I don’t know about anyone else, but this Monday after the holiday weekend still finds me in turkey malaise and sweet potato pie recovery. Yep, over-did it, what can I say? Did that big cook for waaay too many people, LOL, but I was blessed to be able to do it. Now is that small window of a breather between Thanksgiving and the onset of the big holidays. So now it’s off to CVS to get more holiday lights, figure out how we’re gonna do the family Pollyanna, and all things crazy, LOL!
But I had an elderly Aunt say it best… she said that even though folks get on our nerves, family is wild and crazy and has issues, to her — most of all — the holidays (whichever one you celebrate) represented a time when everybody got together for a happy occasion versus a sad one. She made me reflect as I was hustling a 30 lb. bird to the table with a runner in front of me to shoo little kids out of the way of a too-hot rack (my cousin hollering, “Coming through hot!†BIG SMILE)… seemed that the older I got, the more funerals we were attending, instead of birthday celebrations, weddings, christenings, and the like—with an occasional family reunion added in there for good measure. Now it seemed that the only time my people all came in from far flung places was to say goodbye to the dearly departed. Not this year.
This year we all talked about it and decided to change the paradigm of sadness and to invest as much in fun times as we do in sad times (time-wise, that is.) My cousins all agreed, maaan, it takes work to keep kit & kin close, just like it does any other relationship… and the dynamics are no less challenging. However, the laughs when we all looked back, like drunk Uncle so-and-so sleeping it off on the sofa, Aunt whose-her-name arriving with a dish nobody can stand, swearing she can cook, and wanting her offering placed front and center so that everyone HAD to take a little on their plate, (LOL!), not to mention Auntie such&such who was the busy-body but wouldn’t wash a dish to save her life and arrives always as “the diva†to be waited on till we fuss her out, ha ha ha… OMG, this is the stuff of family legends and oral history. We had it as a rich tapestry growing up, and yet when all of my cousins and I looked around, we were allowing that to go by-the-by. We had to take ownership of the fact that, maybe our parents didn’t feel like it either, but they did it. Now it was our turn, and it wasn’t until we tried to pick up the mantle that we truly appreciated what that meant, the sacrifice it contained, and the responsibility they’d shouldered for years in end. Wow. I was blown away. We all laughed about that, suddenly realizing, DANG—we were the parents and older Aunties now. It was quite a profound realization.
My question was—when did that major shift happen? When did I get to be “Madea†for my family, and my other cousin get to be “Big Momma,†and when did “cousin who shall remain nameless†get to be “drunk Uncle sleeping it off in a chair watching football?†When did another couple of “not to be named in public†cousins get to be those Aunties that got talked about by the kids because they couldn’t cook, or didn’t help with the dishes, or droned on about mess the teens didn’t feel like hearing, ha ha ha! Or when did those Uncles get to be the one’s the kids fell out laughing about due to antics that only Uncles can provide?
It is all so weird when the baton gets passed. Thirty adults and ten little kids whizzing by being told they’d “get it†if they didn’t stop running, LOL… plus about 10 teenagers (since they brought boyfriends and girlfriends in from college) – they somehow became me and me and my older cousins became our parents… and the cycle of life continued. It was surreal. But in that, we were also blessed to have this big, crazy, dysfunctional family.
Now I can more clearly see my characters coming to life in every story…. Uh-huh… got the younger, cool Uncle, got the one who will say anything to anybody at any time, got the one who hits the liquor cabinet as soon as he walks in the door, got the philosophy brother Uncle who pours libations and we’ve gotta have a dual prayer to bless the food because he doesn’t believe in Thanksgiving (it’s a Westernized colonial thang that represents oppression, yada, yada, yada) and eats vegan green while making teenagers who ain’t trying to hear it be down with some science, LOL—Oh, the tales!… got the ready-to-fight Aunt, the cool Aunt, the good cooking little Momma Aunt, the “get on your last nerve†Aunt… the list goes on, BIG SMILE. I saw the VHL Compound unfold right before my eyes and knew that the characters live on, even as this last book was penned, because they came right out of my environment and heart.
So I can only say that I wish you and your family a fantastic Holiday Season… and hope that you had a blast watching the drama and contrast of family. It is always a trip!
Much Love & Light… Leslie!
Tags: family, holidays, humor, post-Thanksgiving
I was just thinking about how the best part of Thanksgiving was spending time with family and how rarely I make time for that anymore. It should definitely be a priority on all of our lists of new year’s resolutions to spend more positive time with our families.
Monica Marie Jones
Author
http://www.monicamariejones.com
Thank you for sharing your thoughts on this. I think you DO have to work harder to stay connected to the living as we get older. Otherwise, you’ll find out more who died instead of who’s living.
I admire your family, I come from a small family, but my husband comes from a large one and spending holidays with his family is wonderful. Kinda like you described in your most recent post – it sure makes it interesting when you have people from different backgrounds come together.
Well, I gotta go back to reading “The Damned”. I treated myself over this holiday because I skipped one of the books in the VHL series and I just COULDN’T do that! **laughing**
Blessings to you and your family
Jade
twitter name Jadebellydancer
Wow! You just walked me back down memory lane with the family members. When I was growing up the holiday dinners were the highlights of the year. Earlier this year I had a long, overdue family dinner after I realized how much I missed those special times with family. The kids are all grown and live out of state, but I vowed to squeeze in at least several dinners in the coming year. Yes, I had the small kids running through with greasy hands while I tried steering them back to the table, and a few toasted adults blabbing on and on about nothing interesting. But honestly… I loved every minute. It made me realize just how important family really is.
Thank you for sharing and have a happy, blessed holiday season with your family.
Patricia A. Bridewell
http://www.patriciabridewell.com
Happy Holidays Everyone!!!
I hope everyone had a great Turkey Day. The food down south was mind blowing. I had to tell my mother that next year we just need to bring a dish b/c we all bring 4 and a pie or sweet. We ate twice just to taste new stuff that we could not fit on our plate. LOL I know u guys don’t have to say and just think we all get to do it again this month.
L.A. OMG my English IV and Creative Writing class wants me to tell you hello. They can’t believe that u blog or email us. One of the girls in Creative writing love Myers character Edward (if she sees this she is gong to say “my Edward is real”)I her told if she loves Edward wait till she reads Minion and get introduced to Carlos. I am just gonna sit back and laugh when she asks me that age old question “What happens next?” got’em hook line and sinker!!
Have a great Holiday season Everyone remember to breathe while you are in line at the store, and if they are out buy it online!!
Marquita
OMG!! Leslie your family sounds sooo much like mine. I come from a very large family and all the cousins grew up together. But since the passing of my aunt over 20 yrs ago there was a void in the family. Your right we only got together for the sad times. But as of the last 2 years another aunt decided that this had to stop. So every holiday and even some in between Sundays, all the cousins and aunts and uncles are at her home eating and cuttin up like there is no tomorrow. I’m glad you had a great Thanksgiving with your family. Family is very important. The funny thing too is while I was at my aunts I could see the whole compound personalities come forth. Thank you always for your insight. God Bless.
OK Leslie you sure we ain’t related? God knows if I didn’t know any better I could swear we were in the same place. FAMILY! you gotta love’em. I soooo feel you on how the younger generation starts to let things slide. You just made me make up my mind. I’m gonna start a bulletin for my family. That way when some stuff go down, everyone will know. I think I will start by getting up as many names, addresses, and phone numbers as I can and collecting info on a monthly basis and just putting it in a newsletter or online for the web savvy. I am glad you enjoyed your thanksgiving and hope that you enjoy the rest of your holidays even more.
Much love….Z