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Jeff Berryman's Blog
Updated: 12/21/04; 9:28:59 AM.

  Leaving Ruin

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Friday, December 17, 2004


    Wise Shopping

    Christmas consumerism causes me all kinds of "cognitive dissonance." From the greedy impulse that leaps toward the object of desire (keep me out of all Mac stores), to the strange, lucid revelation that I will never be able to get the right amount of right Christmas gifts (I can neither afford nor find them), to the sudden insight that, of course, these presents are meant to somehow symbolize the love we have for the recepient (what if they can't read the symbol system I subscribe to?), the experience of Christmas shopping (or any other gifting, for that matter) swings me from moments of hopeful ecstasy to depressed resignation.

    I like stuff as much as the next guy - growing up, my sister and I yearly made contests of counting presents. But somehow this year, as I walk the aisles of department stores and boutique specialty shops, periodically grabbing lattes to calm the nerves, I can't help but wonder at the strangeness of it all. The choice of gifts is overwhelming: miles of dresses, skirts, shirts, sweaters, shoes, socks, electronics, exotic foods, houseware glass and appliances, games, entertainments of all kinds, books, books, books....

    What's the cultural comment here? I don't know, just questions: I wonder what Christmas mornings are really like in the homes across America? The kids tear into the packages, the adults open their smaller ones, brothers and sisters try on new clothes. Toys squeak and doink, new computers boot up, the lucky get the keys the big-bowed Lexus out front. Some will have to settle for a hug and a roof over their heads, and some, not even that.

    Do we get the symbols? Do we receive the love offered? Maybe it's offered well, maybe not. Maybe it's the thought that counts, and maybe we haven't thought too much about it. But whatever's given, whatever broken offering's being unwrapped just now, do we take the giving into the privacy of our hearts, pausing at some point to just look across the room at the loved one taking pleasure in it, the gift given, hoping somehow (Dear God) they get the message we're tossing out there? And do we ever ask (Dear God) Providence to help our little exchange of love along? Or pray, "Thanks?"

    Do you ever wish for a wise man experience? I do. It seems simpler somehow, deeper, though longer and harder, too. To travel all those miles, all those days and nights, hunting for just one recipient, carrying a gift that somehow represents all the love you have, all the hope inside you? Seeking, seeking, meditating on the one to receive the gift, the one that sits under a star, in the buried heart of the world?

    But then, to have that kind of Christmas, I guess we'd have to be wise...

    11:12:15 PM    comment []  


    Snakes and Drains

    The man who sold me the 15 ft. snake yesterday told me (no, not that kind of snake - the kind you run through clogged pipes) to tell my wife and children to leave the house for a few hours because they would not want to hear what I would end up calling the thing before the day was over. Fortunately, I didn't swear as much as he predicted, and after a long day of snaking, making various and sundry calls to God, and eating (Krispe Kreams: a far better coping mechanism that swearing), I finally dragged the water hose through the living room to try and blast the clog with water pressure.

    What finally did it? Who knows...all I know is that we can use the sink again.

    Other daily notes:

    The Berryman Theatrical Society strikes again. Amy got cast in Roosevelt High School's Winter production of "The Children's Hour" by Lillian Hellman as Martha, and on the same call sheet saw that she had also been cast in the musical "Once Upon a Mattress." She will playing the role of Lady Larkin. Daniel will also be in the musical, performing in the ensemble - which, I'm told, is a big deal since he's "only" a freshman.

    Mom arrived (shopping begins in earnest), Daniel discovered he's supposed to wear his retainer (just got braces off) 24/7 for a year (not happy), and it looks like the afternoon may find the Berrymans browsing Christmas tree lots.

    Christmas may yet be merry...

    7:33:02 AM    comment []  


© Copyright 2004 Jeff Berryman .



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