Family is the reality of our lives, we all have it, it is source of great nourishment and joy to some, an insoluble difficulty for others, a little of each for many. Family is the wellstone of love and pain, identity and loss, a complex brew, sometimes a nectar, sometimes a poison. The marketers who run our world love to invoke the Rockwellian notions of family at this time of the year, for most of us, these are images to make us feel we have fallen short.
Family can make us feel very good or very bad. I think family is rarely simple, I’d like to write a series on Surviving Our Families, it might be the raging bestseller I’ve always wished for. During the holidays, especially at Christmas, our struggles to be comfortable with our families, to find the right balance between honoring their place in our lives and moving beyond the traumas and conflicts and discomforts of living with them comes into focus. Some of us are showing our children how to make their way in the world, some of us are caring for aging and in-laws and parents. A few of us love it all and center our lives around family.
My own solution has always been to start making Spring around Christmas, to look for color and light, my nourishment and best medicine. Family is the dilemma I have never sorted out and never will. When I was a child, my sister and I loved Christmas and made it together, scouring local stores and shops for months for gifts, saving up our pennies, making cute things for our parents, Christmas was a beloved oasis in a bleak house, it was the brightest day of the year, usually the only one. It had a lot of meaning. My sister and I mean a lot to one another, we have not had a simple relationship, but we love and care for one another. That is enough sometimes.
When I fell apart a few years ago, my sister appeared out of the mists, she steadied me, helped me to save myself. That is the thing about family, I suppose, they are always there.
My family fell apart for various reasons, we have no shared our holidays for many years, we have all found our own families, made our own way, we are a strong and brave and determined tribe, life has not sunk any one of us yet. Maria and I share so many things, one of them is this struggle to figure out family. We have come to see that we are building a new family in our own lives, and we have come to see that we are family to one another, a miracle and a beautiful thing. Family can be about love and nourishment and support, after all. How lucky we are to see that, to find that.
This week, we are scrambling to get gifts for the people in our lives who matter to us – the list gets longer all the time. We are spending a quiet and simple Christmas together, no family, the two of us in our lives, in our home, with the animals of Bedlam Farm, with some close friends. Joy, joy, joy, and reflection and gratitude for our lives together. Then this weekend, something special, something different, we are going to travel to see my sister, spend a night in her home, enter her life, share ours. The circle turns, family is in our heads and hearts, in our imaginations, in our blood. I am happy about this Christmas, I have good stuff for Maria, hidden all over the house, we have people to see that we love, a new community we are happy to belong to.
I am open to finding the spirit of Christmas with my sister again, I think we are both looking for it.
Maria makes Spring every day, we make Spring together, even on days as gloomy and dour as this.
I will be making Spring all week.
To those whose families provide love and nourishment, blessings and blessings to you. To those for whom family can be a dark or painful thing this week, perhaps even one of loneliness or loss and suffering, my hope for you is the gift of Spring, the meaning for me of Christmas day.