Archive for December, 2007

Happy Hogmannay

My mother was not the world’s best or most enthusiastic housekeeper. I like to think, therefore, that I come by my own housekeeping aversion the honest way: genetically. However, it’s a Scottish tradition to get one’s house in tip-top shape before the New Year. It’s good luck. Or maybe it represents order in the year to come. Or something. Whatever it is, I usually spend the week between Christmas and New Year’s Eve getting my house sorted and in good shape.

Closets have been emptied and their contents whittled down into various piles for recycling or donating to charities. I have been ruthless in letting go of things I haven’t worn in more than a year, knick knacks that have no meaning and only gather dust, videotapes I haven’t watched since, well, anyone watched videotapes. It’s embarrassing to note how much stuff one owns, even after the paring back.

It’s also embarrassing how much cat hair can gather in corners, merge together in clumps under the bed as though trying to form a brand new kitten. But the corners are clean, the shelves dusted, my desk sorted, files filed. (The dining room looks like a garage sale exploded in it or as though we’re trying to open our own Goodwill, but that’s my compromise to not getting everything done and out of the house before midnight rolls around.)

Now Chris and I are settling in for the evening. There’s a fire working its way towards a roar. We’ve movies to watch, although it was pretty slim pickings by the time we hit the video store. And there’s a winter storm on the way, up to eight inches of snow tonight, with another two possible tomorrow. It is, in my estimation, a good way to spend New Year’s Eve. For some reason, ever since I was a little girl and we moved to the United States, I’ve found it a kind of melancholy occasion. No one does New Year’s Eve like the Scots, who call it Hogmannay.

In fact, as I write this, the bells are probably just ringing out across Glasgow. Folks are setting out first-footing, an old Scottish tradition in which you try to be the first one to step foot across someone’s doorstep in the New Year, bringing with you a gift of coal or wood (to bring warmth for the new year), something to drink and something to eat (promising plenty of sustenance for the year to come.) When I was little, my Grandpa was usually our first-footer and while my memories of it are pretty shaky, owing more perhaps to the retelling than to actual recollection, it brings up some very bittersweet feelings for times past, and a heavy dose of homesickness for a land that I haven’t called home since I was nine. I always think of Scotland and get weepy when I hear Auld Lang Syne, but not necessarily in a bad way. I think it’s always emotional to let go of the past and embrace new beginnings.

Thus, I wish all of you a safe and wonderful New Year’s Eve. But, especially, to my friends and loved ones in Scotland — know that I am thinking of you, wishing I was on the streets of Glasgow, watching as people throw open the windows on the Victorian sandstone tenements to let the old year out and the new one in. Happy Hogmannay!

1 comment December 31st, 2007

Operation Holiday Spirit: Last Gasp

Where have I been? WHERE have I been?

I have been performing the dazzling double-whammy of trying to whip my MFA application into shape AND prepare for Christmas. Since the former took priority over the latter, I wound up in a bit of a panicky funk towards the end. But the end is here. Today, the writing samples went in the mail. It’s up to the universe now. Or, you know, the reading commitee.

Now, we’re in the process of packing up the gifts and supplies and crap necessary for a Christmas in Indianapolis. We’re leaving in a couple of hours to my sister’s house, where we’ll spend the big day and, I hope, some fun time leading up to said event with the li’l ones. (Although they’re not so little anymore.)

My point is…I’m signing out for the holidays. Wishing you and yours a very happy holiday season, whatever you celebrate, however you spend it.

Add comment December 22nd, 2007

Operation Mandatory Holiday Spirit: In Progress

Although it feels like work and life are, at times, working hard against my holiday spirit endeavors, I’m managing to maintain a little. A progress check to behold:

121107 Xmas

Boxwood wreath from Ann Arbor Farmer’s Market, wrapped hastily in years-old ribbon and garland: check. (Total holiday spirit time investment: 12 minutes.)

121107 Xmas (4)

Four-foot cheapie fake silver tinsel tree from Target, pre-lit for us extra-lazy folk: check. (Total holiday spirit time investment: 30 minutes, not including drive time to pick up the damn thing after the website postponed my order shipping until January 8, which begs the question, why would ANYONE need a Christmas tree delivered January 8?)

121107 Xmas (7)

Pottery bowl filled with whatever ornaments were in the plastic tote, leftover from whenever we last put up a tree 700 years ago, to pass as holiday centerpiece: check. (Total holiday spirit time investment: 6 minutes.)

121107 Xmas (2)

Christmas cards addressed and sent — well, MOST of them addressed and sent — complete with A-dorable knitting themed holiday stamps: check. (Total holiday spirit time investment: one Law & Order SUV episode.)

121107 Xmas (6)

A flock of hand made embroidered birdy ornaments, some for our tree, some for gifts: check. (Total holiday spirit time investment: several movies and TV shows.)

121107 Xmas (3)

Old stockings dug out and new stockings sewn, hung by the chimney if not with care, then with minimal attention: check. (Total holiday spirit time investment: you don’t want to know; sewing cuffs on stockings was the bane of my existence.)

Not to mention, I have most of my Christmas shopping done! Which is all good, as we head to DC tomorrow where I will spend the week mostly hibernating and finishing up the writing for my MFA application. That puts us back in town on the 18th — just enough time to actually enjoy, worry free, some of the aforementioned holiday spirit.

Add comment December 11th, 2007


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