A few of my acquaintances have suggested that, as a heathen, I have
no place celebrating Christmas and, probably because its expected of me,
I usually ramble on about how the intrusion of religion into a long
established orgy of consumption and consumerism does indeed threaten to
water down its magic.
Be that as it may, we like Christmas round here and we always put
decorations up. We're almost always late with this, and so a week or so
before the big day I'll be dispatched to the attic with a flaming torch
and a ball of string to ensure I can find my way back to collect the
series of mouldering cardboard boxes in which we have stored a motley
collection of tinsel and baubles collected over a period of a number of
years. I'll also bring down the lights, and the tree. Its an artificial
tree, by the way, we don't actually have pine plantation in the loft,
though I have found ivy forcing its way inside in the past. Shame it
wasn't holly really.
Those lights... oh how glad I am that LEDs have taken the place of those
malicious little filament bulbs we used to have. It was inevitable,
wasn't it, that the first time I plugged in the string of 52,000 bulbs
each year I'd be rewarded with... nothing. One of the evil little
buggers would have blown during the eleven and a half months during
which they had absolutely nothing to do but sit there. Then I'd spend
two hours searching for your spares - which always turned out to be at
the back of a cutlery drawer which I'd already searched three times,
lacerating myself badly in the process. Finally, I'd spend what felt
like a lifetime swapping each bulb in the string for a new one until I
found the culprit before, with bleeding fingers and terminal cramp, I
could move on to erecting the tree itself.
Our tree has a 'base' which despite its innocuous appearance, has
clearly been constructed from a parts left over after an explosion in a
garden shears and spring factory. It has also, at some point, been
gifted with a vicious personality, presumably by a disgruntled voodoo
practitioner. One wrong move, one lapse in concentration, and I'm off to
casualty with a bag full of fingers.
Finally, the tree's up, and the lights are on. Now for the tinsel.
Which would, in times past, be on the dog. Our tree is 5 feet tall and,
unsurprisingly perhaps, green. Our dog is three feet tall, near enough,
and yellow. How the kids could mistake the one for the other, without
fail, every year, is beyond me. But they managed. The thing is, the dog
seemed to like being decorated and would quite strenuously resist any
efforts to untangle him from his shiny accessories.
Finally, it would be bauble time. Again, there is much to be thankful
for now that these are made of plastic. Until recently these would be
little balls of blown glass, one of which would invariably escape only
to be trodden on almost immediately with predictable and painful
consequences.
So there I'd sit, utterly exhausted, sadly trying to pick tiny shards of
broken ornamental glass from the sole of my foot with my teeth -
because my right hand would be a mass of bandages under which the
fingers had been superglued back on by a nurse, and my left had swollen
to twice it's size having been bitten by a disgruntled golden retriever.
Eventually, it'd all be done, and be time for my reward - a dip into the
brightly coloured tin of chocolates that I brought home from the
supermarket not two hours previously. This is where I'd discover that
the kids, immediately after their adventures in canine tinsel
festoonery, had eaten every last bloody chocolate in the house, and the
exciting rattle in the tin would be explained by the fact that they'd
thrown all of the wrappers back in, along with a solitary half eaten
coffee/butterscotch surprise, which would have been weighed, measured,
licked and found wanting.
But this is all in the past. The LED lights don't go out, except as a
feature of the exciting electronic sequence they're programmed with. Age
and familiarity has tamed the tree base to the point where I'm lucky to
get it to grip the tree itself, and we have three dogs - too much
trouble for the kids to decorate them, so they don't bother. They still
eat all of the sweets, though.
Except I think we may have found a solution to that last problem in the
shape of one miraculous box of choccies given to Mrs Grumbler by her
sister. That's right - a collection of tasty soft centres; dark, milk
and white chocolate, all lovingly filled with creamy ganache by a lady
called Ann Summers, and totally impervious to the kids. The simple fact
is that each of these delicate little treats is shaped like a little
"meat and two veg". Yup, confectioners "wedding tackle". The embodiment
of the "wife's best friend" in, er, "the wife's best friend".
So, I can guarantee the availability of chocolate at all times next
Christmas by the simple expedient of buying a box or two of chocolate
Willies. They join Brussels Sprouts on the very small list of things my
kids wont eat..
Thing is, though, neither will I...
Lights, tinsel and chocolate what??? (story only artificial, not true)
oliveinx
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