, like a thunderstorm, and we all go through it together.” – Cindy La Ferle

–The Grinch in top photo is a gift from my friend Shirley, who adores Christmas just the same. –

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A light to warm our winter


“Christmas, children, is not a date. It’s a state of mind.” — Mary Ellen Chase

Over the centuries, Christmas has been reinvented and repackaged, promoted and pummeled – somewhat like the cookie dough we cut into festive shapes and decorate every year in December.

Christmas is also a mass of contradictions.

The day was chosen ages ago to honor the birth of a king in a lowly manger — a king who ultimately advocated a life of humility and charity. Yet today the holiday is celebrated more as a buying frenzy than as the birthday of a humble messiah.

Then again, Christmas is a mirror reflecting our culture. As author Bill McKibben explains in Hundred Dollar Holiday: The Case For A More Joyful Christmas, “Christmas has been, and always will be, a product of its time, shaped to fit the particular needs of people, society, and faith in particular moments of history. And nowhere is that clearer than at the very beginning.”

Historians can’t certify the exact date of Christ’s birth. In his book, McKibben reminds us that fourth-century Christians decided the Feast of the Nativity would be observed December 25 — originally a pagan holiday. The date was deliberately selected to replace the rowdy winter solstice festivals held in those days. On the old Julian calendar, December 25 was the longest night of the year, which is why the torch-carrying pagans had chosen it to glorify the sun. As church leaders hoped, Christianity eventually took root, and by the end of the thirteenth century, most Europeans celebrated the birth of Jesus.

Since then, classic novels and popular films, including Dickens’ A Christmas Carol and Capra’s It’s a Wonderful Life, have helped transform Christmas into the most sentimental holiday of the year.

Today we tend to forget that the Currier and Ives Christmas we idealize evolved during the 1840s “when Americans were mostly poor, worked with their hands, and lived with large, extended families,” McKibben notes. Yet it would be impossible to re-create such a Christmas in suburban America. “More and more, that old Christmas finally feels played out,” McKibben writes. If we’ve grown ambivalent about the holiday – or even disappointed in it — that’s partly why.

Still, at its heart, Christmas remains a celebration of light’s triumph over darkness. A celebration of miracles.

On Christmas Eve, even the most cynical among us hope to rekindle the embers of our faith, if not the childlike wonder and magic of the season. Like pagan revelers, we build fires and throw one last party before surrendering to winter’s chill. Like hopeful Magi, we track the glimmer of a distant star, trusting there is something wondrous and good at the end of our most difficult journey. We plug in the lights on the Christmas tree and maybe even leave the porch light on for Santa. We light the last candle of Advent to invoke the Divine, and we keep believing in miracles.

Merry Christmas, everyone! My heartfelt gratitude goes out to all of you who’ve visited this site regularly, left your comments here, and offered your friendship. Getting to know you better has been one of the highlights of my year! –Cindy La Ferle

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The giving season

And it was always said of him, that he knew how to keep Christmas well, if any man alive possessed the knowledge. May that be truly said of us, and all of us! – Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol

Our country’s economic recession is making it twice as tough for charitable organizations to do their part. With that in mind, members of my own extended family are making donations to favorite charities and non-profits — the Royal Oak Animal Shelter, The Salvation Army, The Boys and Girls Club of South Oakland, and the American Heart Association — in lieu of exchanging Christmas presents this year. Who needs more stuff, anyway? And what better time to help others in need?

Along the same lines, my friends Anne and Elaine of Wise Women Coffee Chat are sponsoring the most generous contest I’ve heard about this year. They’re asking everyone to nominate their favorite charities or non-profit organizations at http://wisewomencoffeechat.com/2008/12/easy-as-1-2-3-money-for-your-favorite-charity/.

As Elaine explains it, “One charity will be randomly selected to receive an automatic $100 donation and will receive a supplemental donation dependent on the number of comments it receives.”  Anne and Elaine are so excited about the contest that they’re extending the deadline to December 17th.  It only takes a few minutes to visit the site and nominate your favorite charity. (Don’t forget to include a link to the organization’s site).

And please pardon my shameless plug — for another good cause.  I want to remind everyone that I’ll be donating proceeds from the sales of new copies my book, Writing Home, to organizations serving homeless men, women, and children in my community. This has been a holiday tradition of mine since Writing Home was first published. The more books I sell this December, the bigger the check I can write at the end of the year to organizations such as the South Oakland Shelter and the Welcome Inn warming center. I’m deeply grateful for your support. – Cindy La Ferle

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