Showing posts with label dog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dog. Show all posts

Sunday, January 28, 2024

Christmas Passed

2023 ended with our least harmonious family Christmas ever. We were all tired and irritable. Conflict erupted repeatedly then finally at a level that so shook the dynamic that the rest of the celebrations were aborted. Christmas 2023, in all likelihood, marks the end of my attempts to curate a Kodak Christmas experience. I’m sixty seven, my husband is seventy two, and we have two adult children and no grandkids…  There is something a little forced about painstakingly decorating a tree (actually a conifer branch from the garden), preparing a perfectly stuffed and roasted turkey and recreating our mother’s ‘traditional’ ice cream Marsala cheesecake each December.

It is well known that the pressure to create an atmosphere of ‘comfort and joy’ for the festive season is at odds with how many people are actually feeling. There is also the tension between those who want to ‘put the Christ back in Christmas’ and atheists like us who cite Yule or, more appropriately for the Southern Hemisphere, the solstice, as the ‘reason for the season’. I went through a phase of eschewing all ceremony and ritual… that is the reason I didn’t go to my first uni graduation and delayed marriage for so long. I do now see, and have for a long time seen, value in coming together to celebrate, but maybe the cause has to be more personally relevant than the mixture of commercialism and sentiment that marks Christmas.

Until we lost my mother-in-law, and my husband’s family dispersed, our Christmas Day was always marked by trying to please both our families. To do this we would have lunch with my husband’s and dinner with mine and end up exhausted.  Once, before the kids were born, we tried asking both lots of relatives to our place for lunch with catering assistance from a friend who was a chef. He did a glazed ham and a pastry cornucopia with hors d'oeuvres spilling from it presented on an upturned mirror. It was more like a hotel function (the context for his training) than a family Christmas and the two groups didn’t mix readily either. I was so fretful that I got more exhausted than our usual shuttle Christmas had left me.

The Christmas dilemma took on new proportions in 1999 when my mother, declining with terminal cancer, was set to come out of hospital to spend the holiday with the family. Instead we got a call in the early hours of Christmas Eve to say she had died. The kids were little so we went – numbly - through the Christmas Day motions. It felt as if we were all treading water until the funeral could be arranged. Some kind friends invited us to spend New Year’s Eve with them in Newcastle, a welcome escape from the rawness and publicness of processing Mum’s death. My husband took the kids down to see the fireworks heralding the new millennium.  I retreated to bed.

The first Christmas after Mum died none of us could face organising a get together. We accepted an invitation from the same chef friend who’d helped us with that attempt at combining families. Needless to say, his catering was stylish but the whole affair felt hollow, adult-centric and overly steeped in alcohol. I missed my sisters and the children were bored and missed their cousins. After that the younger of my two sisters and her newish husband graciously took on the role of hosting for a few years. We became semi successful in balancing our sadness at the anniversary of Mum’s death with enjoying one another’s company and providing fun for the children.  Then that sister moved away for work eventually settling in Tasmania and generally spent Christmas with friends.

It was around then that we started hosting regularly. We always had a real tree whose decorations included remnants of my  mother-in-law’s collection dating back to the 1960s and our own accumulation of many years featuring felt kangaroos and koalas with little bells, a painted toilet roll and tissue ‘candle’ our daughter made at kindergarten, glass baubles, little wooden figurines and various arty trinkets we’d collected over the years. Some of this collection has succumbed to natural attrition but more recently it has been depleted by successive puppies. My other sister, her husband and kids and my grown up niece and her boyfriend usually joined us. When that sister and her husband separated, her two boys went to live with him and his new partner leaving my sister as a full-time single parent and carer for a daughter with severe disabilities. The first Christmas after their split, either through misunderstanding or bloody mindedness, her ex didn’t deliver the boys to our family gathering. A series of increasingly angry and desperate phone exchanges took place, then, furious and distraught, she took her daughter and went home.

We have tried a few times to dispense with all the Christmas palaver. In 2012 we booked a holiday at a farm stay place in Bemboka on the state’s south coast. Our eldest elected not to come so that cast a bit of a pall from the start. We did however have the company of our beloved family dog, whose cautious encounter with a billy goat provided one of the trip’s high points. Others were catching up with old friends in Tanja and visiting Potoroo Palace, a native animal reserve later threatened by and temporarily evacuated during the south coast bushfires. Christmas lunch was to be at a seafood restaurant in Merimbula a short drive from our accommodation. Despite confirming our reservation twice in the preceding months, we arrived to find the place closed. With the local club booked out, we ended up eating at a Malaysian restaurant, one of the few businesses open. The proprietors created a festive mood by draping a potted Dracaena with tinsel and impaling our desserts with little Aussie flags.  Afterwards we walked under sullen skies around the lake along a path of terracotta pavers many incised with decorative designs, some commemorating local identities and businesses. Merimbula followers (if I have any), who is Bernie ‘Poostain’?  His name is forever etched in my memory.

For our next attempt the following year we chose an Italian restaurant in Lugarno that did honour its Christmas lunch reservations. My sister and her daughter joined us and things were a little hairy on our arrival when my niece let out a series of excited shrieks. However, the family-oriented Italian restaurateurs were good natured and reassuring and she soon settled down.  I remember it being a reasonably successful if not overtly festive occasion. That may have been wishful thinking on my part as my sister has since told me she remained tense throughout and I see, looking at photos from the day, that our son was face down on the table at one point, not from inebriation but to avoid his father’s camera.

The first Christmas after our tree change to Wagga Wagga, when to my delight both my sisters came, sans spouse and offspring but with dogs, to our new home, should have gone swimmingly. In fact the swimming pool was a godsend both as respite from the heat and because it proved a useful way to wear out the largest dog. However the mix of four dogs and three cats, most of which were not used to sharing their domiciles, caused chaos. We had to erect a kiddy gate to stop the biggest dog stealing from the kitchen and dining table and all the visiting dogs chased our cats. It was an ambitious experiment that worked best only when we decamped to the Botanical Gardens to give the mutts some exercise and the cats a break. Everyone’s mental health was challenged and the visit was cut short, albeit not as acrimoniously as happened this Christmas just passed.

It is tempting to think we were just all emotionally wrung out. During 2023 my best friend died, my husband’s middle brother died, followed just 5 months later by his wife, our artist friend of over 50 years died, and our 12 month old kelpie pup was fatally hit by a car.  Our first Christmas both as retirees, the time pressure imposed on us to prepare and host was lessened. However our kids were under their own strains, one arrived from Sydney fighting off a virus and spent a lot of time sleeping and the other was preoccupied with work and rental issues. One of my sisters now lives locally but only had two hours between work shifts to spend with us on Christmas Day. This constellation of factors perhaps didn’t provide the best backdrop for tree decorating, turkey preparation and commemorative cheesecake production or for civilized human interaction, but it would be disingenuous to tell myself we hadn’t been here before.

Time to change course.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Love Me, Love My Dog

I have had the statement 'founding member of Sisters of Disorganisation book group' as a proud part of my blog profile for over 4 years. I have just deleted that as my book group imploded rather spectacularly this week!

Perhaps the fact that the group formed over a mutual love of dogs, not reading, should have sounded a warning note. Yes, that's right, women who met walking our dogs in the local park (or 'parc' to use the creative spelling favoured by one of our number), decided to form a book group.

Isabel Allende's The Sum of Our Days gave us our name, but disorganisation, it turns out, was the least of our worries.  Our main problems were, as they were for Isabel's family, usurped democracy, coup d'etat and exile (luckily we have so far stopped short of assassination).

Our foundation members were two scientists, one full-time carer, a librarian, an accountant/administrator and two public servants. Later both scientists left - one amicably and the other under a cloud (read on); an ex-school principal, a caterer and a training consultant joined progressively over our last 3 years.

Forming, storming, norming, performing, adjourning (sometimes 'mourning' is added) are the well known stages in the life cycle of groups first articulated by psychologist Bruce Wayne Tuckman in the 1960s. We could add fawning, damning, commandeering and interfering (and a word that means speaking on another's behalf without even considering what that person might think or feel, if there is a homophonic half rhyme that means that).


Above: Dog lovers ate my peace of mind!  

We had a constitution of sorts, a list of questions to address (sourced partly from Oprah so quite possibly hexed!) and our meetings were roughly monthly at the home of a 'sister'. Our meetings were great, food and alcohol fuelled fun for quite a while. The first instances of disharmony emerged in our 2nd year over skinny dipping, dog minding, sexual anecdotes and a lawn mower. I agree, as literary controversies go, they are not really up there with the Ern Malley hoax or the 'Hitler' Diaries!  

This is what occurred:  
  • A pious sister had a rural property where she invited two more earthy sisters to stay and where they took off all their clothes and swam in the creek - the neighbours may have seen, or heard about it, or suspected. Not on. 
  • A kindly sister had an informal doggy day care arrangement with another sister but found the rambunctious behaviour of the minded mutt stressful so asked to be released from the arrangement. Inconvenient and resented.
  • Two frisky sisters started playing the singles scene and reporting on their conquests to the rest of the group. A monogamous, a widowed, a polite and the more book-minded sisters weren't impressed. Censure and accusations of prudery and of curtailing free speech ensued.  
  • A lawn-mower owning sister moved to a house with no grass and left her lawn mower with another sister then thought better of it, or disputed that it was a gift, or who knows... and retrieved it to give to another sister, in the first sister's absence, by breaking into her shed. Accusations of betrayal and trespass aired in indiscreet emails to all sisters. 
The first 3 issues we managed without too much fuss, loss of face or loss of membership but the last led to a schism whereby the temporary owner of the lawn mower was 'expelled' by some angry sisters. Not all sisters liked this move.

So the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil had been tasted. We continued to meet regularly, to eat and drink lots and to read and discuss some interesting books. Among them, Nam Le's The Boat, Christos Tsoulakis's The Slap, Cormac McCarthy's The Road and several whose titles did not begin with the definite article, such as Geraldine Brooks's Caleb's Crossing and Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland

Time marched on. One member had 2 babies and moved away. One member had two admissions to hospital for her dangerously low weight (never actually acknowledged as bulimia/anorexia). One member had two workplace grievances lodged against her and changed jobs twice. The dating members introduced beaux to the group and dropped them in quick succession. One members' dogs died and were replaced. One member's Mum died and wasn't. One member was retrenched from her job. Then the latest round of ruptures happened:

  • A sister of strong views and forceful actions stated that she would 'take over' the scheduling of meetings and counting how many book choices each sister had made. Overly controlling? 
  • Rules about not choosing new releases (which are costly or hard to come by in libraries) or expecting anyone to read a book they had already read were relaxed without discussion. Nit-picking or fair enough? 
  • Partiality was shown and covert grumbling indulged in when it came to supporting sisters' extra curricular activities - school plays, market stalls, art exhibitions, trivia nights  etc. What price honesty and assertiveness?
  • The philosophical pronouncements of some sisters sat ill with others. Is it possible that everything may not be for the best in this maybe not the best of all possible worlds all the flippin' time? 
And lastly
  • A sister who has a male relative visiting from overseas in the latter half of the year asked us if he might join us at an upcoming meeting. Some agreed instantly, those who questioned including him on the grounds of gender and book-centredness were howled down.  Pedantry? Inhospitality? Failure to  realise that book group is 'so much more than a book group'? ( Hmm.. don't remember signing on to hero-worship someone I don't especially admire or to have others tell me who to invite to my house?)

You'll note I'm finding it harder to be amusing as the list goes on... And, oops,  I may have showed my hand in some of my comments. Suffice to say that after exchanging numerous heated emails and having an intense discussion that significantly ate into my time with my family we've decided to part company. I think I have learnt my lesson though. Next time I consider joining a book group I will definitely opt for cat lovers!