Monday, November 27, 2006

Holiday Fog

The official start of the holiday season has always seemed a bit surreal to me. All those bright lights and obnoxious window displays, compelling you into a festive spirit. Giant inflatable snow-globes perched in front lawns, and small molded plastic santa sleighs (complete with the Rudolph leading the way) on rooftops while outside the sky is blue and the temperature hovers in the low 60's. Fake frost is sprayed on windows in an attempt to make LA seem more traditionally christmasy, even though the first xmas (if one is to believe the Bible) took place in a small, desert village near the sea. Seems if accuracy is important, the folks back east and up north would spray fake sand on their windows, and have giant, inflatable palm trees stuck on their lawns.

The leftover thanksgiving turkey is about finished (and what is left will probably go to the dogs tonight), and the malaise of a 4-day weekend again returns to the mundanity of a 5-day work week. Shopping for xmas gifts now looms as a threat about to be made carried out, and I still have to conjure up and create our xmas cards.

It’s finally time to wear a long-sleeve shirt, and my friends are talking about college football bowl match-ups.

This time of year has always made me a bit unsteady, as if some odd, omnipotent prankster was fucking with me just to see how I’d react to a lateral shift in normality. That feeling is tweaked even more this year, as an “uncle” of mine passed away last week. I use scare quotes because although he was not directly related to me (he was my mom’s sister’s husband’s sister’s husband), he was a fixture in my youth, and in the old country even indirect relationships are considered family.

The news wasn’t totally unexpected, as he was getting along in years, and was recently suffering from declining health. However, even if he were on total life support for a month, his passing would still have packed a pretty good wallop. I mean, no matter how prepared you think you are, a hard punch to the breadbasket is still pretty intense.

This is that odd limbo: the time between the death and the funeral, which adds even more surreality to an already disconcertingly unbalanced season. The funeral is when people get to say their final goodbyes and get closure. It makes the death both real and final. The priest mumbles, the family weeps, the coffin is lowered, and the ceremony is complete. This time, between the two events, is like an emotional version of Schroedinger’s box.

In the mean time, I keep going as always. I get frustrated at the traffic. I play with my dogs. I dread the thought of buying gifts. I try hard not to over-spice the marinara sauce. I silently mock the ignorance and arrogance of the geeks in the marketing department. But it’s all done in a bit more of a fog than is usual.

No wonder I like the summer more.

Ook ook

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sorry to hear about your uncle. I don't mind xmas season at all--I like the lights (the gaudier the better) and the kookies. Would be nice to have a few days of snow though!

Take care.

Anonymous said...

Fez-

Sorry to hear about your family's loss, glad to see that your brain remains uneaten.

Anonymous said...

My condolences - trudge on, mate.

Anonymous said...

Condolences to you and yours.

The Fez Monkey said...

Thanks for all the nice wishes.

This week or so has been very weird - above and beyond the normal holiday weirdness. Honestly, I never have adjusted to the whole juxtaposition of a winter wonderland on the Southern California landscape, and the almost hallucinogenic blinking lights and sounds does tend to drive me toward some Rain Man behavior at times.

Lukcily, as I remember things about my uncle, they seem to be all from my childhood, and so even though I already do miss him, I can't stop smiling. Just another aspect of the surreality of things.

Oh, and Joe, my brain would hardly make an hors d'oevre, much less a meal.

Did I spell that correctly?

Ook ook

Anonymous said...

I had a hard time with the lights and decor in FL this time of year...it's just not right when you were born and raised in the land of snow and pine trees. Seems to add to the superficiality of it all, doesn't it?
My thoughts are with you while you trod through the fog, remembering.

Deadman said...

"Did I spell that correctly?"

No.

"hors d'oeuvre"

Anonymous said...

"Did I spell that correctly?"

No.

"hors d'oeuvre"


You know, if you don't have a legitimate comment, perhaps it's best if you just STFU.

Anonymous said...

Nyah, Mark! My comment is "legitimate" and yours isn't. That's what you get for answering a question.

Deadman said...

"You know, if you don't have a legitimate comment, perhaps it's best if you just STFU."

Yassuh, Massuh. I's be shuttin' the fucks up raht now. Yassum, boss.

Thankee, boss. I's be good from now on, massuh. Yassum. Sho' nuff.

Anonymous said...

Sorry f_m. Thinking of you.


Lyn

Anonymous said...

* pulls the fezzy monkey onto her lap and pets him to sleep *

So sorry for your loss darling.

Also sorry for the fake xmas crap.

:(

come to Malaysia, we have lots of bummy putras. sometimes they cheer me up.