Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Sleeping Arrangements


I asked Ed, “If my father gets married, do you think his new wife will want to come over on Christmas Eve?  What if she has children and they always have their dinner then?”
“Jesus Christ, Charlie.”
 “He didn’t mean that, God.”
“I can repent by myself, thank you.”
“Well . . .”
“Well, what?””   
“God’s waiting.”
“How much did you and the girls have to drink?”
“I didn’t keep count, since I didn’t have to drive.   But anyway, what do you think?”
“About what?”
"What we’ll do if my father gets married again and he can’t come here Christmas Eve.”
“Charlie . . . your father isn’t engaged.  He isn’t even dating.”  I don’t know why Ed keeps sighing whenever we have conversations in bed.

“Nikki says he must be having sex, since he was so pleasant.  He did seem happier.”
“Well, if he’s dating, it may not be just one person.  And even if it is, he probably wouldn’t get engaged for a year or so.  And then it might take a while to get married.”

“But if they’re engaged, they’d have to spend Christmas Eve together.”  Then I had a disturbing thought.  “What if they’re engaged and they want to sleep together?  I couldn’t let them do that with the children here.”
“ One of them could take the guest room and he could sleep in Josh's room or she could sleep with one of the girls."

“Do you think one of them would sleep on the air mattress?”
“I thought English majors got sarcasm.”

“Of course, by that time, Betsey may be old enough to babysit the others.  But she may want to go to the service and it wouldn’t be fair not to take her.”
“We can pay her.”

"But it's so nice to have everybody together.”

“Tell that to your father’s fiancĂ©e.”

“But if she has a dinner, she’ll want us to come.  We’d have to go, too.”
“Maybe it will be fun.”

“Or maybe she always does her dinner the Saturday before Christmas, so her children can go to their in-laws’ Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.  That would be great.”
“Explain all this to you father and tell him that if she won’t watch the kids Christmas Eve, that has to be a deal breaker.”

I was about to fall asleep when I remembered something.  “Did you tell God you’re sorry for swearing?”

“I’m going to right now.  In fact, He’s going to get quite an earful,”
“That’s good.”  Then I did fall asleep.  It’s lucky we have an air mattress.


 

 

Monday, December 30, 2013

It's Still Christmas Until Epiphany


Even The Holidays don’t keep Karen, Nikki and me from our Friday nights.  The first Friday after Christmas (or Saturday if Christmas was on Friday) we get together to exchange presents and eat leftovers. This year, I gave Karen a miniature music box that played “We Wish You a Merry Christmas” with skaters twirling on a  mirror pond and Nikki a page a day calendar with cartoons from The New Yorker.   Karen gave me a set of Victorian-looking Christmas placemats and Nikki, who loves flea markets, gave me a little china dog from occupied Japan.  There was something different about him that I couldn’t figure out at first.  Then I realized that his eyes were “slanted.” 
Karen wondered if that was racist.  I said I didn’t think so, since he was made in Japan.  If his eyes had been round, that would have been racist.  I named him Nick, after Nikki and Santa Claus.

Sometimes we have horror stories, like the time Nigel knocked over the Christmas tree or when the flame on the plum pudding set off the smoke alarm.

But Christmas was pretty peaceful this year except for the Great Christmas Tree Debate. 

We don’t have a big dinner until Christmas Day;  Christmas Eve is pizza between the family church service at four and the eleven o’clock candlelight Mass.  My parents always stayed over to watch the kids so Ed and I could go to the eleven o’clock service and they could be there for Christmas morning.  My father still does, although without my mother as a restraining influence, he fusses about “that nonsense.”  I used to tell him not to talk like that in front of the kids, but now I just let them argue with him.  He enjoys it.
 

This year they got us up at six.  Kate and Janet came over for dinner, but he was too tired for any Discussions.


"He was quite cordial this year,” I said.  “He and Kate played Monopoly with the kids.”
“He must be getting some,” Nikki said.

“No!” 

“I wouldn’t be surprised,” Karen said.  “You know, he caught the bouquet.”
“Well, if he gets married again, maybe she can do dinner.”

“But they’ll be coming over here on Christmas Eve.”

I sighed.  “Well, the more the merrier.  I’ll have to see what Ed thinks.”   

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

 
 
 

Merry Christmas from the McDonalds
Ed, Charlie, Betsey, Josh, Cilla, Duke and Nigel

 

 

Monday, December 23, 2013

Christmas Eve Eve

 


When I was a child counting down to Christmas, I would say, “If you don’t count today and you don’t count tomorrow, Christmas is X number of days away.” 
When I told my mother this, she said, “Why wouldn’t you count today and tomorrow?”

I said “To make it come faster.”

“Now, Charlie, you know that doesn’t make sense.”
Later I heard her telling one of her friends about this on the phone.  “She’s such a funny little thing.  I just don’t know how she’s going to get along in the world.”

If she’d sounded amused, my feelings would have been hurt, but she sounded concerned.  So I never shared the countdown with her again, although I kept it up.
 

I did tell my cousin Bethany, who thought it was a neat idea.  Aunt Pooh suggested that we could also count down to Christmas Eve.  “And then there’s Christmas Eve Eve.”
The day before Christmas Eve always had a special feel.  It was the last day of school before Christmas vacation.  I’d get to stay up late.  There would the final deluge of Christmas cards waiting to be gone through when I got home and my parents brought home the schmooze food gifts they’d gotten from business contacts.  It was a preview of Christmas.

As an adult, with the job of “doing” Christmas, I count today and tomorrow to try and make Christmas come more slowly so I can get things done.  I’m not sure if it works.
But by Christmas Eve Eve, I either have finished everything or given up.  The children come home from school all excited and I let them have some of the “not until Christmas” cookies that I’ve been guarding.  We sit around and they try to get me to let them open “just one" of the presents that Ed and I got for them to “help Santa out.”  Somebody says, “If you don’t count today and you don’t count tomorrow, it’s Christmas.” 
And we all understand. 

 

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Christmas Traditions at the McDonalds' House

Every year, the children fuss because the Church doesn’t decorate or sing carols until Christmas Eve.  I tell them they can get as Christmassy as they want at home the Sunday after Thanksgiving. (I used to tell them that the Advent Police check churches, but Betsey asked Kate if it was true.)  But every Sunday in Advent on the way home from church, they complain.  I kind of agree, so it doesn’t get on my nerves.  I even join in.  Ed asks me why I encourage them, and I say that it makes them appreciate the fact that the Episcopal Church allows disagreement.

 The first step is getting out the Christmas tea towels and mugs.  Then we change the message on our voicemail.  It’s just “Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from the McDonalds.  Please leave a message.”  The children take turns each year.  I used to be more creative (“Now joyous Christmastide is here/The halls are decked with red and green/We hope you find a lot of Christmas cheer/And that you’ll leave message on our machine.”), but I decided that was too cutesy even for me.

We put the tree up about two weeks before Christmas.  Ed takes the kids to go out to buy it and I stay home to make cocoa and bake cookies.  The children come home all excited, sucking on the candy canes the tree place gives out, which they never finish.  We haven’t gotten The Elf on the Shelf yet, but we have The Half-Eaten Candy Canes All Over the House.  After we get the tree in the stand, Ed has a drink.  I tell the kids we can’t start decorating right away because the tree has to “settle.” 

This year, one of Betsey’s friends told her that cutting down trees was bad for the environment.  So Betsey suggested that we get an artificial tree.  Josh said, “No way, Jose.” Cilla added, “Like Hell, Emmanuel.”  Betsey said that when trees were cut down the birds and animals lost their homes and even died.  Cilla said Betsey just wanted to spoil things for everybody.  Betsey said Cilla was a selfish moron and didn’t care about animals or the planet or anyone but herself.  Cilla asked Betsey what she thought Jesus would say if he heard her talking to her sister like that.   Then things got really ugly.  Josh just listened;  I’d like to say that he was horrified, but he was amused.  Nigel took off for the cellar. Duke started joining in the shouting.  Ed was in the bathroom.
I prefer to let the kids work out their disagreements, but things were getting out of hand.  “That’s it!”  I shouted.  “We are not having any goddamn artificial tree in this house!  Ever!  Now everybody shut up!”

The girls were so shocked that they stopped yelling.  Josh remarked that all he had said was “No way, Jose.”  Betsey ran up the stairs, nearly knocking Ed over.  Cilla looked like she couldn’t decide whether to cry or not.

Ed said, “What the f . . .heck is going on?”  After Cilla and Josh had filled him in and Cilla said, “We’re going to get a real tree, right?”  Ed explained that if everybody stopped buying real trees, the tree farmers would stop planting them, which would hurt the environment, and anyway, the factories that made the artificial trees were really worse for the environment than cutting down trees. 

I told him to go talk to Betsey.  It would sound more logical coming from him.  I gave Cilla and Josh some cookies.  I thought they would run off, since they had won, but they sat very quietly in the kitchen, only asking for milk.  I think they were afraid of what I would do next.  I told them I was sorry for yelling.  “That’s okay, Mom.”  Josh patted me on the shoulder.  “Everybody makes mistakes.”
There seemed to be something wrong with this picture, but I couldn’t figure out exactly what.  Where is Dr. Phil when we need him?

In the end, everybody made up and they came back with an enormous tree.  We had to make paper chains for filler and the girls cut out stars from aluminum foil, which I’d done as child.  And, of course, it was the prettiest tree we’d ever had. 

Thursday, December 19, 2013

A Reflective Discussion at Midnight

“You know,” I said to Ed last night, “If I were Rudolph, I would have told the other reindeer to bug off since they’d been so mean to me.”

“Oh, dear God!”

“Wouldn’t you?”

Ed sighed.  “I don’t know.  But it was Santa who asked him.  I would have done it for him. ”

“Of course, you’ve always been a team player.  I never played team sports.  But it would be hard to turn Santa down.  I bet the other reindeer were still nasty to him as soon as they got back to the North Pole, though.”

“Can’t you talk about this with the kids or Karen and Nikki?”

“You’d think Santa would have put a stop to it.  I guess he was too busy.  Maybe he didn’t even notice.  You can sit and watch TV when the kids are fighting in the next room.”

“Maybe he thought it was best to let them work it out for themselves.”

That is a good idea sometimes, especially when you’re too tired to do anything.

Then I thought of something else.  “What if the next Christmas Eve wasn’t foggy?  They wouldn’t need Rudolph.”

“You do know that this is just a story?”

“Oh sure.  The only real Santa’s reindeer are Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen, Comet, Cupid, Donner, and Blitzen.  But it’s fun to pretend.”

Ed laughed.  “Well, maybe what’d I’d do would be to eat a lot of beans before we took off.”

I didn’t get it at first.  Then I did.  I had to laugh.

Monday, December 9, 2013

Aunt Pooh Channels Nelly Dean (from Charlie's diary)

Kate suggested that I find out more from Aunt Pooh.  “Sometimes I get the feeling that you didn’t really know your mother.”  She had a point.  I could always talk more easily with Aunt Pooh or Aunt Judy or my grandmother.

One time, my cousin Bethany and I were discussing whether we would rather be rich and ugly or poor and beautiful.  (“How ugly?  Does that mean fat, too?  If you’re poor would you be able to get a job where you’d meet rich people?”)  Aunt Pooh happened to overhear and said, “That’s too hard.  How about rich and stupid or poor and smart?”  That was easy; poor and smart.  When I had asked my mother, she’d said, “But you’ll never be poor or ugly.”
Aunt Pooh was delighted when I asked her if Karen and Nikki and I could come over.  She loves to tell stories, even more so if they’re true.  And it gave her a chance to bake.  This time she gave us brownies, which said insisted tasted best with milk.  (“It’s imprinted in your memories.”)      

“Now, I don’t want you to be too hard on your mother, Charlie.  She loved you very much.  But she was never a hugger or a fusser.  When she was so sick, your uncle talked to her, to see if she needed emotional help, and asked her if she had any unfinished business ‘just in case’.  You know how counsellors are; they can’t resist jumping in if they think someone needs help.  Anyway, she said, no, she had insurance and she and your father weren’t in debt.  When he told her that he meant emotional business, did she needed to say anything to anybody, like you or your dad, she said, ‘If they don’t know I love them, there’s no sense in having some deathbed drama.  It would just make everyone uncomfortable.’  She might have been right there.  He didn’t tell me that, she did,” she added quickly, so we wouldn’t think Uncle Joe had been unethical.  “But you know she loved you don’t you?”
Karen and Nikki were both sitting there with their mouths open.  But they hadn’t known my mother very well.

“In those days,” Aunt Pooh continued, “they didn’t have ultrasounds like they do now.  Your mother told me she was really hoping you’d be a girl.  She said she was only going to have one child, so he or she would be spared having older siblings bossing them or younger ones getting away with stuff they couldn’t and would never have to worry whether she and their father liked the others better.”
“Classic middle child,” Karen said.

“Exactly.  And she was the only scientist in a family of artsies.  My father taught English and my mother painted.  My brother is a music teacher.  He was never into books that much; I guess that’s why he agreed to give the children those names.*  That upset my mother more than Louie’s getting pregnant with a married man.” 
“It probably made her feel excluded.”  Karen and Nikki were in their element, practicing amateur analysis.

“Why, I never thought of that, but I bet that’s true.  She didn’t like to be out of the loop.  But, of course, she didn’t interfere, although she complained to Louie and me.  ‘Those children are going to feel like outcasts in the family,’ was how she put it.  She blamed him more than Judy.  Judy and her brothers and sisters were the five J's. ”
“But didn’t Charlie’s mother read?  After all she named her after the Brontes.”

“Well, that was my idea.  She wanted to name Charlie after our mother, but her name was Alice (Alice in Wonderland, you know) and your father’s first wife’s name was Alicia.  Actually, I wanted Emily Charlotte Anne, since Emily was really the better writer, but she liked Charlotte -- the name, I mean.  She probably hadn’t even seen the movies, since we didn’t have Netflix then.” 
“What was she like?  Alicia, I mean.”

“Well, I only heard about her, but she was English, oddly enough.  From what I heard, she was rather quiet, but it’s the quiet ones you have to watch.  When they finally get mad, run.  From what I heard, though, they weren’t happy.  She hated being a faculty wife; I can’t say I blame her.  My mother always said that if she hadn’t had the outlet of her painting she would have become an alcoholic.  All the politicking and sucking up.  She said being the wife was worse than being the faculty member.
“Now, I wasn’t so sure about your father, at first, but . . . well, you know how he is, so literal, like your mother, so they were well suited.  And he loved her.  And anyway, it wasn’t my business.  And  he grew on me when I realized I’d never be able to understand him.”

Aunt Pooh brought out the albums and tried to clarify the family for Karen and Nikki.  By the time she got to the story of when Uncle Joe met the family (“He seriously thought of writing his dissertation on us.”), it was time to go home.  Aunt Pooh gave us some brownies to take with us for our kids.  “You know, I feel like Nelly in Wuthering Heights, when she was telling that story.  I wrote a paper on why Emily did it that way.  I know that this isn’t your thing, Charlie, but why don’t you all come to the Solstice Service?  It’s mostly women.  And we usually go out to get something to eat afterwards.”
Karen and Nikki’s eyes lit up.  We might just do it, but I won’t take the girls.  We had enough spiritual crises this year with Cilla’s nearly going over to Rome. 

*Most of the children in my mother's family were given names taken from literature, but Uncle Hank's children are Jessica, Jason, and Jennifer.  Uncle Hank's name is Henry James;  Aunt Judy wanted him to start calling himself H. James, but he wouldn't do it.

For more background, see "Cast of Characters". February 27, 2015. 


Sunday, December 1, 2013

Remembrances of Thanksgivings Past

I’d say that Thanksgiving is about my third favorite holiday, after Halloween and Christmas.  Of course, it’s special because Cilla was born on Thanksgiving.  My water broke just as I was bringing in the pies. (My mother made sure Ed had the carpet cleaned before I came home from the hospital.)  My cousin Joanna, who is an artist, was doing the birth announcements for us and designed one with a turkey wearing a pilgrim hat carrying a bundle with a baby girl wearing a pilgrim lady’s cap.  If anyone had said anything, or even looked like they were thinking of something, I was ready to say, “Cutesy is the new trendy.”   But nobody did.

When I was a child, we always went to my mother’s parents’ house for dinner.  My other grandparents were usually on a cruise or something.  Aunt Pooh would be there with my Uncle Joe and my cousins Meghan, Joanna, Bethany, and Jim, and my Uncle Hank (Henry James) and Aunt Judy, and their three children, Jennifer, Jessica, and Jason.  Aunt Judy refused to go literary with the names, although she did try to persuade Uncle Hank to start calling himself H. James, so they could be the Five J’s. 
We kids all had fun running around, but what I liked best was sitting with the grownups and listening to them talk. Someone would always say that Thanksgiving was their favorite holiday, since it wasn’t cluttered with a lot of religious baggage.  There would usually be a debate about what we had to be thankful for, since the world was in such a state and how should we feel about having so much when so many people had so little?  Someone would say something about helping the poor, and everyone agreed that we had to do it, but really what good does charity do when the system continues to oppress everyone?
One year Jennifer, who was just in nursery school, wanted to say grace, but my grandmother saved the situation by suggesting we all go around the table and say what we were thankful for.  I said I was thankful for the Barbie doll and Barbie Dreamhouse I’d just gotten for my birthday.  Aunt Pooh looked at my mother, who said, “She wouldn’t give us any peace.  But we got her Veterinarian Barbie.”

Holidays can be delicate situations for divorced families. Janet and Ed’s father switch off between Allison and Ed.  This year, Janet and Kate are came our house, as well as my father.  There was some game on TV for the men to watch and Janet and Kate like to help in the kitchen or amuse the kids.  By dinner time, everyone had had some wine, so we all got along.  I’m thankful for that and basically for everything.

Saturday, November 23, 2013

More from Charlie's Diary


I don’t know what to think.  If this were a soap opera instead of real life, I’d probably have a nervous breakdown and start having an affair or something.  Nikki says I ought to “confront” my father.  Karen thinks I ought to try to track down my sister.  But I’m really not that interested; I spent so many years repressing my curiosity and feelings about the whole thing that I don’t have the energy.
Every summer my father would fly out to see my sister for two weeks.  He would call home every couple days, but he never mentioned her.  As I grew older, I wondered if my father’s first marriage was simply an elaborate ruse designed to fool either my mother or me or both of us.  Maybe he had a girlfriend that he saw once a year.  Maybe money that supposedly went for child support was just his fun money.  My mother was easy to fool, because it never occurred to her that people would say things that weren’t true; that would defeat the whole purpose of communication.  You’d have thought this would have been great for me, but I stopped taking advantage of it because I felt too guilty; it was liking stealing cookies from a blind child's lunchbox.

This was before I knew the story of his first wife and the Trashing of the Offices.  Janet said that she’s not surprised with all that was going on in those days.  There were even parties where people would pair off with someone else’s spouse.  Not that she ever did; it creeped her out and anyway she’d never been invited to one. At the time, everyone in her crowd had young children and they were all too tired.  She supposed she should have suspected something when Doug told her he thought it would be “interesting.”  But at least he’d had the decency to wait until the kids were teenagers.

Kate, of course, was very concerned and kept asking me how I felt about things.  I said I didn’t know.   She kept eyeing the box of tissues and offering me tea.  Then she asked me if I wanted to go out and get a drink or a hot fudge sundae.  I opted for the sundae.  We didn’t talk about It, but just about stuff, like the kids, and how Janet’s cats are adjusting to the rectory, and what we were doing for Thanksgiving.  Strangely enough, I felt much better.

Karen and Nikki want me to get more information from Aunt Pooh.  I decided we could all go over to see her; she loves to tell stories and this certainly is a good one.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Charlie Starts a Diary

I can’t believe what happened!  I can’t put it on the blog, but maybe if I write it down as if I were blogging it I’ll feel better or something.

Aunt Pooh was an at-home mom who wrote in her spare time and was active in the women’s movement.  Today, she’s won awards for her writing and teaches at the community college.  My Uncle Joe is a therapist, which Ed says was lucky for my cousins, who had to grow up in a house with writers and feminists hanging around all the time and making protest signs in the living room.
Aunt Pooh gave me a nice cup of pumpkin spice tea and organic oatmeal cookies.  “Well now, I always wondered how long it would take you to notice your birthday.  I figured that if you were like your mother, you’d have spotted it years ago.  But you take after the rest of us.  Too busy with life to worry about numbers.”

“Well, I never needed to see it.  I thought I knew when I was born.  But why did everyone tell me I was a year younger?  I could have been driving or drinking or voting!”

“It seemed like a good idea at the time.  Not lying to you, but not arguing with your mother.  She was upset enough.”

“Upset about what?”
Aunt Pooh signed.  “Charlie, for someone who reads so much, you are showing a real lack of imagination . . .  Do you remember when you got married, and your mother’s dress fit perfectly except in the stomach area?”

“So we got it altered.”

“And if you look at the wedding pictures, you’ll see how big her bouquet was.”
Fortunately, I’d put my cup down or I would have dropped it.  “You mean my parents had to get married?”  I don’t know which was more shocking, that my mother had been pregnant at her wedding or that she had lied about it.  “But why . . .”

“Oh, Charlie,” Aunt Pooh shook her head.  “Your mother was so innocent.  She was so wrapped up in her science and numbers that she didn’t know what could go on with people.  She didn’t see consequences and when they turned up, she was dumbfounded.  But there’d been enough scandal already.  She didn’t want it to follow you for the rest of your life.”
“What scandal?”

“You know your father was married before and that you have a half-sister.  Didn’t you ever wonder why she never came to visit?”
“I gave up asking.  My mother always changed the subject.  And it made me too sad to think about it.”

“Well, your mother’s office was next to your father’s.  One thing led to another and his wife found out.  She stormed into the Chemistry Department, trashed his office and your mother’s and got a quickie divorce.  Very bad business decision on her part, but she agreed because your father offered to pay very generous child support and not have her arrested, which he could have done.  And then she moved; she was probably too embarrassed.”

“What did Grandma and Grandpa say?”
“There was all kinds of stuff happening at the time.  Everyone was getting divorced either for ‘personal growth’ or because they found someone else.  You know how your grandmother was, always looking for the positive.  So she threw herself into planning the wedding and then the baby shower.  Dad said that your mother could always support herself and a baby if she had to.  You know, they never understood poor Louie.”

Poor Louie!  I never thought of my mother like that.

I’ll have to think about this and talk it over with Karen and Nikki and maybe Janet and maybe Kate and maybe even Ed.
And I’ll have to think about something else to put on the blog. 

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Did I miss a year?

It’s been a tradition in my family to give the children literary names.  Betsey was named for Elizabeth Bennett, David Copperfield’s aunt, Betsey Trotwood, and Jane Austen.  My mother was Louisa for Louisa May Alcott.  I have three names, Charlotte Emily Anne, after the Brontes.  Cilla was supposed to be Belinda Harriet as a salute the Barbara Pym’s heroines in Some Tame Gazelle, but she was born on Thanksgiving, so we decided to give her a Pilgrim name, and she is Priscilla Temperance.  Josh escaped, because Darcy is a girl’s name and you can’t really name your son Mister.

Betsey did not believe that I had two middle names.  “That’s weird.”  So I dug out my birth certificate.
“See, right here.    ‘Charlotte Emily Anne Somerville born November 12 . . .’”  Then I noticed something.  My birth certificate said I was born a year earlier than I was.  I guess I’d never read it. 

That was weird.
Ed joked that I had married him under false pretenses and that maybe we’d have to get married again like Rob and Laura Petri had.  Unfortunately he said it in front of the girls, who were all set to have another wedding.

Karen thought there might be some romantic story behind it and Nikki said it was probably a clerical error.  She had had to have her daughter Jennifer’s birth certificate changed because it said “Hennifer” and her nephew is Matthew David instead of David Matthew, since her sister didn’t want to go to the trouble to change it.

Nikki is probably right, but I decided to call my Aunt Pooh.  That is my mother’s sister, who was named after Ursula in Women in Love.  When she didn’t like it, my grandmother explained that Ursula meant bear, so she decided to call herself WinniethePooh, but somehow it degenerated into “Pooh.”  Aunt Pooh has four children, my cousins Meghan, Joanna, Bethany, and Jim.  When Jim realized that he had been named James so he could be called “Jamie,” he rebelled.  I think my uncle was relieved.
When I called Aunt Pooh, she said she’s been dying to have a nice visit and could I come over to her house and how would Saturday be?

I was puzzled, but I said “Of course.”
It’s always nice to see Aunt Pooh.    

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Boo!


Halloween has always been my favorite holiday.  I loved dressing up and going out at night.  Of course, until I was ten or so, my friends and I all went with a parent. .

Unitarian Christmas just seemed to get lost in a blur of inclusive celebrations – a Hanukah party featuring  pancakes without maple syrup, which we kids threw at each other; a Thanksgiving Seder, with readings from The Mayflower Compact and other Puritan writings instead of Exodus; and a Solstice Ceremony, which my father refused to attend.  There weren’t a lot of males there; afterwards my mother and her Unitarian girlfriends and their daughters would go out to a diner.  The grownups would talk about the Goddess and lament that the church hadn’t attracted any Wiccans.  Usually someone would complain about all the Christmas chores she still had to do, and they would laugh and say, “What are you, a Jesus freak?”  It was fun but a little uncomfortable to see the moms this way, laughing and talking and having a good time.


When my mother was a child, she had lived in a suburb that was really The Country.  There were cornfields on two sides of her house.  She and her friends would go into the fields, pick corn, shell it, and on the nights before Halloween, go out without adults, sneak up to windows of houses, throw the corn, and run away.  (It was animal corn, so it was hard, like the decorative Indian corn you see in stores, although in the summer, when it was soft, she and her friends would eat it.)  The bolder ones would ring the doorbell.  The kids loved this story and would have loved to try it, but fortunately there aren’t any cornfields around.

As usual, the girls had started planning their Halloween costumes in September.  Perhaps because she had been cheated out of a first communion veil, Cilla decided to be a bride.  Betsey couldn’t decide between being a vampire or a zombie until Josh decided that he wanted to be a zombie.  So vampire it was.  It would involve lots of makeup, perhaps because Betsey felt she’d been cheated out of being allowed to wear lipstick for the wedding.
In our town, Trick or Treat night is always the Friday or Saturday before Halloween, so the kids won’t be kept up too late on a school night.  This makes Halloween rather anti-climactic, but I always make a Halloween dinner, which we eat by candlelight; pumpkin soup from the intellectual deli and grilled cheese sandwiches imprinted with a jack-o-lantern. (I got the stamp in a set, with stamps of a smiley face,  Santa, an Easter egg, and a turkey.)  We have tomato juice to drink, since it looks like blood.

Karen asked me if I wanted to come over and try to contact Margaret with a Ouija board.  I said we always watch scary movies together, and why didn’t they come over here.  Maybe it makes me a wuss, but after The Exorcist, which gave me nightmares as a child, I’m afraid of them.  I asked Karen if they were going to have pea soup.
I would have told Karen that it would probably be more worthwhile to say a prayer for Margaret on All Saints’ Day, but I didn’t want to be an obnoxious churchlady.



 

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Post Nuptial Post Mortem

Karen and Nikki came over Sunday afternoon for Part 2 – Discussing the Wedding.  The people at Epiphany had loaded us up with leftovers (telling us to “Come back, now.”) as well as the paper and plastic.  (Somehow this doesn’t sound as elegant as china, silver, and glasses, but I don’t want to give a false impression.)

We all agreed that the wedding had been beautiful, although Karen, who is becoming quite the Methodist thanks to her detective work, thought the chanting was “kind of creepy – no offense.”
I had to agree. “But Kate went High Church because when she was community organizing in the slums, she needed to escape to another world for an hour a week.”

“Well, she certainly did.”

Allison and her family had left in the morning.  “Do you think she’s healed now?”  Nikki asked.

“I sure hope so.”
“You’re nicer than I am.  I wouldn’t give a rat’s as . . .butt.”

“Well, she’s family.  Courtney and Dylan are calling Kate ‘Grandma.’  Maybe back home, they’ll call her ‘Pastor Grandma,’ but that’s not my problem.”

“Speaking of family, your dad seemed to hit it off with Missy.  She started getting all sentimental and telling him how awful she felt about breaking up Janet’s marriage and would she ever forgive her?”
“He must have loved that.”

“Actually, he didn’t seem to mind. He told her she should try to get to Janet through Kate.  He called her ‘the other one.’  Why doesn’t he like Kate?  She’s such a sweetheart.”
“In his mind, there’s got to be something wrong with anyone who would love Janet if they weren’t related to her and had to.  Plus, he thinks clergy are either crazy or hypocrites.”

“What about Unitarian ministers?”

“He thinks they’re bleeding heart liberals and tree huggers with more education then common sense, but they’re interesting to talk to.  Were you eavesdropping?”
“I was at the table next to them, and they’d gotten loud.  Ed’s dad was getting a drink or in the bathroom or something.”

“It’s too bad he wasted his time with Missy,” Nikki said.  “He probably could have gotten some wedding sex with one of the single churchladies.”
“She’d probably have tried to convert him.” 

Cilla picked that time to walk in the kitchen.  “I thought the bride and groom were the ones who had wedding sex.”
I gave her one of the homemade white chocolate macadamia nut cookies.  “Why don’t you take Betsey and Josh cookies, too?  Here, I’ll put everything on a tray for you.  And here are some napkins from the wedding.”

“Can I have two?”
“Of course you can.  Now run along.”

Karen and Nikki were trying not to laugh.  “You missed a teachable moment there.  Does she understand about Janet and Kate?”
“She has a new grandmother and she got to be a flower girl and that’s good enough for her.  Anyway, one of her friends has two dads.”

“And she got two cookies.” 
That would work for me.

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Beautiful!


The wedding was beautiful.  The weather was beautiful.  The church was beautiful.  The Parish Hall was beautiful.  The brides were beautiful.  The bridesmaids and flower girl were beautiful.  The junior ushers were beautiful.  Nobody spilled anything on themselves or had to go to the bathroom just before it was time to walk down the aisle.  (Betsey and Courtney, who had been watching wedding movies for weeks, had been concerned that they were going to have to help the brides go to the bathroom.  But the dresses were tea length, so it wasn’t necessary.  I told them I would take care of holding back anybody’s hair if she was throwing up.)

Ed ended up taking Kate and Janet down the aisle at the same time.  Kate said she needed someone to grab onto and she was afraid she would knock Janet over.  Ed said he had finger marks dug into both his arms.

 The Peace took fifteen minutes.  By the end of the ceremony, everyone over the age of twenty was crying, except the priest and the brides, who were beaming. 

The reception was beautiful.  The parishioners had outdone themselves with the food.  Everyone brought his or her specialty, so it was a giant potluck.

One of the ladies from Epiphany came up to me and said how lovely the children had looked and did my family have a church home?

“Oh, yes.  We go to Trinity.”

“Oh . . . Well, I’m sure it’s very nice.  I hope your enjoyed our service.  We really go all out.”

Kate saw what was happening and came over.  “Evelyn, you look lovely.  Did you try Dominick’s little quiches?  You know he’ll want your opinion.”

“Oh, of course.  Now don’t be a stranger,” she said to me as she hurried off.

“I was afraid this would happen,” Kate apologized.  “I should have said something to them about sheep stealing.”

I just laughed.  “We just have to keep them away from Cilla.”  I was not ready for “Please, please, please can we go to Grandma Kate’s church?” probably with some doctrinal arguments. 

I had been worrying about my father and Doug.  But I guess their mutual dislike of Janet made a bond.  Since Doug is not a dancer, my father even danced with Missy.

There were two bouquets to throw.  Betsey, Cilla, and Courtney dragged my father up, and he caught Janet’s.   “Yet another grandmother to come,” Karen remarked to me.

“What's one more?,” I said.  “But her daughter can do the wedding.” 

 

Just Before the Big Moment



Dylan escorted Allison and Josh escorted me.  The girls tried to look serious, but they were too excited.

Here come the brides!

 
So no one would think, "Stepped on a turtle/Down came her girdle."  I had this at my wedding for the same reason.

The Brides' Dance

Janet's Choice




This started out as the Mommy Dance, with Ed dancing with Janet and Kate.  Then everyone danced with their children or parents.  Lots of us ended up in the ladies' room fixing our makeup.

Kate picked this. The girls loved it!


What can I say?


What's a wedding without it?


Sunday, October 6, 2013

Barbara Pym Meets Sex and the City

Since the bridesmaids were all under 12, we decided not to have a bachelorette party.  But I decided to have a girls’ night at the house and invited Karen and Nikki.  Ed graciously agreed to take Josh camping.  I should have known how the evening was going to go when the first thing Karen said was, “I got a lavender heart cake.  I was going to get one shaped like a vagina, but then I remembered the girls would be here.”  (Never mind my current and future mothers-in-law.)  “Anyway, I was too embarrassed to order it.”

“This is daring enough,” I said. “The lady at the bakery probably thought you were a Lesbian.”
Karen looked pleased.  Then she looked sheepish.  “Actually, I was going to order one for after the girls went to bed, but the lady asked me if I wanted it with or without coconut.”

“What for?”
“Well, did I want the cake to have a Brazilian or not.  I couldn’t go through with it.  And anyway, I didn’t know.”

Thank goodness she didn’t call Janet to ask.  “Oh . . . Well, what do you want to drink?”
I’d picked up a lot of fancy intellectual, finger food from the deli that all the professors use and Nikki brought cheese and crackers and grapes.  We had four kinds of potato chips for the kids (plain, onion, barbecue, and salt and vinegar) with spinach-vegetable and classic onion dips.  I put out some olives, too.  As my mother always said, “Olives are so festive.”

Karen and Nikki had never met Kate, and they were surprised when she hugged them.  They’d never been to an Episcopal service and experienced The Peace.
By the time we’d sent the girls to bed and opened the third bottle of wine, we had stopped watching our language.  Nikki asked Kate if her collars were plastic or what.  I’d tell you, but I don’t remember.

“So, how did you meet?”
“Well,” Janet said, “I was at a conference about poverty or something and Kate was on a panel on    ‘How do we really feel about the poor and what can we do about it?’  Afterwards, I went up to her and said, ‘When you take your collar off, do you take the stick out, too?’”

“What stick?” I asked. 
“You know,” Nikki whispered in my ear.  “The one up her butt.”

Kate didn’t even blush.  “I said, ‘It depends.’  An hour later we were making out in the ladies’ room.  It was one of those single ones,” she added quickly.
Janet did blush.  “Just kissing.”

“If I remember correctly, there was some tongue.”    That was when we all started squealing.  Betsey and Cilla came down complaining that we were keeping them up.
“Good one,” I said.

So we all had a contest to see who could eat the most salt and vinegar chips without having something to drink.

 

Sunday, September 29, 2013

"Poor, dear Charlie. Batshit crazy but so lovable."


Kate’s tendency to launch into Therapist-speak is one of those lovable idiosyncrasies that people reminisce about when you die.  (Especially since she never was one; before she was a priest she was a community organizer and state lobbyist.)  Of course they may not realize that it was lovable as long as you’re alive.  I brought this up to Ed when I told him about the fight.  (Or, as Kate would say, “difference of opinion.”)
I want to make sure Ed knows my foibles are lovable while I’m still around.  I asked him if there was anything I did that he found “quirky.”

“Well, you pick the chunks out of the granola when the kids aren’t around.”
“You don’t have a problem with that, do you?”

“No, but I don’t like granola.”
“What else?”

“Well, those English expressions you use.  Like ‘before you can say knife.’  And you call the fruit and vegetable store ‘the greengrocer’ and the dishtowels ‘tea towels.’  And the way you say ‘dog’.” (I don’t know what it is about the way I say dog, but for years that was my trick at parties.)  “And the way you want to have discussions about things nobody has ever thought about, especially when I’m trying sleep.”

 “What else?”
“Charlie, we have to go to work tomorrow.”

“Don’t you want to know what your quirks are?”
Ed sighed.  “Sure, why not?”

But I was too tired to think of anything, and I fell asleep before you could say knife.

 

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Purcell's Trumpet Tune to Get Everyone in the Mood




The girls are already practicing for their walk down the aisle.

Save the Date!


 

 

Katherine Maria Parker

And

Janet Wilson McDonald

Joyfully request the honour of your presence at their marriage

Saturday, October 12

At two o’clock in the afternoon.

Church of the Epiphany

 

Reception immediately following the ceremony in the Parish Hall

 

 

Nostalgia and Nerves


We were sitting around the kitchen table trying to decide what to do about going down the aisle.  Naturally, no one gives brides away today; they are “escorted.”  I thought it would be nice for Ed to escort Janet, but Kate doesn’t have any children and her parents are dead.  She thought of asking her brother, but he’s in a Buddhist monastery in Japan. 
“Maybe Josh could take Janet and Ed could take Kate.”  But what about our nephew Dylan?

“Maybe you can just go down together,” I said.  “When I got married, all the way down the aisle, my father kept whispering to me that it wasn’t too late to call off the wedding.”
Kate looked concerned.  “How did that make you feel?”

Janet looked exasperated.  “For God’s sake, Kate.  You’re off the clock now.”
“I’m just trying to be supportive of Charlie.”

“Charlie doesn’t need you to be supportive.  She’s worked through her issues.”
“Maybe she’d like to talk about it.”

“Charlie is very happy with her life, and besides, her father is an asshole on roller-skates.”

“You’re going to upset her even more by criticizing her father.”
I was about to tell them that I just thought it was a funny story and give Kate the opportunity to tell Janet that I was in denial, when Kate said, “Excuse me” and ran out of the kitchen. 

Janet burst into tears.  I started to go to her, but she told me to go after Kate.  Josh had come in and was staring into the refrigerator.  I told him to “Go hug Grandma” as I ran out.
Kate was in the den.  She was crying.  “I just want a nice wedding,” she said between sobs.  “I just want everybody to be happy.”

“Good luck with that,” I thought.  But I just handed her a box of tissues and put my arm around her.  “It’s just wedding nerves.  Everybody has fights before their wedding.”
I couldn’t believe that I was comforting a Priest of the Church.  I thought they never got upset, except maybe about suffering and injustice.  By now, Kate was sniffling and blowing her nose.  Well, what worked with the children might work for her.  “Now let’s wash your face,” I said, “and then we’ll have a nice cup of tea and maybe some cookies.”

“Th-thank you.  That would be very nice.”
When we got back to the kitchen, Janet was making Josh a peanut butter sandwich.  He looked at her and then at Kate.

“Now tell each other you’re sorry.”
“Josh!”

“Well, that’s what you make us do.”

So they did.  All we had was Oreos, but no one complained.