Friday, September 5, 2014

What Happens To Christmas

Sometimes the hardest thing to accept is the very thing you’ve spent weeks, months, or even years bracing yourself for.

You’ve worked to prepare yourself mentally so that when the news comes you’re able to maintain your composure no matter the setting.

You’ve fortified your heart so that when your mind is no longer up to the challenge it will step in and rescue you from yourself.

You’ve told yourself that her leaving is for the best because you know that asking her to stay, even if it’s just for a little while longer, is a selfish thing to do. Selfish, when you think about it, was just one of those things she didn’t even know how to be.

But then your mind starts to drift.

Did she know how much you loved her?

Of course she did, you tell yourself. And you believe it, for the most part.

Is she in Heaven?

You hope she is. You want her to be. But that’s an answer only Heaven knows which means there’s just one way to be certain and you’re not ready for that kind of certainty. Not yet.

You remember the denim footstools that she’d made out of juice cans more than a decade ago. It’s a weird idea, if you think about it. But weird is how genius finds a way to reveal itself to the world, and everyone who has ever seen those footstools has loved them. And now the one footstool has dried toothpaste on it because your son uses it to reach the sink when he brushes his teeth. Man that kid is messy.

She’d love, that even after all of these years, you’re still using them. She was big into homemade stuff things like the footstools. And blankets. And sugary goodies like caramel popcorn and peanut brittle.

Who’s going to make the peanut brittle, you wonder. And the noodles she made for holiday meals? You’ll never have homemade noodles like the ones she made ever again. Unless someone has the recipe. You hope someone has the recipe. And as you go through all the possibilities in your mind of who might have the recipe you realize that it won’t matter. Their noodles will not be her noodles. So you decide unless the noodles are spaghetti noodles you’ll never eat another noodle again.

Your Grandma the best spaghetti. It was a simple recipe, really, and yet you could never master it yourself. You vow not to eat spaghetti ever again, either. Which is good because you’ve put on more than a few pounds in the last year and have outgrown your best suit which is your best suit by default because it’s your only suit which means you have to hurry out and buy a next-best suit to wear when you help pull her out of the back of the hearse and carry her to her final resting spot before saying one last goodbye to her in a few days. But at least you don’t have to worry about finding a bag to match your shoes, so that’s good, right?

And as the years come and go through your thoughts you can’t shake the one question that seemingly haunts you: What happens to Christmas?

You sit for a long time letting that one sink in. The truth is that nothing happens to Christmas. But it’s not the kind of nothing that results from everything staying the same but the kind of nothing that happens when everything changes.

You want to scream “This isn’t fair!” but you know that cancer, like life, is anything but fair. Fair is an illusion you cling to when life does or does not work out in a way that benefits you, which isn’t an illusion she’d want you to have because selfish wasn’t one of those things she knew how to be, remember?