Which philosopher was it who said, "if stare into the abyss long enough,
the abyss stares back into you"? Prolly Nietzsche or one those fun dour ones.
I get it's mostly a poetic way to say, " stop dwelling on the negative there,
Debbie Downer." But damn, it sure feels like we've been staring into the abyss
alllll weekend long. Sigh. Feisty Pants is actually doing much better. Better
enough that they are discussing paroling her soon. Which means she is also now
better enough to complain 24/7 about being tortured and imprisoned, umm, er, I
mean hospitalized.
So, hopefully, we will be home in time to have a somewhat
organized Christmas. And find the cat, who has escaped and is sulking under our
back porch because the only two humans he likes haven't been home since last
week. Maybe actually finish a cookie. Or wrap a gift. My in-laws will be doing
the holiday after the holiday, thank heavens, so I might actually be prepared by
then. (This is, at least, the lie I am telling myself.) My folks are used to me
and will just roll their eyes and think, "We'd knew she be all hurry up and
never done". Everyone else will have to roll with it if we show up in dirty
sweats with half made gifts, looking like refugees from some very smelly
disaster.
I used to try to still be as close as possible to whatever
passes for normal when Feisty Pants was younger. Foolish of me. I was tired
and over stressed and just made myself ( and everyone else around me) miserable
when I never met an impossible illusion of what I thought was organization.
Now, eff it. We try to show up. On time. And be somewhat reasonably
presentable. Preferably with no weird biological substances in our hair .
Doubly preferably with no one screaming. Triply preferably with none of the
screaming being aimed at me. Anything else is a fun goal but we make no
promises. And anyone who does not understand is just gonna have to deal with it
and/or suck it. I don't care which. This year my Christmas gift is having her
home and anything else is simply details. So if we are too messy, too loud, too
chaotic, too casual, just consider us the embodiment of Christmas present. The
children who accompanied that spirit were poor homeless waifs so we already look
the part.