Pharyngula

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Sunday, December 25, 2005

Christmas melancholia

I don't need a Ghost of Christmas Past to revisit the good old days. I still remember well one of the best Christmases ever, way way back when I was 11. But then, Christmas is always at its best when you are young enough to revel in it, and old enough to spend a month anticipating it.

It was at my grandmother's house. This house was a small place, built by my grandfather sometime in the thirties, I think, and it was a little bit tumble-down, but that just made it better. The kitchen was long, and the whole house was slumping down towards that back corner, so you could race toy cars down it. It could get cold and drafty, because insulation was not something en vogue when it was built, and the west wall of the living room was incredibly leaky—ivy had covered the outside and crept into the interior, so the wall was sheathed inside and out with stems and leaves. The place was heated with a coal stove—how cool was that? Most people nowadays probably have never huddled around a coal fire to keep warm—which wasn't very efficient, but I suspect the lack of temperature uniformity would help keep families together, anyway. Oh, and the place was right next to the railroad tracks. When a train went by, the rumble deafened you and whole place shook and shivered and groaned. It was great—like a funhouse.

Best of all, my grandmother lived there with my bachelor uncle, Ed. We'd spend the night there on weekends, and Ed would treat us to comic books, and we'd sit up to draw and read our comic books and watch Batman and The Avengers and the late night creature features, with grandma in her chair doing her crossword puzzles and Ed passing out and snoring through the part where Christopher Lee got staked on a wagon wheel.

My grandmother had raised six kids in that little house, and most of them had in turn gotten married straight out of high school and started popping out kids of their own at regular intervals. We were an assemblage of big families with a common center in that small place, and on Christmas, we would converge. There'd be a mob of aunts and uncles, a swarm of cousins, a fringe of more distant relatives…there'd be thirty or more people easy, most of them small, frantic, and noisy. The air would be thick with cigarette smoke, that sharp scent of whiskey, and grandma's cooking. The trains would be negligible, since we'd be making enough noise to drown them out, and it was our feet that would make the floor shake.

We kids had plenty of playmates. With so many aunts and uncles having kids so often, we each had our own cohort of like-aged cousins. This one Christmas, we each got the same present: a box of games. Checkers, chess, cards, tiddliwinks, dart guns and targets…it said there were 88 different games we could play. We were energized with Hi-C Fruit Punch and cookies, so we were going to play them all that night; we'd give each one 30 seconds, and no two people would play the same game simultaneously. Chess matches were resolved with dart guns, tiddliwinks were projectiles, and the one game everyone could play at once was 52 Card Pickup. I don't know how the adults could stand the chaos (jeez, actually—my parents were only in their late 20s, and were young and indestructable themselves…maybe it wasn't so hard.) I remember Grandma dancing a jig with her apron flapping, and everyone laughing and wearing giddy grins. It was a Christmas where we celebrated the joy of being a family together.

It was paradise. It couldn't last.

That summer, there was another party to celebrate my grandmother's birthday. Grandma was tired and seemed a little sad, something I couldn't quite understand, and I wondered what I could do to cheer her up. We went home, but later my father was called back—she died with a sigh with her kids around her bedside. Our center was gone.

It hit me hard at the funeral. I was sitting in the front pew with my mom and dad when I realized that she was never coming back and the house would never be the same. I cried like I had never done before and never have since. It was like I'd been pierced by a spear and the waters geysered forth, running in sheets and rivers down my face. At the same time I felt like my heart had been ripped in two, I was astonished at the volume pouring out of me…and I knew. That was my childhood flowing away, evaporating and turning into molecules dancing in the air of a funeral chapel, becoming a thin rime of salt on my mother's handkerchief.

We all become that dread Ghost of Christmas Future as we age, and we can never look back on those happy times without feeling an ache of grief and mortality. Most of the laughing adults at that party are gone now, lost to cancer and heart disease and age. The kids have all grown thick-waisted and slow, and we rarely shriek and chase our cousins through a crowded house, or hug a beloved uncle, or throw away the rules and play games however the heck we want. We're scattered, and some are lost to accident and disease, others hurt by alcoholism or divorce or poverty or the thousand small tragedies that pile up over a lifetime. Many of us have our own little families now, but it's hard to leap unhesitatingly into the revel, knowing that all of this will also pass, and feeling the weight of ghosts lost and gone. We do our best, but that carefree childhood is no more.

That old house on the corner of First and Willis in Kent, Washington is also gone. Last time I went by, it had been leveled and replaced with a parking lot for a convenience store. It's an odd thing to feel the weight of remembrance, regret, happiness, and inevitability about a flat sheet of asphalt, full of people walking obliviously through my memories. Whose Christmas Past have you tread through today, unaware? What memories have you created today that will liven some young person for years to come, only to fade and dissipate, eventually gone forever?

(crossposted to The American Street)

Trackback url: http://pharyngula.org/index/trackback/3621/MQE2eSbW/

Comments:
#55120: GrrlScientist — 12/25  at  01:58 PM
wow. nicely written. thanks for sharing that, pz.



#55121: — 12/25  at  02:03 PM
loved your post, thanks
my grandparents were over in Maple Valley
they added the memories of following Gramps to the tumbling down barn, the sweet smells of hay and oats and the milking...



's avatar #55122: PZ Myers — 12/25  at  02:15 PM
I know Maple Valley -- we lived in Covington for about a year. It's sad to see what was once pleasant farm country being turned over into soulless suburbs now.

PZ Myers
Division of Science and Math
University of Minnesota, Morris



#55124: — 12/25  at  02:39 PM
wow, made me shed a tear. great prose.



#55125: — 12/25  at  02:40 PM
Lovely piece, very well written. Thanks for sharing it.



's avatar #55126: Hank Fox — 12/25  at  02:51 PM
A little toast:

Here's to all those who couldn't be here to share this Golden Moment.

For my part, to Granny, Mom, Dad, Aunt Merle, Uncle Joe, Aunt Kate and Uncle Grover, to Ranger and Tom and Andy and Molly and Tippie ... and so many others, from all those other Golden Moments.



#55128: OGeorge — 12/25  at  03:00 PM
Beautifully written PZ. Myself, I have only vague memories of childhood much less a childhood Christmas. Christmas disappeared in my 10th year as my mother found a version of God that didn't sanction celebrations of any kind. No more trips to Grandma’s, no more trees or stockings. Just why my father went along with this I don’t know, but he did. No more birthdays either. The good old days weren’t. The one good thing is that I spent more time alone in the woods with my notebooks and pencils. At least I was never denied those. Today I’m drawing. Petting my old dog and drawing.

So merry melancholy Christmas PZ. Someday your kids will give you grandchildren and you can be the one dancing the “jig” while everyone’s “laughing and wearing giddy grins”.



#55129: — 12/25  at  03:26 PM
While we are passing out the warm wishes,

Happy Holidays to PZ, Alon, DarkSyde, ezkept, Hank and the rest of our little international family; and that includes all you lurkers and occasional commenters, too. There is plenty of good cheer and love to go around.

One of my grandmothers lived in the same little house,but located in Malheur County Oregon. It started out as a chicken coop, but was made livable and sometimes enjoyable by my hard working, no nonsense grandmother. It did have one luxury-we huddled around an oil burning stove. She was a dedicated self taught christian, but her actions spoke loudly that things only get done because someone rolls up their sleeves and gets busy. A great role model. She didnt die until I was in my mid 40's and I do miss her at these times of year when we no longer go to grandma's house for the holidays.

Love and Peace to you all



's avatar #55134: Raven — 12/25  at  04:05 PM
thank you, PZ--that was beautiful, and it made me wistful.



#55135: — 12/25  at  04:10 PM
Magnificent. Thanks!



#55136: Federico Contreras — 12/25  at  04:52 PM
I think I just experienced that christmas yesterday =) It was awesome. I never saw the end of it though, because I drank too much and I think I may have passed out (after some drunken wrasslin') I woke up with pains in my body and I can't remember how they got there!

It's the memories pz, it's all we got.

Cherish them. Merry Hanukwanzamas to all.



#55150: — 12/25  at  10:22 PM
Thank you for sharing your memories with us. You were so lucky to have the opportunity to share that time with them. It is so hard when those times are gone but not many get to experience them and fewer have the ability to understand the great gift they represent.

My happiest memory was not of people but was laying in front of the fireplace, next to the Christmas tree, in my new robe and hairy scuffies. The icicles would shine and scorch next to the old tree lights, and angel hair would be lying across the mantle, with the stockings hanging below. My cat would come in and lay down beside me, both of us absorbing the heat from the fire. We would play with an icicle or two, I would rub her belly then the heat would help sleep overcome us and soon we both would be snoozing away. That wonderful warmth and the cat's purring brought me great happiness.

Hope you have a purrr-fect holiday.



#55160: Clare — 12/26  at  12:48 AM
Very nice, I'm glad you saw fit to share memories of a Christmas past with us. Merry Christmas.



#55185: Arun — 12/26  at  10:15 AM
That these good times are unremarkable and fade away is a blessing. Only great sorrows like the Holocaust live for generations.

The true sorrow would be if people ceased having these livening occasions. The true sorrow would be if the only good times that people could remember were a legend, a myth, something that happened generations ago. A happy people experience it for themselves, sorrowful are those who must subsist on memories.

Therefore, be glad!



#55200: Idyllopus — 12/26  at  11:23 AM
My husband's father died a couple of days ago, on Christmas Eve morning. Our son is eight and has watched his grandfather's sufferings with ALS as long as he can remember, his grandfather having been ill for seven years. Our son's not ready to talk about it yet. He loved his grandfather a great deal and I know it was very difficult for him watching his grandfather decline. I don't know what memories he'll retain of him as the past couple of years were so hard and he didn't have the experience of carefree play at his grandfather's, only too aware of mortality. He will be attending his first Memorial Service for a relative on Wednesday. Perhaps. He's saying right now he doesn't want to go and I may end up staying with him instead at his grandmother's house. We aren't Christian (most of the rest of the family is). He believes in Santa, or says he does and I know he was incredibly relieved at some normalcy, as he had Christmas here and at relatives of mine. And he said it was "the most perfect Christmas ever". Playing with his cousins all day. He was determined to play happy. He was eager for celebration. As with you, the grand times with his cousins mean a great deal to him.



#55218: — 12/26  at  01:48 PM
Lovely vignette of a slice of your past; thanks for posting it.
We have lived in Seattle for over 31 years, and have unfortunately been witness to the loss of its rural and wild areas. I don't know how, in this political climate, we can stop that loss.



#55223: Mary — 12/26  at  03:33 PM
Thanks; that was beautiful. Made me feel better about my own bittersweet Christmas memories. My dad says he read somewhere that grief is the price you pay for love.



#55229: — 12/26  at  05:55 PM
Christopher Lee staked by a wagon wheel?

Is this a reference to the extended cut of Return of the King? But that'd be an anachronism...is this from one of the vampire movies he was in back in the day? Did the Pacific NW do that Sunday afternoon sci-fi movie (it was on in the late 70s, when I was a kid in Tacoma) back when you were a kid PZM?



's avatar #55235: PZ Myers — 12/26  at  07:08 PM
Dracula has arisen from the grave. Still a bit of an anachronism, but I do recall seeing it.

And yes, in the 60s and 70s, there was a Saturday sci-fi horror matinee, and also a late night creature feature on Fridays, on one of the local stations in Seattle.

PZ Myers
Division of Science and Math
University of Minnesota, Morris



#55299: — 12/27  at  11:15 AM
PZM,

Thanks. I've just increased my LOTR: ROTK geek quotient by a factor of 10. Or something. There's likely a clear link between the two films.



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