Editor’s Notebook
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Danette Goulet
When I was a child, holidays meant no school, my mother’s stuffing,
homemade pies, playing board games with my brother and four sisters and,
at Christmas, the deep and superficial joys of giving and receiving tons
of presents.
Ah, the good old days. Where did that simple bliss go?
These days, Thanksgiving usually means working although this year I’m
off and will celebrate the day by cooking for a trio of otherwise
helpless men.
Christmas is an expensive, tense time of flying cross-country bogged
down with countless bags filled with gifts for nieces and nephews, while
still needing to make it to another store for that one more thing before
the visit to family for a time that is always too short.
And yet, I love the holidays.
I am looking forward to Thanksgiving. There will be no traveling
involved, I don’t have to work, I have a small stack of board games
ready to go and I plan to gorge myself on my mother’s secret recipe
stuffing, which I will make.
Plus, no one will try to make me eat those horrible, orange sweet
potatoes because they will be absent from my feast.
Christmas is a different story.
The Christmas saga has begun already. In place of that excited
anticipation of youth, the build up to Christmas now is one of anxiety
and stress. Going online day after day to find a flight on Christmas eve
at an affordable rate, which in my gut I know will never happen.
I’ve begun talking to my mom with increasing frequency, as she calls
to see how the search is coming. All the while she says “just see what
you can do,” which means hurry up and find a ticket because I will be
very disappointed if you don’t make it, like that one year we don’t talk
about.
I’ll probably end up on a red eye flight to Boston Christmas eve, and
then be forced to take a bus out of the city to a station closer to my
parents house.
But, you know what? Once the nightmare journey is over, and I walk
into the house, which will smell like cooling pumpkin pie and that
stuffing cooking in the oven while being attacked by my adorable and
adoring nieces and nephews, I’ll remember exactly why I love the
holidays.
* DANETTE GOULET is the assistant city editor. She can be reached at
(714) 965-7170 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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