Tuesday, December 28, 2010

CSI Christmas


So Christmas 2010 has come and gone. As I return to the normal activities everyone has the same question..."How was your Christmas"? A fair question but let’s face it, no one is really looking for much of an in-depth answer. It’s a polite, socially appropriate question for this time of the year. I write today to process this holiday. I mean the holiday, with a small h, not the meaning of Christmas, not about the birth of our Savior. Obviously there is some of that in most of our Christmas holidays, a church service perhaps, some reading, some pondering and meditation. But the real crux of the real answer to “How was your Christmas?” lies more in the interactions with family and relatives, the gift buying and giving, food planning and preparation, getting to all of the obligatory parties/get-togethers, and trying to capture/experience that elusive, warm, inner glow known as the “Christmas spirit”.

I have mentioned before in this blog that the best Christmases seem more likely to happen to those who enjoy intact, functional families, with lives not beset by problems, with adequate funds, good health....you get the picture. But let’s face it, most people are lacking in one or many of these areas. For every item missing from this formula for a merry holiday, the likelihood for some level of disappointment, the likelihood of a gap between expectation and reality, increases exponentially.

My intent for writing this is not to be a gloom monster. I am not on a negative tirade, not lambasting the holiday. My desire is simply to do a bit of a post-mortem, to examine where things can come apart and to at least consider any helpful adjustments that might help avoid common pitfalls in ‘doing the holiday’.

Went to church the day after Christmas and I was amazed that the theme of everyone I happened to talk to was one of exhaustion, both emotional and physical. Such a shame. Jesus never intended his birthday to produce such experiences in people...of that I am sure. Where does this exhaustion come from? I am convinced that there are way too many conflicting constituents all demanding to be satisfied in the average person’s holiday experience. I know, constituent is kind of a political word. Constituents are individuals, voters in the way I am using the term, that must be served and every politician has the challenge of managing and pleasing many constituents with their conflicting demands and priorities. Good politicians manage to make each group feel served and acknowledged and so must we with our holiday constituents.

And just what are the constituents of our holiday experience? Well there are many. It starts with ourselves and our personal expectations for how we would like to see things go. The more thought we give to our desires, the more defined is our ultimate score sheet from which we will come up with the result that will be at the heart of an honest answer to “How was your Christmas”. Then there are any surviving grandparents, parents, possibly children, aunts/uncles, in-laws all with their own hopes and aspirations for how they would like to see the holiday play out. A different type of constituent can be the “how it used to be” and the yearning to somehow return to the experience of holidays of yesteryear. On the insidious side of things there is the constituent of the media and the seeds of expectation they manage to plant in us, most often despite our unwillingness to succumb, via their relentless programming and bombardment of every sense we possess.

Yikes, you put all these constituents in a blender, hit frappe, and you will likely pour out a grey liquid that only the weirdest palate will find delectable. What is one to do? If these are some of the causes of holiday misfires what might be possible solutions? I suppose this is where I feel bad for I have inferred I may have some answers. In reality, I feel like I might be onto some possible causes of holiday blues but alas, the solutions to improve seem mostly outside my grasp.

My answers all seem to involve simplification and the management of expectations. For if we could keep things simple, uncluttered, stay away from trying to shove 10lbs of holiday stuff into a 5lb bag, we might find some answers. But to simplify requires different expectations and the willingness to stop doing what we have always done on Christmas just because we have. What starts as a simple tradition can pick up a number of additions and permutations over time. And, once established, the new twists become part of the new and improved traditional constituents, demanding to be served in subsequent years.

Simplifying, when it comes to a holiday such as Christmas, requires getting radical....not something that most families have much of a capacity for. Can the meals be less complicated, needing fewer dishes and more easily served? Can formalities of all sorts be allowed to morph into more relaxed informality? Do we really have to touch every base on the 24th and 25th, frantically rushing around the freeways and praying for no accidents so as to make our tight deadlines? Can we opt out of anything? Is making it less about gifts and more simple just too much of a sacred cow to change? I don’t know but I would love to learn some answers.

It’s December 28th and I am still feeling wore out from the granddaddy of all holidays. Perhaps it is just that I am much to be pitied...? Perhaps... but this I know, just writing this down has brought me some relief. And Jesus, for all that we have done to massacre your birthday I am so sorry. I am not innocent. Please forgive me and bring your revelation on how things can change. Because the next Christmas is only 363 days away and I would like to look forward to it. Please father me in this Lord.

2 comments:

di said...

I sit here thinking about how simple our Christmas is and being very grateful that the gift exchanging in my family is a thing of the past with only one exception - between Godparents and Godchildren. On Rob's side, we don't even do that. His side had this "exchange of the gift cards" which his Mom finally just this year was willing to put an end to the madness. Rob and I have always agreed not to buy each other gifts. I have to say this all makes for a stress free holiday where the focus can be, as Rob recently coined it "Christ cognizant" and on spending time together and moves at a relaxed pace between Christmas Eve with his side, Christmas Day with mine. And the long standing tradition I was fortunate enough to marry into of enjoying Christmas breakfast with some Timber Bay friends.

The only thing missing this year was Gracie.

Which brings me to my point in all this (no it wasn't to gloat) because the flip side of this coin is that we do not have children and therefore, no grandchildren in our future here on earth, either.

Rob did purchase some water for Haiti for some ministry colleagues and we bought a goat for a widow in Burundi for my Mom's December birthday (she was thrilled). Of course, this just solidifies me as the wacky sister my siblings have always judged me to be. But that's okay. I love the idea of subverting the culture and giving really useful gifts to those really in need. A drop in the ocean, but it matters to this one.

Here is to 2011 becoming even less about us and even more about Him and those he puts on our path. That is so much more than enough.

God has been so faithful in 2010. And this moment. And the expectancy for 2011 is ablaze.

Here's to more seeing you this next year, I am hopeful!

James said...

Di,
Ah, your rendition of the Christmas holiday sounds so very good. Eliminating the gifts, simplifying the number of venues...I love it. Your "stress-free holiday" helps me to know that it is possible. Just not sure I can get our familial supertanker to turn in a new direction...so much momentum, so many with a stake in the game. So for now, I will seek small things, baby steps that may take a chunk or two of stess off the pile.
Here's to the sweet memories of Gracie....
Glad to know the "wacky sister"...
James