Festive cheer by Bill Kirton
Oh yes, once again it’s Festivities Time – fun,
feasts, frolics, and lots of other things beginning with ‘f’. So I’m allowing myself a wee festive aside. Mari Biella has already offered her reactions to it all, so this is a sort of counterpoint to hers.
First, though, let’s leave kids out of the equation. Christmas for them is different. Never mind that the Star of Bethlehem doesn’t move nearly as fast as the flashes from their magnums as they play the kindergarten equivalent of Grand Theft Auto – there are sparkly things everywhere, a huge tree is suddenly growing and twinkling inside the house and the fat guy with the red gear and the latest PS4s and IPads is on his way. A curmudgeonly cynic like myself is less impressed with it all but I’m genuinely pleased that it makes kids happy.
First, though, let’s leave kids out of the equation. Christmas for them is different. Never mind that the Star of Bethlehem doesn’t move nearly as fast as the flashes from their magnums as they play the kindergarten equivalent of Grand Theft Auto – there are sparkly things everywhere, a huge tree is suddenly growing and twinkling inside the house and the fat guy with the red gear and the latest PS4s and IPads is on his way. A curmudgeonly cynic like myself is less impressed with it all but I’m genuinely pleased that it makes kids happy.
But this isn’t about the kids’ Christmas (or the
Christmas for genuine believers which, again, I acknowledge is something
different and something special). This is about Christmas for heathens such as
me and even those heathens who still pay lip-service to the notion that it’s
somehow connected with a religious faith.
I used to get angry about the whole thing – all the
enforced
jollity, the contagion of Santa’s ‘Ho-ho-ho’. I found it sad that
people were nice to one another just because it was Christmas and couldn’t see
that it would be good to be like that right through the year. Why not be happy,
caring and ho-ho-ho-ish because it’s Tuesday or October or late afternoon? I
didn’t like the profits made from crap goods that wouldn’t even last until
bedtime. I couldn’t see the point of sending a card to someone ‘because they’d sent
one to me’. I was the guy wandering amongst all the ever-so-jolly adverts,
listening to George Michael, Wizzard and Slade belting out their singalongs in
all the shops and muttering ‘Bah humbug’ at every opportunity. I was the pre-ghosts Scrooge minus his miserliness. (In fact, one December, as I was walking into a
store, a complete stranger said to me ‘Cheer up, it’ll soon be over’.)
Then, lo, it came to pass (many years ago,
actually) that the scales fell from my eyes and I realised what I’d known all
along – that it’s actually the festival of Godot.
Waiting for Godot is about all sorts of things. It’s bleak and yet
very funny, simultaneously theatrical and anti-theatrical, and it sums up
marvellously how we live our lives. I really do want everyone who reads this (and everyone else, for that matter), to
have a wonderful, happy time, so I won’t stress (well, not much, anyway) the
essential self-deception of waiting for something which never happens, but, for me at least, that’s what makes Christmas really interesting. The anticipation begins earlier and earlier each year
– and that’s marvellous, because there’s a feeling of direction, purpose, a
reason to do particular things. The excitement and magic is a daily experience,
through late October, November, December. Great! Terrific! My 'inner 6-year-old' (© Mari Biella) loves it.
The mistake is to assume it’s building up TO
something. It’s not. Nothing could match the build-up, so Christmas Day
arrives, then goes. And almost at once the newspapers start including
supplements about summer holidays. Philip Larkin’s poem Next, Please is a powerful evocation of our fascinating Waiting for Godot lives and, although it’s not about Christmas, it does
encapsulate the season.
I’d love to quote all of it but I won’t because for
an unbeliever its truth may seem uncomfortable, and for a believer it would
make no sense. Its opening lines set the tone:
Always too
eager for the future, we
Pick up bad habits of expectancy.
Something is always approaching; every day
Till then we say,
Watching from a bluff the tiny, clear
Sparkling armada of promises draw near.
Pick up bad habits of expectancy.
Something is always approaching; every day
Till then we say,
Watching from a bluff the tiny, clear
Sparkling armada of promises draw near.
But, of course:
it never
anchors; it's
No sooner present than it turns to past.
No sooner present than it turns to past.
And no, I’m not just being a miserable old bugger.
I’m having a good time (despite the opinion of that stranger). I like the
excitement, the gaudiness, the superficial impression that everything’s OK
really. I love the wonder in the faces of the younger kids and secretly applaud
the naked, smiling acquisitiveness of the older ones who’ve learned how to work
the system. And I actually think it’s a shame that, in the USA, political
correctness has emasculated the bluff, complex cheer of ‘Merry Christmas’ and
substituted for it the bland ‘Happy Holidays’.
But I really, really do want everyone (of all
faiths or none) to have a great time. So Happy Christmas to all, and Happy
Tuesdays, Happy Octobers, Happy late afternoons.
Comments
Discuss
And a merry xbox to you too, you old curmudgeon
Have a happy Christmas anyway, and a happy whatever-time-it-may-be (and thanks for the mention!)
Jan, I've no idea what you're on about.
Fran, the other favourite quote which might be appropriate here is the Browning one about 'a man's reach should exceed his grasp'.
Mari, I'm all for getting pleasure out of the anticipation and even the let-down.