Things I'm Thinking About

Month: January 2016

My Holiday Recipe

The tree is down, the decorations are tucked away in their boxes in the garage, and the house has a clean, spare look.

During the holidays, the tree and the decorations fill up the empty spaces and push everything into cozy closeness. With lights twinkling and candles glowing, it’s festive and magical. There’s anticipation for our favorite traditions, and busy preparations for the big day. It feels like the whole year builds up to this glittering culmination of joy.

Like most families, we have the critical traditions that must happen for Christmas to be a success. The tree, the stockings, watching White Christmas, a candle-lit Christmas-eve service ending with the singing of Silent Night, opening gifts one at a time on Christmas morning, and certain once-a-year foods.

This year, Grandma’s Bow Knots were rolled out and fried, and the Peanut Blossoms and the Snow Balls were baked and lined up in pretty rows. We made the special Butter Horn dinner rolls, the scalloped potatoes, and–a new addition to Christmas dinner–macaroni and cheese. The Ginger Crinkles, all the pies, and the Chocolate Peanut Butter Balls were missing.

Fruit Bread, a recipe handed down from my Norwegian Great-Grandmother, which must be toasted and eaten during the gift-opening on Christmas morning, was the traditional recipe that turned out perfectly this year. Last year it was dry. This year, it was the way we all remember it.

You’d think I’d have it down by now, the recipe for holiday success.

After all the turkeys I’ve cooked, I still overcooked the Christmas bird this year (after undercooking the Thanksgiving bird). The tree, after 32 years of trees, was so far from straight that we had to prop one side of the stand up with two boards and hope it wouldn’t fall over. The lights on the tree were bright white instead of warm white, which, unfortunately, is very noticeable.

It wasn’t perfect. In the snug, dim evenings, and especially after a few sips of the traditional Stinger, it all looked beautiful anyway.  I relish the holiday moments when we are together, not for the the straightness of the tree or the variety on the cookie tray, but because we are sharing and laughing and enjoying each other.

After the new year, cozy evenings give way to bright winter days, and all I can see is spider webs crisscrossing the tree, brown, spiky needles on the floor, and dust collecting on the ornaments and the row of grimacing nutcracker dolls. The tree’s piney-green smell that was so fresh and woodsy now has a sharp edge to it, a mulch-like odor that I can’t ignore. The wise men, the shepherds and the holy family are all jostled out of position in the nativity scene, and the stockings sag empty from the mantle.

It’s all put away now, though. January is a clean slate.

Maybe this year, I’ll start my hand-made gift projects early enough to actually finish them. I can find some warm-white lights on clearance, and finally figure out a way to not spend the whole Christmas day in the kitchen. Maybe this year I’ll get my shopping done early, wrap the gifts as I buy them, and stick to my budget.

Maybe this year I’ll be able to follow that perfect recipe for holiday success. I probably won’t though; it just wouldn’t feel like our traditional Christmas.

Yoga at the Y

I went to yoga again today, and it is so good to be in that place. I’ve been a little more regular lately. Finally, I found a class that works for me. It starts right after the morning school drop-off, so I don’t have time to think about it and come up with reasons not to go. I’m already out. The only modification I have to make to my routine is putting on yoga pants instead of jeans.

As I make my way upstairs to the class, I can usually guess who is on their way to the same place. Some have yoga mats under their arms, some just seem like yoga people. One morning, a woman hurried up behind me, dodged around me up the stairs, and then cut in front of another woman to rush ahead–she must be late for something, I thought. Surely not yoga. As I trailed behind her, I realized she was going to my class. I guessed she had a favorite spot to set up her mat and  she needed to stake it out.

It’s a slightly funky but perfectly relaxed class, a reflection of the community here that I love. All types are here for Yoga 1–teens, young adults, middle-aged and old,  men and women, big and small, sweet and ornery. I’ve run into some friends there, a few that I’ve volunteered with at school and a woman I took a writing class with several yeas ago. We all settle on our mats, content to be here, now.

I feel comfortable here because I’m not the most anything. I’m not the oldest or the youngest, the biggest or the smallest, the best or the worst at the poses. Nobody is, because the biggest isn’t the oldest, the youngest isn’t the most accomplished at downward-facing dog, and we all move aside for the ornery ones.

It’s a big jumble of people just being themselves, so I can be too. No one is looking, no one is judging. If they are, they keep it to themselves, at least.

This class works for me because it starts a half hour after school starts, so I cannot be late. The Y is across the street from the school. There’s plenty of time to drop off my student, park and get to class.

I have a reputation for being relaxed about time; some might say I’m always running a little late. Not to yoga. I hate arriving late to the silent studio, stepping gingerly over mats and people, wedging my mat into a little space, and apologizing every time I bump hands or feet with my annoyed neighbors.

You may be wondering why I must be on time to yoga when I am casual about lateness in other areas of my life. Honestly, I am too. It’s not that I decide that it’s ok to be late to one thing and not another. I set out to keep a schedule, but I get side-tracked along the way.

Is it that it’s so noticeable in a class like that? Is is that I risk being turned away if there is no more space in the studio? Is it that secret ingredient, the one that has proven so elusive: motivation?

I’m motivated to not be embarrassed, to not arrive and be disappointed, to get a good spot on the floor. It’s not much, but it’s something to work with. If motivation can solidify into habit, I may be on to something.

There was an old woman there one day, and I watched her as she got her mat, blocks and blanket set up and went over to chat with the instructor. She was bent over and moving slowly, but she was in good spirits. I wondered how long she had been coming to yoga, if she had been relatively young and spry like me then. I hoped that I would be like her as I age–still going to yoga, still active, still sweet.

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