It’s never too late to have a moment of redemption.
Happy Christmas Eve.
December 2018
… this.
Making my entrance again with my usual flair…
Even if I don’t quite feel like it this year, I’ll get on my tip-toes and make it happen.
That’s what we do.
Regarding office present protocol: I don’t give gifts. I only receive.
No hard feelings.
Maybe it just got started a week or two earlier than usual, but for some reason I was completely over this Christmas holiday season many days ago. Reminder to self: next year we need to begin later, because the burn-out is like some tail-whip hangover that just won’t quit.
As for how to survive the actual event itself (and a seven-dish Filipino dinner I’m making for my entire family) I find it best to devolve into fantasy and future-planning. My mind is already onto the days past Christmas – and the first few days of January when all is quiet and everyone is feeling the let-down. That’s where I find inspiration. I have plans for the next project (but you can still see the fuss and hubbub over the last one in this post, and this project page). It’s going to be a bit of a departure from ‘PVRTD‘ – as is my wont – and I’m hoping it will be a peaceful avenue. Actually, it will be a peaceful avenue because I intend it to be.
Until then, I’m biding my time. Staying quiet. Keeping still. Riding out the last few days of the year in subtle style. And looking to the future…
This is one Christmas sandwich most of us won’t be able to replicate at home, but how lovely would it be if we could? According to Twitter-lore, this is what happened when Hugh Jackman and Jake Gyllenhaal tricked Ryan Reynolds into wearing a Christmas sweater at a party without a Christmas sweater theme. “These assholes told me it was a sweater party,” Mr. Reynolds tweeted with the photo. I love this on at least three levels:
Each of the gentlemen has been featured here a few times:
Ryan Reynolds – In his birthday suit, in his almost-birthday suit, in shirtless motion, and in this menagerie of male nudity.
Jake Gyllenhaal – In his collaboration with Tom Ford, naked as a jaybird, naked as a swan, naked as a hawk, naked as any given bird.
Hugh Jackman – In this grouping of hot guys, in this back-end of a recap, and in this criminally hot nude GIF.
{…continued from here.}
The next day began in light gray fashion, but after a quick breakfast at Charlie’s the clouds parted and the sun came out to play. Texts were coming in and most of the gang was arriving. There was excitement and anticipation in the air, and if the whole truth and nothing but the truth is to be told, a bit of anxiety as well. The days of finding thrills and glee in stuffing the condo to the gills with people have long been gone. Fitting eighteen bodies, no matter how small half of them might be, into a more-or-less-extra-large closet gave me agita. When half of them were under the age of fifteen, well, that was even more of a crap shoot, and I simply don’t shoot craps. I practiced taking deep breaths and declared the mantra for the day, only half tongue-in-cheek: let go and let God. I was giving Jesus the wheel, God help us, every one.
The day was certainly a fine one. Temperatures had risen, the sun was out, and it was perfect strolling weather. We walked through the South End then turned back toward Copley, where our friends were gathering at a nearby hotel. In one of those fortuitous moments that seemed designed by some coincidence-happy screen-writer, we ran into half the group outside of the Boston Public Library. They were on their way to Newbury Street, while Chris was headed to the hotel to meet the rest of our friends. I was headed back to the condo for some alone time. Before any gathering, large or small, I find that a small window of solitude works wonders for the soul. It’s a moment of meditation, when I can be alone and quiet, stilling the jittery edges and calming the flighty fantasies of fleeing before anyone arrived.
Unlocking the door to the building, I trudged up the stairs as a vaguely familiar tune played faintly in the background. At first I couldn’t tell if it was even real, or if I was just imagining and willing it into being. The melody was soothing, even if it carried questionable memories. Something of church, and serving as an altar boy, something of Christmas, and something sacred. I paused at the top of the stairs and listened. Someone was playing ‘Ave Maria’ and a woman’s voice rose to fill the staircase. I was about to hurry into the condo and finish getting ready, but I waited at the doorway taking it all in. This, then, was that moment of meditation. Provided by some happenstance of the universe – a higher power, God, whatever you want to believe – it stopped me in stillness and peace. I knew then that it would be all right. No matter what happened for the rest of that day, there was this sliver of sacred perfection when all was as it should be. I wanted to freeze the moment as much as I wanted the get-together to begin.
The finishing touches assembled – a bucket of eucalyptus against the brick wall in the bathroom, a pot of mulled wine simmering and lending fragrant Christmas cheer on the stove – I waited for Suzie and Chris to return. Once they did, I changed into my party outfit – all glitter and rose gold – and the guests started to arrive.
The space – so often so quiet and hollow – sprang back to life. Laughter and conversation bounced off the walls, rising all the way to the ceiling and back down to the floor. ‘Christmas in a glass’ was poured, while Suzie’s plate of charcuterie was steadily depleted by hungry hands. The crafts we had purchased a couple of weeks ago were opened and used; kids want nothing more than to be entertained and occupied, and when left to their own devices will find their way around a craft project better than any adult I know. The Boston Children’s Holiday Hour passed much too quickly, and I wasn’t the only one who wanted it to slow way down. Dusk approached, sneaking in the windows and grabbing at the light. Soon it was dark, but inside the lamps and candles glowed. Kids giggled and played with new toys and games. The condo doesn’t often get to hear such outward displays of happiness.
My friends – the most important people in my world for the past 23 years – filled the room with their own light. I looked around at their faces – in the smiles and lines, in the way that we were now, beyond any doubt, adults on the verge and in the midst of middle age, for better or worse – and I felt the way most of us only ever get to feel a few times every few years: happy, content, and bursting with the sublime. It was the way I felt for each of their weddings, and when I met each of their kids for the first time. It’s the way I feel when Andy and I have a perfect night out and I’m reminded of the night we first fell in love. It’s the way I feel when my family and I come together and recall a happy childhood memory. It doesn’t happen as much as I’d like; it doesn’t happen as much as it should – so I hold onto it a little bit tighter, and I put it down here so we can bookmark the moment.
I was just about done with Christmas.
It started so early this year, and it just never let up.
I was burnt out by the whole scene, especially considering the various mishaps that had already all but ruined the season. We still hadn’t even come with a week of the damn day, and all the events planned suddenly felt like insurmountable chores rather than exercises of enjoyment, and what’s the point of any of it then? I was spent. The real reason for the season had once again dissipated like the final wispy throes of a dying candle. The sparkling remnants of a broken Christmas ornament waited to be swept away beneath the tree, while holiday lights blinked blankly in the dark night. A dismal ache of emptiness; the sigh of a discontented season.
Into this madness I’d scheduled the Boston Children’s Holiday Hour, and eighteen people (nine of whom were under the age of fifteen) were about to descend upon my one bedroom condo on Braddock Park. It had coalesced into something that was verging on terrifying for me; the only thing that allayed my social anxiety (after a week of constant social interaction with office holiday parties, grab bags, dinners out, and family strife) was the thought that these were my safe people – the singular group of people I’d chosen as a family of sorts even and especially when the real thing could not be counted on. These were the people who had seen me at my absolute worst and not given up or turned away. We grew up together in the best possible way: out of choice. A choice to stay close and stay in touch no matter how much time or distance passed. A choice to remain in each other’s lives as we got older, got married, had children, lost loved ones, advanced through jobs, and went along our own mad paths of existence. Simply surviving in the world can be daunting, and some of these people have had it very difficult indeed. When we’re together, though, everything’s a little better. Maybe we are reminded of how simple things were when they were all back in school, living in that house on College Ave. I was only a visitor – the best friend of Suzie – but she was so beloved they each took me in and embraced me in all my non-glory. They became a family when I wasn’t sure if I could depend on my own. They did so unquestioningly, not taking any of my proclivities – sexual or otherwise – into consideration. To be so accepted was something new and startlingly wonderful. The best part is that when you go through something with someone when you’re both young, you can keep that as part of your very core make-up. It’s almost like being born into it. I like to think we caught that just in time, just before our souls solidified into the people we would forever be. They certainly informed the man I am today, and if there’s anything good or decent or compassionate about me, they each played a part in it.
With that in mind, quelling doubts and concerns about things being broken or burned, I entered my favorite city, where Chris and his son Simon were on their way to the condo from Harvard Square. There was just enough time to get everyone’s gift bags in order, turn on the Christmas lights, and prepare for a weekend with the kids.
Simon had been at last year’s Children’s Hour, and we’d had a blast then, but kids change a lot in a year, and I was sure he had little to no memory of all the mayhem that happened then. Childhood is forgiving that way. We caught up in no time, and whereas last year it took him a while to come out of his shell, this time he was ready to go within minutes of making a book together. While waiting for the glue to dry, we headed out to dinner at a family restaurant (according to Chris, most five-year-olds have a half-hour of table-sitting time before other distractions are needed, and apparently a bar is not an appropriate distraction, though I don’t know what we are teaching kids…) Though Simon favors a stroller, he did deign to hold my hand for the escalators and stairs.
Considering that half-hour warning, dinner went surprisingly smoothly, though we passed on dessert in favor of a visit to the Chipyard at Quincy Market. There the Faneuil Hall tree rose skyward in all its magnificence. Kira and I had missed it on our Holiday Stroll, so I was glad to mingle with the tourists for a bit and watch the light show with Simon. Seeing that through the eyes of a child was reason enough to believe in Christmas again.
Back at the condo, with preparations for the next day almost complete, there was nothing left to do but hunker down for the night. We set up the pull-out bed for Chris and Simon (hey, it was their turn as Kira and I had been relegated to it last year) and Simon helped me put the sheets on. I was told that he would be back up at 7:30 AM…
{To be continued…}
I don’t know why, but this song always makes me cry a little.
It’s ‘Edelweiss’ from ‘The Sound of Music’ – and I honestly can’t explain it.
“Why didn’t you tell me to bring along my harmonica?”
Welcome back, old friend.
I can say that, right? I mean, I may consider you a friend?
You’ve done this 42 times with me, and for 43 I expect more of the same.
Your drama. Your annoyance. Your cruelty.
In so many ways, we are so alike.
Neither of us wants to own that.
We’d rather pretend we are nothing but pretty.
Innocent and pure and pristine perfection.
But underneath the murkiness runs thick.
We will shed our snow-white veneer and reveal our rich, muddy countenance of life when it’s time to depart for another year. We’re not there yet. No, we’ve only just begun. There’s a long road ahead. That’s how you like it – with your evergreen décor, your dried grasses swaying in the wind, and your insatiable desire to wreak havoc with the sky. You open big – with the shortest day of the year – but you start receding as soon as you appear. The days will only get longer until it’s summer again.
Only then will I forgive you.
It’s what friends do.
Many work days consist mostly of inadvertently recreating John Krasinski’s reaction shots from ‘The Office’ – and I never even watched ‘The Office’.
With all of the Christmas and holiday mayhem, it’s easy to forget that it’s still technically fall. Not for long, though, as the calendar finally moves us into winter tomorrow. While I’m loathe to begin the snowy season, we can’t finish until we start, so let’s just do this and be done with it. As for fall – the ending is so very different from the beginning that it’s worth a look back at how far we’ve come.
It began in September, when we returned from a summer break. It always takes a few posts to get back into the fall swing of things, so I swung away.
Fall is… a Tuesday morning.
It’s when we get back into the high heels.
A fall fragrance, not by Tom Ford.
Subscribe to my YouTube channel and I’ll post more.
An almost-annual fall fun-fest.
Ben Cohen readied his new calendar.
Wait for it…
And finding peace.
And remembering.
A fall cocktail, verging on winter.
I do so love an overture, even though it seems to be in danger of getting lost. I suppose that has its good and bad points. People are late enough – an overture might just be another reason for people to push their arrival time further out. The world turns…
{Here’s one of the greatest overtures ever written, far better than its accompanying show: ‘Candide.’}
The colorful mix was gorgeously displayed in a mason jar, wrapped in a Christmas ribbon, and its crystals swirled like works of sand art. The color was a vibrant orange – almost matching a circus peanut in intensity and hue. Peppered throughout were darker layers of tea and spices, and the whole thing carried an exotic air of mysterious, far-away lands. Treasure like this was surely smuggled and secret, sold in questionable shadows for crazy sums of money. Somehow, every year around Christmas, we came into a jar of it, and we would sparingly measure out spoonfuls of it into hot water for cups of tea that would see us through the wicked winter.
As with so many “exotic” memories of childhood, the reality would prove much more humble (see also ‘Green Beans Exotic’ as made with Velveeta). This ‘Russian’ tea mix was made mostly from… wait for it… Tang.
Yup. Years later, I discovered its genesis when Suzie presented a collection of classic Ko holiday recipes. There was the Russian tea, and the first ingredient was Tang – a good 2 cups of it – followed by instant tea mix. The rare recipe to which I’d attributed such a storied tale found its origin in some astronaut juice that peaked in the 70’s and 80’s. Still, nostalgia is a powerful thing, so when I found the recipe again I decided to give it a modern-day whirl to see how it stood up to the memory and time.
It turns out they still make Tang – in the powdered drink section of the supermarket no less (though you may have to dust it off, as I did). When I was checking out the cashier commented that he hadn’t seen Tang in years. To combat such a relic, I switched in some Chai for the instant tea, added the requisite all-spice, ground cloves and cinnamon, then swirled it together as puffs of Tang dust filled the air. I funneled it all into a glass jar as a gift for Suzie, then stole a couple of spoonfuls just to try it.
It was just as I remembered it.
All that’s missing now is a jar of Turkey Joints.
Regarding your Ugly Christmas Sweater: it’s the ‘Christmas’ that sets it apart from your other sweaters, right?
Now accepting recommendations for holiday movies. Here’s my current list, which runs the gamut:
Some of these I watch faithfully every year, some of them I only visit once in a great while. I’m always looking for new suggestions. (You’ll also notice a few glaring omissions, so if you have a compelling reason for me to revisit ‘It’s A Wonderful Life’ or ‘Miracle on 34th Street’ I’m open to hearing it.)