Friday, December 12, 2008

Where have all the Chrismas Classics Gone?

Lately, I have been turning to old traditions to boost my holiday spirit (Which is in full swing this year, perhaps trying to compensate for the absence of my mom). I was looking forward to watching the old holiday classics from childhood: Santa Clause is Coming to Town, Rudolph, Frosty, The Year Without a Santa Clause, and my new favorite The Life and Adventures of Santa Clause. But the family channel's 25 Days of Christmas lineup looks more like this: Harry Potter, Chronicles of Narnia, Cars, The Incredibles. What do ANY of these have to do with Christmas? They have relegated all of the classics into a one-day marathon, which they don't even give you a schedule for! I suppose that we really DO have to take responsibility for our own traditions. I'll have to buy them on DVD.

The problem is IDENTIFYING traditions and then deciding which ones to KEEP GOING. I have difficulties doing this, because there are no set traditions that are called "traditions" in my family. There is simply our way of doing things. Is making homemade ornaments a tradition? I don't know that we did it every year, so does it still count?
This year I'm going to try out the tradition of making a yule log cake (Bushe de Noel) and see how it goes over. Maybe it will become a yearly thing, or maybe I'll find something else.

Monday, December 1, 2008

The Year Without a Santa Claus

I know that I haven't posted in a while, and I apologize. It's been difficult to keep up with blogging since the holiday rush has begun.

This weekend, I visited home. My sisters and I cleaned my dad's house and went through (some of) my mother's things; mostly clothes. Since we all live out of town, we decided against trying to hold a garage sale. It would have been too difficult, anyway. My mother's things hold sentimental value, and it would be impossible to put a price on them that satisfied both my family and garagesalers alike. Some things hold more weight than others, like the dress that she wore to my sister's wedding. It reminds me that she won't be there if/when I get married.

We also got a chance to go through some of our old things, especially dance costumes. I chose to donate mine, as I know some little fluffy girl will love being able to play dress-up in pretty costumes, but my sister kept most of hers. You could attribute it to the fact that she is now a dance teacher herself, and she sees the value in them for that reason. I tend to believe it is because she is more sentimental than I am. I rarely keep things for keepsake alone. She is a scrapbooker and a picture-taker. I am a packrat, but not for keepsakes. Throw away all of my stuff from highschool! Am I really ever going to look at it again? I have a few of my mother's things, and I suspect over the next few years I will take more from my father's house. But I know her memory is alive inside me and these things only serve as touchstones to jog my memory about specific moments in time.

My boyfriend's mother told me at Thanksgiving that she has already begun to divvy up her possessions for her children when she passes. They were even joking that they were going to get colored stickers and mark what they wanted. I think this is sad, but practical.

It is not the possessions that hold so many memories for me, but noting when she isn't there. For instance, while I was spending Thanksgiving with my boyfriend's family, tears welled up more than once just noting how differently his family interacts. It has never been a large holiday for my family, and I didn't quite know how to be a part of the festivities. I was still missing my mother. It also pains me that my father will not be putting up a tree this year. I understand why he doesn't want to, but he didn't even consider it. Last year, we had a few presents to open, since my mother had ordered some from catalogs before she passed. But this year, we will have nothing under the nonexistent tree, since my dad told us not to get him anything and he's not getting us anything. I'm a little resentful because part of my mother's spirit is being Santa Claus.

I suppose it is time for me to start my own traditions and take charge of my own celebration of the season, even if others are being "scrooges."