Spare the change in the holidays, please
- Share via
I spent the last week of 2002 in Boulder, Colo. with my youngest
daughter, Debby, and my two grandsons Trevor and Trent. The timing
was a considerable break with tradition. So were a lot of other
circumstances of this visit, which set me to thinking about the
dynamics of change in human affairs and how we deal with them.
For many years, I have made an annual pilgrimage to Boulder during
the first week of December. The scenario was always the same, which
was exactly how I wanted it and seemed comfortable to the rest of my
daughter’s family, as well.
On the first evening of my visit, we would set out as a family on
the search for a Christmas tree, which I would always buy after much
internal wrangling over the best tree. The final decision would be
made by my daughter with the males usually in full retreat from the
whole lengthy business.
The evening would be spent in setting up the tree and stringing
lights. We would decorate it the next day and evening to the
accompaniment of Christmas music. Then I would spend the next few
days shopping, wrapping gifts and playing interminable board games
with my grandchildren, usually against a backdrop of snow outside and
torturous lectures about being good losers inside.
Change happened slowly those early years and it mostly involved
the children. Board games turned to basketball games in the driveway
in which no concessions were made for my girth or my age. Repeated
regular activities became near-religious events. Visits to feed the
ducks on a nearby pond with Trent, for example. Or squirming through
a forbidden fence with Trevor to feel the sensation of throwing a
football in the vast emptiness of the University of Colorado stadium.
Then, of course, came the inevitable sense of command performance
in the boys when we went tree shopping, and their disappearance to
teen-age activities speedily afterward. The house was frequently full
of young people, and the gifts changed from bats and gloves and balls
to technological items I didn’t understand and music that
reverberated in my eardrums. And, finally, came the absence of Trevor
at college during those early December dates.
Until this year, we muddled on through, recognizing change but
still denying it at the same time by wrapping it a little
uncomfortably in nostalgia, mounted in a frame of beneficent history.
Then Trent went off to college, and we could no longer look away from
the breadth of other changes that had taken place. It was time to
begin painting a new picture.
Trevor lives in San Francisco now, has an administrative job with
a local radio station, and could only get away for a few days at
Christmas. In two trips to South America to study Spanish, Trent had
fallen in love with a young lady in Paraguay and would use most of
his Christmas break to fly there before returning directly to college
in Washington, D.C. The Christmas gift most appealing to both of them
was money.
And so I came to Boulder the last week in the year because that
was the only time I could see the boys. The tree was bought, mounted
and decorated without either my help or my money. There was no snow.
My favorite Boulder restaurant -- the only place west of Indiana I’ve
found serving breaded pork tenderloin sandwiches -- was closed.
I had to catch time with my grandsons between conversations on
cellular phones, which now seem to be permanent attachments to the
arms and ears of young people. And there were a multitude of more
substantial changes I let wash over me this time in order to start a
new picture to mount beside the old one.
My daughter is a single mom, now, and handling that role with
strength and spirit. There is a new man in her life who is both warm
and gentle. I must make room on these visits to be sure to see
another man, who once helped pick out the Christmas trees and will
always hold a place in my heart. And my grandsons are dealing with a
different level of problems, more complex than ducks or footballs,
some of which they share with me. I can even be useful to Trent in
helping him improve the writing on his term papers.
So, as I write this flying home from Boulder, I am thinking about
the inevitability of change and how best to deal with it. Change is
resisted most powerfully by children and old people. In those stages
of life, I guess we find even an uneasy present preferable to an
unknown change.
But this is a counter-productive position to defend. It puts off
-- or, at least, mitigates -- risk. Adventures involve change, and
they are by nature risky. Banishing adventure -- even a small one
like a break in habit -- from life takes the larger risk of missing
out on some of the real juices that make life stimulating.
It also ignores an element of change that came home to me very
powerfully on this visit: that in the midst of change, I must not
forget that some things remain the same. Like love. And like the
escalloped potatoes and ham my daughter cooked for me because she
knows how much I like it.
That dish made it clear that even when the mix is different, some
of the basic ingredients don’t change. And for me, that recognition
turned out to be the most important thing to remember.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.