Tomorrow is
Mother’s Day, and so far I’ve spent the day:
1) fielding early morning phone
calls from my youngest son who was headed out of town (to a spot where he’d
have spotty cell coverage), but wanted to tell me he loved me and wish me a
Happy Mother’s Day
2) confirming reservations for our 40th
anniversary trip to Italy next month (!)
3) taking down the Christmas
tree.
Yeah, you read
that right. It’s the first week in May and my tree is still up.
Now in my
defense, it’s an artificial tree, and I’ve had the lights unplugged since the
end of January. It’s been wrapped in sheets since March, just waiting for
someone to carry it down to the basement—which was supposed to happen when my
family was all here for Easter, but that plan was abandoned amidst the glitter
once the egg-dying marathon began.
So my once-beautiful
tree has been standing in my living room, shrouded by sheets, and making me
feel like a neglectful homemaker for months now. But today, I decided it needed to be put away—at least for a
few months before it reappears once again, probably over Thanksgiving
weekend.
So why, after
months of silence on this blog, did I decide that my greatly belated tree
un-decorating needed to be memorialized in words? Frankly, I’m not sure.
While I was
removing the ornaments, I was noticing patterns among them—their progression;
first, handmade (by me) and dated (I’m big on keeping track of dates), to
handmade (by my children) and tragically undated, with their specific creators left
to my slightly unreliable memory. Then there are the themed ornaments—musical instruments
which paid homage to my childhood inspirations, Santas and snowmen, gingerbread
men and Nutcrackers (I collected these for years, so there are MANY). Then
there are the collections of wicker bells, gold stars, and tiny silver baskets
(really! I thought they’d be adorable filled with candies on the tree, but it
only took my first grandchild to convince me that anything that encouraged a
small child to reach for and remove things from a Christmas tree was a ridiculous idea.
The remaining baskets have been empty ever since—much to the consternation of my
youngest grandchildren).
Those of
you who know me know that I am slightly obsessed with trivial details. I celebrate obscure
anniversaries and traditions, and remember the minutiae of long-forgotten events or dates. I’m a word nut
who hoards books, letters, cards, and the mound of “great quotes” tacked on my
bulletin board.
But mostly, I
am a romantic idealist who is a sucker for a story.
And today, I was
struck by the stories held within the various objects that up until an hour ago
had been hanging—somewhat embarrassingly—on my definitely past-date Christmas
tree.
Contained
within those objects—now sorted-by-theme or material of construction, and laying
in piles on my dining room table—I rediscovered the tales of a brand-new family
trying to reinvent the magical Christmases of their childhoods, and the young mother
who proudly hung silver macaroni-covered stars, created by her children. I read
the story of a budding artist who wove visual leitmotifs throughout her annual creation,
and pursued those visions through glass, wood, resin—and plastic.
As I removed nearly
a lifetime’s collection of ornaments from that artificial tree in my living
room, I listened to their melodies, and counter-melodies, and felt the wordless
rhythms of the lives that have been lived out in this house for over 39 years
now—and I couldn’t help but smile.
Monday, May 2,
2016 was the 39th anniversary of the day that my husband and I moved
into this house. That morning, I awoke to brilliant sunshine and a keen awareness
that I have inhabited the same space on this planet for almost 2/3 of my life.
May
2, 1977 was also a Monday—but it rained all day (so much for patterns).
Now, if you are
still with me after 700+ words, you are probably asking yourself, “Is there a
point here?”
That remains to
be seen. For the most part this is just a collection of my meandering thoughts
on Christmas ornaments, Mother’s Day phone calls, houses, and the continuity of
life we somehow find in all of them.
For six years
now, I’ve greatly missed being able to call my mother on Mother’s Day, but at
least I get to talk to my own kids (sometimes they even visit).
I’ve been
collecting Christmas ornaments for 40 years, beginning with the set my aunt
brought me from Germany as a wedding gift. They told the story of a marriage,
she told me, and I treasured them for years until I passed them on to my
daughter-in-law almost 15 years ago, the Christmas before she married my oldest
son.
For 39 years, I’ve
walked the rooms of this house. At first, without a history of my own, I wondered
over the lives of the strangers who had walked them before me. But now that my
own memories crowd every room, I think instead of dangling my hand over the
side of the bed to comfort a new puppy sleeping in a box and spending her first
night away from her mother, of hovering in doorways watching my babies sleep,
or standing in the kitchen talking to my mother on the wall phone with the
extra-long cord. I reminisce over backyard birthday parties, mud soccer and
bike jumps, Chinese birthday feast shared sitting on the floor around the living
room coffee table, Mother’s Day pancakes, and laughing till I cried as a friend
played Christmas carols on our piano with the broken soundboard. Our first
wedding anniversary was celebrated here—as well as the vow renewal ceremony we
held for our 25th.
In this house,
I’ve met good news and bad. Elation and tragedy. The inescapable stuff of life.
The things that
make up my story.
So, for those
of you who are celebrating Mother’s Day tomorrow—whether for yourself or your
mother—I wish you a blissful day and another memory with which to build your
own story.
And thank you
for indulging my long-windedness. If you'll excuse me, I've got to get back to my tree...