Christmas
Spirit Takes Precedence Over Christmas Season
By
Bud Focht
Hi,
my name is Bud and we had snow over the weekend. With the first snowfall of the
season, I’ve had a change of heart when it comes to beginning the Christmas
Season.
I
used to hate it when we no sooner changed the clocks in the fall and the stores
would start playing Christmas music and people in the neighborhood would start
putting up Christmas lights.
It
was always too soon for me.
It
ranked right up there with seeing Back-To-School sales in July newspapers when
I was trying to enjoy my boyhood summers.
Even
starting the Christmas Season on Black Friday used to bother me, when all I
wanted to try to do was digest turkey, stuffing, yams, peas, biscuits, ham, turkey,
sweet potatoes, string beans, corn bread, cranberry sauce, turkey, gravy, carrots,
mashed potatoes, pumpkin pie and turkey from the day before.
I
now know that my own ‘War on (the rush to) Christmas’ was because, with my work
schedule, I was never ready to deal with all of the commercialization of the
holiday. You know, having to fight the crowds to buy gifts, putting up tacky decorations
on the house, drinking way too much eggnog. Instead of putting me in the
Christmas Spirit, it was making me act like Ebenezer Grinch.
I
have a neighbor who lets everyone on our street know when to celebrate what.
October 1 the witches, jack-o-lanterns, fake grave stones and skeletons are in
place in the front yard. November 1 the giant turkeys and pilgrims inflate. And
on Black Friday, when everyone else in the neighborhood is either in a shopping
line or trying to find a parking spot at the mall, he is hanging his Christmas
lights.
When
I was growing up in a Catholic family in the 60s, taught by grade school nuns, the
Christmas season would begin with Advent, usually the first Sunday of December.
Four Sundays to prepare for the celebration of the birth of Christ.
We
believed Christmas was all about what Linus told Good Ol Charlie Brown. “And
there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch
over their flock by night. And, lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and
the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were so afraid. And the
angel said unto them, ‘Fear not, for behold, I bring you good tidings of great
joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of
David a Savior, which is Christ the Lord. And this shall be a sign unto you; Ye
shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.’ And
suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising
God, and saying, Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace, good will
toward men.”
I
still believe that, but I am afraid I have grown to know that the chronology doesn’t
work for December 25.
Santa
from the North Pole works well with the pagan winter solstice rituals and made
for a good time of year to kill a tree and give presents, but I am afraid
Biblical historians will tell you otherwise. All indications point to Jesus of
Nazareth, because of, among other reasons, shepherds being in the fields
watching their flocks, was actually born during late summer or early fall,
probably in September. That also coincides with the Biblical fact of Jesus
being born about six months after John the Baptist, who we know was born in the
spring, probably March.
Turns
out these days December 25 is just a good day for Jews to go out and eat
Chinese food before going to the movies.
Sorry.
That last paragraph or so sounded a little Bah Humbugish. Like the Scrooge that
Stole Christmas.
But
I’ve had a change of heart. And not a heart two sizes too small, like Scrooge. Or
was that the Grinch? I seem to be mixing my midwinter metaphors.
Now
that I am a caregiver 24 hours a day for my wife Terry, who is in the middle
stages of Early Onset Alzheimer’s Disease, I no longer have time for all of the
commercialization bullshit of the holiday. I can no longer afford to buy gifts. I don’t decorate.
I don’t even have time to get out to the store to pick up too much eggnog.
And
because I no longer do all of the running around, because I no longer deal with
all of the commercialized holiday bull, I now believe more in the miracle of
the Christmas Spirit, and look for it to arrive as soon as possible.
Because
the miracle of the Christmas Spirit is something we need to believe in, as Bill
Murray so eloquently said at the end of the movie Scrooged: “If you believe in
this spirit thing, the miracle will happen and then you'll want it to happen
again tomorrow. You won't be one of these bastards who says 'Christmas is once
a year and it's a fraud', it's NOT! It can happen every day, you've just got to
want that feeling. And if you like it and you want it, you'll get greedy for
it! You'll want it every day of your life and it can happen to you. I believe
in it now! I believe it's going to happen to me now! I'm ready for it! And it's
great! It's a good feeling, it's really better than I've felt in a long time.
I'm ready. Have a Merry Christmas, everybody.”
Like
I used to say to the coeds when I was in college, especially the hippie chicks,
“There isn’t enough love in this world, so maybe we should make a little.”
Love
and Peace and Joy, that is what the Christmas Spirit is all about.
Everybody
acts a little nicer when they have the Christmas Spirit. Like the way my wife
Terry used to act ALL the time.
Terry
was the meekest, most polite and good-hearted person I have ever met. There is
not a person alive or dead who ever met Terry and did not love her, did not
feel the peace and joy in her heart.
About
20 years ago Terry found a group of people who were very similar to her. She
joined their Bible Study group and was very happy. About three years ago her
diminished cognitive skills prevented her from following what was going on, so I
began taking her to their weekly meetings and one of their annual regional
conventions.
And at
that convention I Witnessed something extraordinary. At a convention attended
by close to 9,000 people, I saw a young mother go up to a perfect stranger and
say “Could you hold my baby while I use the restroom?” And when she returned
from the restroom there were three or four additional people, men and women, all
helping to entertain the baby until the young mother returned.
Now
how many of us would ever have the testicles to do something like that, and
feel in full confidence that everything would be all right?
Is
there a group you know of that if you went to their convention, you could do
that? The Democratic or Republican Conventions? Maybe the Teamsters?
If I
went to a ball game with 9,000 people I wouldn’t trust a stranger to hold my
beer, let alone my baby.
As I
said a few minutes ago I grew up Catholic.
But I don’t think I could even ask someone I didn’t know to hold my baby
in church while I used the little alter boy’s room.
In over
50 years of Church-going I witnessed too many times people smiling and shaking
hands with the sign of peace during Mass and 20 minutes later cutting each
other off trying to get out of the parking lot in order to get home to watch
the game or get a good seat at IHOP.
But
these people I Witnessed at that convention always seem to have the spirit that
some of us are only lucky enough to experience around the Christmas Season.
So now
I believe the longer we can experience “the miracle” of the Christmas Season,
Christmas Spirit, that Bill Murray spoke about, the better.
Let’s
start the Christmas Season, start spreading the Christmas Spirit, as soon as
possible.
How
about Christmas in July?
Until
next time, spread the Christmas Spirit, and don’t stop spreading it when you
take down the tacky Christmas decorations.
Bud