Obligatory Christmas – oops, HOLIDAY – entry.

I’m somewhat hard-pressed to say what “it” is that snuck up on me again this year. Guilt? Exasperation? An elusive and loosely defined sentimentality based more on habit and cultural influence more than anything else? Once again, like so many others, I have found myself frustrated and resentful at the commercial inundation to Buy! Buy! Buy! for the “Holiday Season”.

Now, before I go sounding like a a generally sour nay-sayer who is just looking to justify my lack of preparation for showcasing what should be my outstanding domestic skills  (because hey, as a woman, if I’m not makin’ it look good this time of year, then what kind of woman am I really? Oh my!) let me point out that I absolutely am in favor of celebrating – even if for celebration’s sake alone – especially this time of year, when it’s cold and claustrophobic, and our part of the world is settling down for something of a hibernation. In fact, this instinct to hibernate is exactly why we should gather together, celebrating life and family and togetherness, thinking about the best of the year gone past and making plans for the one to come. We need one another, whether we live alone and have only our neighbors to nod to in the morning as we trudge through the snow to catch the bus for work, or if we’re busily heaving piles of the white stuff from the minivan as we’re loading four wriggling, squealing children in for a trip to the tobogganing hill or the outdoor skating rink.

I’ve been re-inventing how I “do” the “Holiday Season” since my separation and divorce – but truth be told, there was never any real structure to how we did Christmas even when we were a family of four. At the time, we counted on the church that we attended and the cues from our group of friends to show us how to behave and maybe even to feel at this time of year. Once I left the church, I felt simultaneously relieved and frightened. Where was the meaning going to come from? Who was I going to get all warm and fuzzy with?

Now that my family has been reworked – with my children living with my fiance and I, permanently and full-time now,  in a relatively new city – I have been reworking my view of this time of year as well. This may make some uncomfortable, but I have to be honest: I simply don’t know what I think or how I feel about Christmas, or the Holiday Season. In fact, I don’t know what I ever really thought of it. Actually, I’ve even wanted to completely dispense with it, to be honest. Why should I spend money that I simply don’t have right now in order to live up to the status quo? Really! Is that so cynical? Some would say so. I’m not afraid to ask that uncomfortable question.

But what about the children? some would argue. Yes, what about them? We did indeed purchase some gifts for them so as not to totally seem neglectful – and truth be told, the kids’ expectations have been pretty low regarding Christmases past – but I want them to shake off the indoctrination of Consumer Culture and take the time to think about what it is that we are actually doing, and what it is exactly that we’re celebrating. I suppose that while I’m reworking all of that in my own mind, it’s tough to make it clear for those around me – if they are looking to me to define that, that is.

At any rate, I will be spending today making a mountain of food, decorating the house with some color and candlelight, wrap the few gifts that I have, and play the Christmas CD that an online friend sent to me a few years ago. We’ll share dinner and drinks and munchies and some potentially serious xbox time with my fiance and kids and my sister and her fiancee. and somewhere inside of all that, I’ll reflect on what the days between Winter Solstice and New Year’s Day mean to me.

That doesn’t seem bad at all. A perfectly reasonable approach to this demanding time of year.

(Originally submitted to http://www.allthingsgirl.net/uncategorized/it-snuck-up-on-me-again/ )

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“The Romance of Thrift”

Thrift is the really romantic thing; economy is more romantic than extravagance…thrift is poetic because it is creative; waste is unpoetic because it is waste…if a man could undertake to make use of all the things in his dustbin, he would be a broader genius than Shakespeare.

G. K. Chesterton, What’s Wrong With the World (Chapter IV “The Romance of Thrift“)

Oh, you gotta love it.

Yesterday I found myself on the following two sites:

http://www.xmasresistance.org/
http://www.buynothingchristmas.org/

Does this offend?  Does it make you feel funny?  Go ahead, call me a Scrooge, or a Grinch, or anything else you want, if it makes you feel better. I don’t have much cash at all, I don’t want to consume more crap that basically gets squandered, I don’t want anyone else telling me what it is that I need, or should think I need.  I don’t believe that buying more will fill that empty, gaping vacuum in my soul, and I don’t believe that this retail-driven season has anything at all to do with Jesus Christ and His birth.  Or anyone else’s, for that matter.

That being said:  There is absolutely no reason why I can’t lift my head up and look around enough to see that there are indeed gestures of kindness that I can make to those around me, and shake myself out of this stupor.  It’s cold, it’s hard times for everyone, and people recognize that it’s still a season of giving in spite of the greed and compulsion (so skillfully concealed beneath a veneer of sentimentality) that we’ve been sucked into for as long as we can remember.

There’s something about the legitimate need of so many that gets drowned out by the illegitimate greed…and yet, somewhere in the midst of the din, beyond the Muzak and the malls and the madding crowd, aside from the diminishing digits on our bank statements, there is still the opportunity for thoughtfulness, true kindness, and a quiet joy that surpasses all understanding. It’s not the Christmas spirit.  It’s simply The Spirit.

That cannot be purchased.  Anywhere.  At any price.

Nor do we have to line up for it or trample anyone in the process.

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Broke – but not broken!


Me at home, Fall, 2008

I live in Montréal with my Fiancé and our two teenaged kids.

In September 2008, I was laid off from my full-time (dead-end, mind-numbing, soul-sucking) job as a corporate Receptionist. Now, I certainly was not making mountains of money, but it was a thousand dollars more (per month) than I’m bringing in now (on Employment Insurance).

My Fiancé works as a Shipper/Receiver at a major Canadian bookstore, and while he works his sweet fanny off (and genuinely likes his job and the company) it’s not a huge wage by any means.

We’re poor.

We’re resourceful.

We’re cute.

W and R, Fall 2008

This blog is about living happily on less. Period.

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