My earliest memories
begin in my great-grandmother's middle bedroom, where the biggest window faced a dirt road
punctuated in potholes, with a cedar Christmas tree-always cedar-and
decades-old ornaments, some broken and taped back together, some recycled from
what others (who hadn’t lived through the Depression) might throw out. Things
like spent flash bulbs, the ones you put on top of cameras for indoor shots,
and a bread tie for a hook. A red dog pin cushion, the stuffing peeking
through. A plastic Rudolph, one leg broken and taped back together. That loud mantle clock chiming at
all hours, in a hurry, like it had some place to go. The scent of cloves and citrus.
Fat outdoor Christmas lights the colors of candy wound around the front porch banister, on the
enormous evergreen beside the garage.
And people walking in,
one after the other, family and neighbors, coming by to dip a coffee cup (one
of many that came in boxes of detergent) into a huge pot of golden, simmering
Russian tea and sit a spell, to laugh and talk, ruffle the hair of a youngster
or two and ask if Santy’s coming. We kids would have been told how good our performance was in the church Christmas play a few nights before, as we stood there wrapped in sheets with glittery halos made from pipe cleaners jiggling above our heads.
No one was staring at a digital device, though we might have been watching Rudolph or the Grinch as we sat on the floor (because boxy tvs can’t be hung on walls), unable to hear it from all the current of conversation and laughter that flowed from the kitchen into the living room and back again. And before everyone quit smoking, before they realized how bad it was for them, there were ash trays, cigarettes poised between calloused fingers that had only ever known hard work, a haze hovering over a table filled to the edges with a meal so good it was liable to make you cry.
No one was staring at a digital device, though we might have been watching Rudolph or the Grinch as we sat on the floor (because boxy tvs can’t be hung on walls), unable to hear it from all the current of conversation and laughter that flowed from the kitchen into the living room and back again. And before everyone quit smoking, before they realized how bad it was for them, there were ash trays, cigarettes poised between calloused fingers that had only ever known hard work, a haze hovering over a table filled to the edges with a meal so good it was liable to make you cry.
There was so much to
love about Christmas Eve, 24 hours of it didn’t seem like enough. When I was a
kid, it had a lot to do with anticipation of presents, because we got them on
birthdays and Christmas. And because no matter how lean times were, my folks
always came through with what we wanted.
Last night, I drove by
Mamaw’s house because I wanted to be near the porch and the tree, because I’m
drawn to it by the power of memory. The tree is there but dark, and so is the
house, the glow of a lamp barely visible behind drawn shades. I’m taken back to
cars lined up, parked on both sides of the road, that tree and those fat
outside lights a beacon. I hear voices inside and see condensation on the
kitchen windows because it’s so warm in there from the cooking, the simmering
tea, the laughter. The door banging over and over again as presents are carried
in trash bags to put under the cedar tree in the bedroom with the cedar
furniture. And then everything darkens
again, and the house is just a house.
There have been
not-so-romantic Christmases, the first after losing loved ones or divorce,
those when some of us were laid up with a stomach bug, the flu or the effects
of chemo. And I know that things like this-or awful family rituals that just
ruined it for some as kids- can make people wish it away, or feel angry, because
it’s everywhere you look: Christmas is an in-your-face holiday. So it’s an
individual experience and I accept that, though I’ve always felt a selfish-bit
resentful when people go to bed early.
But that quiet magic
that lives in the light, in the ornaments made of everyday things in a past
that leads us forward, in the traditions like Russian tea that we still make
from the yellowed pages of an old ledger book….that magic is what I crave every
other day of the year.
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