by Janis Susan
May/Janis Patterson
This year the Christmas elves have morphed into malign
gremlins, entangling me in strings of tinsel and lights and sending me crashing
flat on my face. I try not to post just one essay to both my first Wednesday
blogs, preferring to do two different posts on two different subjects, but this
time I really have no choice. You see, I forgot. It is now almost half an hour
after they should have gone up online, and I am sitting desperately writing in
a dark cold office while every other creature in the house is contentedly
sleeping, including The Husband.
I do have good excuses/reasons – many of them. Christmas
shopping. Out of town family come to visit. Self-indulgently, parties. A couple
of meetings that could not be missed. Two hard deadlines breathing fire down my
neck – one to finish a book, the other to finish edits. A chronic physical
health problem flaring up, as usual at the most inconvenient time. And, perhaps
the most annoying of all, this is our seventh week of having no internet at
home, meaning that I will be breakfasting at my favorite internet café as soon
as it opens in order to get this posted. I really don’t know whether to go
‘sigh’ or ‘grrrr.’ Or both.
As I have said before, do not marry an overly-analytical
man. It does get ugly.
So now what shall I say to redeem myself? Nothing, because
the forgetting of such a long-standing and treasured responsibility is
unacceptable. Hand to heart, I promise to be better.
With any luck at all, all our Christmas shopping will be
done this week. Except for my own present, I do all the shopping for the
family, but I have been known to have to buy my own occasionally. In both The
Husband’s and my families we only give token gifts as we are all blessed with
what we really need, but the list is long and it is hard to find even tokens
that are not outrageously expensive. As I lurch from store to store, happily
shrinking list and traumatized credit card in hand, it is a painful mental
gymnastic to think of something appropriate to give each individual. I predict
that the gift-card people will be getting most if not all of our business this
year.
So, dear reader, the hour is wee, the office is cold, and I
am tired. Again, I beg your pardon for such culpable behavior, do promise to be
better, and wish each and every one of you a very Merry Christmas!
(And if you see a couple of elves with sinister expressions
carrying ropes of tinsel and lights, please don’t tell them that you’ve seen
me!)
A post I'm sure many will relate to, Janis Susan. I hope you eventually got some sleep - and may your Christmas be calm as well as merry!
ReplyDeleteMerry Christmas to you, too, Janis - and a blessed, peaceful New Year.
ReplyDeleteJanis, I'm proud of you for getting words into the blog post! This time of year is horrible busy, not counting the "normal" deadlines we writers must cope with. Congratulations for doing a post uploaded and have a wonderful Christmas season.
ReplyDelete