It’s that time of year again; time for my annual Christmas
decorating guilt.
I’m not big on decking my halls beyond recognition, mostly
because I don’t want to invest the hours it takes to put them up, maintain them
and, worst of all, take them down. There is nothing more depressing than taking
down Christmas decorations, which is another reason God put Dirtman into my
life. Dirtman can’t wait to yank down that annoying tree that puts a glare on
the television.
Yet I always wonder if my family would like for one year to
be dazzled by thousands of flashing lights and maniacally jolly snowmen.
Perhaps they would enjoy those blinking red lights on a plastic Christmas tree
that plays 26 Christmas carols over and over with that metallic clinking that
is supposed to be a computerized version of bells but sounds more like icicles
scraping on a blackboard and gets into your head, waking you up because it’s
infiltrated your sleep with nightmares of being rendered deaf by a psycho
Quasimodo dressed in a red velvet suit with white fur trim. Because we Linguinis tend to be heavy on Stephen King in our To-Be-Read pile.
As the holiday season progresses, though, I know I will be tempted at every turn by marketers determined to have my home bedecked in Christmas spirit, right down to a Santa face toilet seat cover. But I’ve developed a strategy for preventing myself from
making a fatal holiday décor purchase I will later regret. I envision the same
item thrown on the bargain table on December 26th along with masses of other useless red and
green detritus. It doesn’t look quite as enticing,
even priced 75 percent off.
I’m not entirely a Scrooge. We have a tree with lights and
ornaments. The ornaments are pretty old and some quite ratty-looking. When
Topper, our male Australian Shepherd, was a puppy, he had a particular fondness
for teething on a white unicorn ornament (give me a break -- I was 19). But you can still make out that it’s
some sort of a horse-like creature and there is even the suggestion of a golden
horn left on its head. A stranger may not know what it is hanging there, but we
do, so the unicorn stays ... along with the miniature rubber plucked chicken with the holly
around its neck that Dirtman insists we keep since he was a poultry science major in college, making him a good person to call if you have a chicken problem, but not exactly an expert on Yuletide decor'.
I want to add that one ornament we don’t have on our tree is
one of those pickles that catalogs tout as “an old German/Dutch/Danish
tradition,” but that I suspect was a wicked marketing joke by someone stuck with
thousands of glass pickles they had to unload in a hurry. Or maybe some Madison
Avenue dare: find the most unlikely thing to make an ornament out of and trying
to get the gullible public to find it a necessity. Anyway, no pickle at the Jackson house.
Oh...also, my decorating does not extend to my person. So my
ears will not jingle and my hat will not blink.
In addition, the reason why my animals love me is because I
never once forced them to have their pictures taken dressed as Santa Claus or
with reindeer antlers (even though our Parson Russell Terrier, Gaspode,
would make an ideal Max from How the Grinch Stole Christmas). I hope when I am
old and my kids stash me in a nursing home somewhere, caregivers will afford me
the same dignity.
So, as in all things, I try to practice moderation in my
holiday decorating. Candles in the windows, wreath on
the door. No fake Santas clinging to my roof, no plastic Saviors being watched
over by a glowing Mary and Joseph, no fake icicles hanging inexplicably from my
sheltered front window.
But there are some pretty spectacular houses out there and,
as the actual holiday draws near, I always have the urge to do more and more.
Perhaps an electrified reindeer or two! Or how about giant fake candles
flanking the driveway! BLOW UP SNOW GLOBE DISNEY CHARACTERS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1111
It’s amazing how taste flies out the window in the presence
of the pervading smell of bayberry.
5 comments:
Hovel, aluminum can, lean-to: all without decks, yet each one needs to be bedecked to the occupant's level of comfortable undecking.
we have a pickle I haven't unpacked in a couple of years. hoping I can get away with a live rosemary tree again this year. next year, with a grandchild, I'll be back to decking halls, though, I'll also be steering clear of Santa toilet seats.
Dody: A candle. That's all I ask. One. Single. Candle.
Lisa:Yeah, I thought I was in brief "getting away with" phase prior to the grandchild phase. However, it turns out not everyone was okay with that...
merry christmas :)
Fifteen-foot tall inflated Rudolhp from Hammacher-Schlammacher!
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