Home Alone for the Holidays - Sad or Wonderful?
Santa greeting me at UNION STATION
I will be
alone for Christmas (and hopefully New Years Eve, too). "Oh, you poor lonely
creature", some might think. And I did feel a tinge of sadness, too. But,
"lucky you!" yelled a younger friend, a mother of several younger kids,
a huge family and a husband - and I quickly saw it her way. Totally.
She's been
running around in a frenzy for weeks, and her eyes glittered with sheer envy
when I told her that I will be reading, writing, eating delicious foods,
drinking champagne and thinking about the state of the world. (Which is dire and I
won't have enough champagne to drink it away.) In short: I'm making Christmas
totally mine, shape it, bend it, give it new meaning all to my taste! Well, if
that isn't classic feminist living, freeing yourself from the role of an
overworked family-servant - then I don't know what is.
Why am I
alone? Does it say something about me or the times? Sure. I'm an immigrant, old, and all by myself. Siblings and family members are on another continent; American
best friends live in other cities and nobody my age is willing to travel huge
distances just to sit at a table, eat too much and watching all younger people
stare at their new technical devices, or men glancing longingly at the TV where
- inexplicably for a foreigner - there will be FOOTBALL (I think) seen as the
highlight of X-Mas.
What I DO
admit to is a severe case of nostalgia. I miss Christmas but I'm trying to put
it in the proper context. Did you know that nostalgia, when it was first defined in 1688, was an illness
- and it was deadly? Today it's about emotions, about longing and
remembrance, tinged with a bit of melancholia sometimes.
Christmas
with its inherent magical and mystical force is for kids, I truly believe that.
For the kind of kids I once was - totally excited, actually shivering all day
on the 24th which is the BIG DAY in Germany where the christmas tree is lit at
night and the kids find their presents under the tree (nobody had heard yet of
stockings and Santa coming down the chimney - maybe because nobody had a fireplace). I'm aware
that what I miss most are the memories, my parents, grandparents, aunts and
uncles that are all dead.
So the only
sad part of "home alone for Christmas" is the realization that any
form of sadness, should it appear while Bing sings "White Christmas"
and Handel's "Hallelujah" is filling the atmosphere, is nothing more
than saying goodbye to childhood for good while remaining childlike when it
comes to hope.
What I really
wish for and want and miss is Peace on Earth and Happiness for All. And to
believe that it's possible - is truly an
innocent child's futuristic vision.
***MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL***
Brava, Sister Spirit! I too choose to celebrate my time alone. I have never been envious of those who demand all the chaos during these times. I will raise a toast to those of us who decided not to take the conventional life path most do due to societal pressure.
ReplyDeleteEnjoy!
Your vacation is very interesting and very inspiring. Thank you for sharing your experiences and knowledge about holidays. villakubu.com
ReplyDeleteThank you! But what do you mean by "vacation"? I've lived in Los Angeles for a long time and was alone for Christmas quite often....I've gotten used to it....
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