by G. E. Shuman
When I was a child, and when you were
a child, summers seemed to last forever. Tell me if I'm wrong. A
school year was painfully long, but summer break made up for it all.
Each warm month off seemed like a year in itself, or seemed, at
least, long enough so that, as we played in the sun, September was not even a thought until only days
before it arrived. Also, in those days, holidays were things strung
loosely together, separated by nearly endless weeks and countless
days. The distance between Memorial Day and Christmas Day was
nothing that any of us even tried to measure. Our lives were just
beginning, and a year was much longer to us then, than it is now. I
have often wondered if this all may have actually been only because
one year was such a large percentage of time, in relation to the
total time that we had lived, as children. I'm not sure if that is
true, but each passing year seems to confirm it more to me. I think
of that idea again now, as we have just survived another Christmas
season, and are right at the beginning of a brand new year.
New years are special. Slates are
wiped clean, resolutions are made, and we all seem to have that “out
with the old, in with the new” mindset. If there is anything I
like, (as Grinchy as this sounds,) it is a clean slate, along with a
newly-undecorated, uncluttered, 'UN-Christmas-ed' house at the first
of the year.
If you would tolerate my armchair
philosophizing one more time, for the last time before the big ball
falls in the Big Apple, (Unless you are reading this on January first
of after. Then, I guess, it's the first time.) I will return to my
theory of why holidays, especially Christmas's, seem to happen right
on top of each other these days. Firstly, I'm beginning to think,
as each year passes, that a year simply isn't a very long period of
time. Most days seem to turn to night before I accomplish half of
what I had intended to do that day, and a week is only seven of those
short, twenty-four hour failures to fully accomplish. Then, if we do
those short weeks a little over four times we have blown through a
whole month already, and only twelve months brings the earth one full
circle around the sun, and brings us right back from one Christmas
Day to the next. (There is something slightly sickening, to me, in
that last statement.) I really do think that all of this 'time
travel' seems to take place for us faster and faster, as each of
these short years becomes a smaller and smaller portion of the total
time we have survived on this planet. Here's a 'travel and time
travel' example of what I mean. For years, our family dreaded our
long trips over to Central Maine, to visit relatives, because the car
rides were so long. Then one year we drove to Florida and back, and
later made another trip to Maine. That Maine trip seemed to fly by,
simply because of the longevity of the recent trip south.
Everything, including time, (Thank you Mr. Einstein.) really does
seem to be relative, even when you're going to visit relatives.
Also, at least as far as the Christmas
holiday is concerned, we are our own worst enemies in making it seem
to be eternally here, or at least right around the corner. I made my
living, for many years, operating department stores. Although it is
probably different now, in those days Christmas merchandise was
ordered in February, and began arriving in the stores the following
August. Some companies actually had certain areas of their stores
reserved for only two purposes; Christmas trees, and barbecue grills.
As soon as Christmas ended the grills went up; by the time the kids
entered school in the fall, the trees went up. For us managers,
Christmas was nearly a year-round event. That fact, sadly, nearly
ruined many perfectly good Christmas Days for me. It's better for me
now, but the stores we visit are still all set for Christmas by
Halloween, complete with advertising and music, and many of us begin
buying red and green before the days of orange and black have even
passed. So, we have then reduced those twelve short months between
Christmas's to only nine, and, although lots of things can happen in
nine months, I don't think the celebration of Christmas should be one
of them.
As I end this column, I am tempted to
suggest that the answer to the problem of rapidly-repeating holidays
is careful planning. In reflection, I suspect that it is actually in
planning to be not quite so careful. As far as Christmas goes, I
think we should spend less time making a list and checking it twice
with the results of filling our closets with gifts before the
Thanksgiving turkey has even been stuffed, and more time pondering
the real reason we celebrate Christmas Day at all. As Ebeneezer
Scrooge eventually learned, we should keep Christmas every day, but
in our hearts... not so much in our minds and shopping carts.
This new year, if I were to make any
resolution, it would be to simplify my life, to help others more, to
enjoy each season exactly as it comes, and to refuse to rush the next
one. It would be to let tomorrow be the only thing that is right
around the corner. Happy New Year!
1 comment:
I think your theory is a valid one. I had wondered if part of the reason time seems to travel by faster and faster was because of busyness and trying to keep schedules. But after talking to people who are retired and have no set schedules, I have concluded it has to be more than that, so your theory sounds more reasonable.
I'm looking to simplify my life a bit more, too, although I am trying to beautify our home a bit more for Christmas. It seems to be one of the ways to help keep the Christmas spirit for at least my daughter and me. I am grateful for grandchildren who also bring simple excitement and enjoyment with them, not only at Christmas, but all year long.
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