TREE TRIALS
Join me for a visit to Christmas past. Not that long ago. . .
|
One of our
cast of characters. |
It’s half past tree-decorating time. I have a collection of
beautiful and delicate heirloom ornaments handcrafted to celebrate joy and
reflect the beauty of the Christmas season.
In a box in the basement.
Why?
Because nothing says Here Comes Santa Claus like shards of
memories and broken glass scattered across the living room Oriental to impale
the toes of random passers-by on their way to the kitchen for a snack. And with
centuries of experience, the reindeer are finicky about landing on a roof
that’s decorated in a festive pawprint motif. Santa is understandably anxious
about a house that decorates with broken balls.
A week ago, we decked the halls, shook out the tree
skirt, and festooned the boughs and branches of the well-worn, but guaranteed
to remain life-like, evergreen with symbols of good will toward men. The
evergreen that has a permanent, cat-shaped hole in the middle.
The next morning the tree exploded. I thought the star had
gone supernova.
A black ball of fangs and fur flew past in a cloud of
glitter and tinsel, and a tabby with a surprised and somewhat bewildered
expression catapulted from the center of the Christmas tree, ricocheted off the
La-Z-Boy, and careened into the hall, where it scattered laundry baskets like
bowling pins. The vacuum cleaner succumbed to a change in air pressure and
current and performed a magnificent backflip, neatly taking out a stack of
newly washed towels on an end table. A black and white furball with years of experience
grabbed a gold ball with a luminous snowflake pattern and headed downfield like
an Olympian about to score a gold medal goal.
The tree was shredded like a delicate interoffice
memorandum and teetered like a ballerina with sore feet before it crash-landed
on the hardwood floor.The Pit Bull, who is leery of the cats' shenanigans and
who learned emergency maneuvers during the last hurricane, hid under the coffee
table with his favorite knucklebone for rations.
But within minutes the tree was up and re-decorated
in its Christmas finery.
Its Christmas plastic finery.
In a move of inspiration and lightning-fast reaction
to a scene of destruction in our living room years ago, Bill rushed out and
snapped up all the dazzling, heirloom plastic ornaments that WalMart had to
offer.
Of course, our tree looks like the toddler aisle at
Toys R Us on Black Friday.
If our Christmas tree were a Muppet, it would be Miss
Piggy.
Where other homes have trees that reflect good taste and
tradition, our tree is a reflection of our life choices. We don’t have family
photos on our walls so much as mug shots.
Because sometimes Peace on Earth looks more like Earth in
Pieces. It just takes a little love to keep it all together.
And maybe some duct tape.
Hold your loved ones together with whatever it takes.
Merry Christmas!
No comments:
Post a Comment