Christmas Eve

IMG_0251Again, at Christmas did we weave

The holly round the Christmas hearth;

The silent snow possessed  the earth,

And calmly fell our Christmas-eve.

 The yule-log sparkled keen with frost,

No wing of wind the region swept,

But over all things brooding slept

The quiet sense of something lost.

 Alfred Tennyson

Oh Christmas tree…

lucas tree

“Why oh why” grumbled Lucas, “Does our family tradition have to include getting the tree on the coldest frigging night of the year?” Minus 37 with the wind-chill – a new record.

A major hurdle has been negotiated and I am so proud of all of us.

Decorating a Christmas tree has always been my favorite part of the holiday season. Even when I was in high school and living at home on Ave J, I would drag a Charlie Brown tree home from Mayfair Hardware and decorate it with ornaments purchased at the Army and Navy store (some of which are still around). I was a tinsel user from way back until I met Greg who was not a big fan of the stuff (more conflict ensued as we discovered that I was a gentle draper of tinsel and he was a thrower of tinsel clumps.) But I stuck to my guns till the boys were old enough to have an opinion (“it looks stupid mom”) and I was out voted.

Once we moved into our home and had the advantage of a cathedral ceiling (allowing for very tall trees), and once the boys were born and became part of the annual tree decorating tradition, things got a little out of control. Gone were the days of my beloved Charlie Brown tree – replaced instead with manly monsters that had to be wrestled into the house and secured with additional bolts and strings to prevent them from tipping over and taking the house with them.

There was the year we tried a different tree vendor and discovered as we were setting up the tree that it had been sprayed with a sickly green colored fire retardant that had everyone breaking out in a rash and hives.

There was the year we bought the most perfectly shaped, perfectly colored blue/green beauty of a tree – only to discover that “trimmed” meant none of the branches actually had the strength to hold an ornament.

The best year ever though, was the year Greg dragged in a 12 foot monster, at least a foot of which bent over at the ceiling once we hammered it into the stand. “Are you sure it isn’t too big Clarke?” I asked. “No worries” said Greg as he cut the final string. Thwack. Thwack. Thwack. Children flew. Lamps were broken. Paintings were knocked off the wall. It was a pine scented, sap spraying Christmas explosion as the tree unfurled itself to its full 8 foot wingspan. The boys loved it! They slept under its branches every night that year and fondly referred to it as their “Christmas in the forest”.

This year finds us scaling back a bit – not quite to the Charlie Brown tree of my youth, but certainly smaller, easier to set up, less time to decorate. I have been dreading Christmas since the day Jordan died and   I honestly did not think I would be able to find the courage to even fetch the box that holds the decorations, let alone touch the ornaments that Jordan’s hands have touched so many times over the years.

But as December arrived I found myself wanting to provide Lucas with some sense of stability, some way to reassure all of us that we will make our way through. So we talked about it as a family and the tree was bought. And we survived.  We didn’t wallow, we reminisced and even laughed. I was determined to make Jordan part of it all, so we lit his candle and hung all the decorations that Jordan had made over the years. And we talked about the ornaments that represent special moments; like the Christmas we went to Disney World, the Christmas spent in a hut in the middle of the Abel Tasman trail in New Zealand, ornaments representing their favorite things, like hockey and soccer. And we found some joy in the remembrance of those priceless family moments.

I am well aware that I am still very much cushioned from reality. That some force is at work protecting me from the full pain of this unbearable loss. I like to imagine that it is Jordan’s gift to us – this ability to remember him and love him and take comfort from the familiar traditions we have always shared during this holiday season. But still, it is so very hard.

Small steps. Deep breaths.jordan

Reflecting on my parenting skills…

Lucas blue

It’s only now, as my youngest child has reached adulthood, that I am  finally able to assess the full impact of my parenting mistakes. And the good news that I want to share is that it doesn’t seem to have had any lasting negative effect. In fact, there is some evidence that my “mistakes” have actually resulted in positive outcomes.

I have spent countless hours over the years tormenting myself because I wasn’t like the other moms. You know the ones I mean. The ones who never raise their voice, who have never sworn in their child’s presence (nor… gasp… actually directed an invective at their child). Who have never grabbed them by the arm, shook them, and yes, I admit it, spanked them. Who’ve never had an out of body experience; watching and listening to themselves as they screamed at a decibel level that could peel paint off a wall.

Those mom’s also didn’t have toilets that would have looked at home in a service station. Or dust bunnies the size of a small country hiding under the fridge. They  never threw a fruit rollup at their kid on the way to a soccer game and counted it as a vegetable. Nor can they claim to be responsible for the huge profit margin  McDonald’s Restaurant realized during the boom years of 1991- 2003.

I am quite certain that somewhere in my neighborhood there were children who actually rose up quietly off the couch, brushed their teeth, said a prayer and quietly climbed into bed for a solid 10 hours of sleep each night. Whereas I seem to have spent most of my children’s lifetime rocking them to sleep, lying down with them till they (or more likely I) fell asleep, and dragging them kicking and screaming to the bedroom, confiscating flashlights, and threatening any number of punishments in an effort to get the lights out before 11 pm. (Mrs. Chartier, Lucas seems very tired in the afternoons. Yeah? Well maybe you could let him take a nap ’cause I give up trying to get him to go to bed).

I let them watch the Simpsons ’cause it was on at 5 pm and the TV was too far away from the kitchen where I was frantically putting supper together for me to monitor it. I let them watch Seinfeld every night for an entire summer because it came on at 1000 PM and for the first time in years they would cuddle up on the couch with me to watch and the boys would laugh together instead of punching each other out.

Because I worked, and especially because I worked at a job that I was passionate about but that periodically demanded a lot of time from me, I gave them what felt like too much independence. I was wracked with guilt because I felt they were on their own too much. And I know for certain that they were left alone at a younger age than many of their classmates.

So where are the positives?

They did their own laundry. They did housework (yes, they needed a list and usually some threat of violence but they both knew how to wield a vacuum). Lucas can cook anything from a full turkey dinner to a gourmet feast complete with a scratch made chocolate cake.

Yes, they were loud and annoying and they learned from the master how to raise their voices. But they also learned how to demand what they needed, to stick to their principles, to call people on bad behavior.

While I didn’t appreciate it when the fast wit and quick retorts were directed at me, the wry sense of humor they honed on Seinfeld and Simpson’s made them good company, interesting conversationalists and excellent debaters.

While I recognize that I was likely an even worse mother than usual when I was taking my Masters degree (as was their father when he took his) they seem to have grasped the value of education and that achieving goals requires hard work.

Lucas has successfully navigated his first semester in the College of Engineering. We had our concerns about him tackling school so soon after the death of his brother. And even more concerns when we discovered that he had a seven class load to manage. But he navigated his way through with his usual pragmatic ease and with all seven finals now complete, it does indeed appear that he has passed every class.

As I watched him study (holed up in his room, living in his PJ’s, rarely bathing) I was reminded of a weekend when he was about 9 or 10 and he had once again procrastinated on a major school assignment. I think I spent the entire weekend yelling at him. By 10 pm Sunday night I was completely finished with him. I pronounced that he was a lazy shit, grounded him for the rest of his life, told him I hoped he failed and stomped off to bed. Nice. Yet another parenting success story for my scrapbook. About an hour later he arrived at my bedside for a hug. Still damp and sweet smelling from the shower, he wrapped his arms around me and said “You know mom, the important thing is that I am done. It’s not like the prince rescues the princess from the fire breathing dragon two weeks in advance. He does it in the knick of time and it’s the fact that he does it that’s important”.

How did I get so blessed?

I still suffer too much guilt over my past parenting indiscretions to feel like I can take any credit for how well they both turned out. However I do take comfort in knowing that they seem to have turned out pretty perfect despite their mother’s failings.

The one true lesson I have learned? As long as you love them, really… the rest is insignificant.

The light of love

Joannes Phone 054 Joannes Phone 052

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We light these candles in memory of Jordan.

One candle to represent our grief.  The pain of losing you is intense; it reminds us of the depth of our love for you. 

One candle to represent our courage – to confront our sorrow, to comfort each other, to change our lives. 

One candle in your memory – the times we laughed, the times we cried, the times we were angry with each other, the silly things you did, the caring and joy you gave us. 

These candles are  the light of love.  As we enter this holiday season, we cherish the special place in our hearts that will always be reserved for you.  We thank you for the gift your living brought to each of us. 

We love you Jordan. 

Joannes Phone 062

A ribbon of light around the world…

This Sunday, December 8th, please consider taking a moment to light a candle in remembrance of Jordan and all the other young people who lost their lives this year. candlelightingThe Compassionate Friends Worldwide Candle Lighting unites family and friends around the globe in lighting candles for one hour to honor the memories of the sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, and grandchildren who left too soon. As candles are lit at 7:00 p.m. local time, hundreds of thousands of persons commemorate and honor the memory of all children gone too soon.

Now believed to be the largest mass candle lighting on the globe, the 17th annual Worldwide Candle Lighting, a gift to the bereavement community from The Compassionate Friends, creates a virtual 24-hour wave of light as it moves from time zone to time zone. Started in the United States in 1997 as a small internet observance, but has since swelled in numbers as word has spread throughout the world of the remembrance. Hundreds of formal candle lighting events are held and thousands of informal candle lightings are conducted in homes as families gather in quiet remembrance of children who have died, but will never be forgotten.

Thank you.