I Can't Believe It's Not Butter
Sorting through papers and notebooks, I found this would-be
Christmas Letter-one of 8 that I never sent.
Why weren’t they sent? Well, it’s
complicated, but this one made me smile.
Christmas letters typically do not contain the ugly, the brokenness of a
year, the trials, and failures. They
contain the shiny, the beautiful, and sometimes the nauseatingly paraphrased
lives of our loved ones, seemingly with no flaws, and no cobwebs in the corners. We have cobwebs here, and sometimes more.
Unsent letter #6, 12/26/11
I really thought that this year we’d be on time. OK, I hoped we would at least get them out, the cards. I fantasized about learning
to scan or download pictures in “the Letter.” I am writing low-tech on a notepad given as a stocking stuffer to my boys
last year, the chaff of Christmas past.
The Holiday season began with cleaning the hutch.
The kitchen has been under deconstruction
since last year. Two thirds of the floor
is torn up. The cupboards have been
stripped and repainted. A half wall seemingly
attached to the very foundation of our home was sledge-hammered out by my burly
and determined hubby.
We hired an
electrician and a plumber and moved, then replaced the (original to the house) broken
electric stove with a new one with gas burners--ooh aah. We also installed a plank ceiling to hide and hold up
the cracking plaster that had started to lose its battle with gravity.
Dust is everywhere, hence the hutch cleaning.
The silver was dingy, the crystal smudgy, the candle sticks
tilted awkwardly- perhaps from the earthquake in August, or perhaps from burly
guy and I pounding and scraping and cursing at the floor.
The somewhat brittle 50 year old linoleum 4
inch tiles pried off in pieces to expose a 1/8 inch layer of tar which had to be
melted with a heat gun, and then scraped off quickly while still hot. I am convinced we are headed toward cancer
due to the volatilized toxins from the tar.
Next is a layer of glue all swirly over the
virgin red oak floor. The glue was
removed using a stripper (of the chemical kind). After that I scrubbed the floor over and over
and over to remove the sticky slimy feeling of deconstruction. Someday, it will be lovely. Today it is not.
tarnished and smudged |
So…dust…hutch…and oh, what did I find during the deep clean?
I opened our smudgy tarnished silver
butter dish, an heirloom from my hubby’s grandmother, and what to my wondering
eyes did appear but a bright yellow rectangular object, without even a
smear. This bar of disturbingly bright
yellow matter did not smell and held its’ shape disturbingly well. I had two thoughts:
butter or margarine?
I reasoned that it had only been there since Easter, because
somehow, I thought that should make me feel better! No, I remembered we stopped eating margarine
from January through June when our youngest son went on a wheat, egg, soy, and
banana free diet. This was supposed to cure him of repetitive
behaviors, whining, and lapses in memory.
Instead he obsessed about the foods he couldn’t have, whined more, and I
lost my mind. Since margarine is made
with soy, it was banned.
That leaves
last Christmas and almost a year in limbo in the hutch.
The mass was not even compost worthy. I am a bit of a compost fanatic, but this was
more like plastic than food. Besides, the wonderful, deaf, and old Springer
that we adopted 3 years ago would absolutely consume it. Lyme disease almost killed Hannah this year, and
the plasticized margarine would be sure to do her in.
Aside from protecting our compost eating 3
dogs and 4 cats, we have to look out for our 18 chickens. Thankfully, the ducks stay out of the
compost, mainly because their waddling impedes their ability to climb the pile. It is comical to see them try.
The trash was the plastic yellow bar’s destiny, although, I
was curious enough to think, “What would it look like in another year?” How about 50 years? Could this be the inspiration for a time
capsule? I didn’t voice my thought,
because I knew that my sons and husband would insist on furthering the
experiment. I threw the mass in the
trash and returned to cleaning, wondering what else was lurking...
Forward to 2013:
shiny shiny |
It
is that time again for giving and receiving, but also for cleaning out,
sorting, and parting with bits of us that have lingered too long to be
useful. It’s odd how Winter’s light can
show the smudges everywhere. Perhaps
it’s simply the light of reflection that shows the wear and tear. It’s also the light of reflection that
reveals the sturdiness of a life, and the surety of all that is still
standing.
For us the light exposes a
still unfinished kitchen, and yet a marriage that pushes forward and enjoys the
projects even if they move slowly. We
see the lives of 2 teenaged boys who make us laugh, and spur us on to learn and
understand their worlds. My oldest son
has helped me understand how to import photos and upload documents. My youngest has helped me to be patient and
loving especially when I don’t understand.
"Mild He lay his glory by, born that man no more may die." |
Of course, the light of reflection steadily shows the unseen and
increases the value of it each year.
There are no smudges on God, no spots to clean. In His eyes, through the gift of an infant,
His precious Son, we are smudgeless as well.
smudge-proofing |
As long as we reflect on Him, we never lose our purpose, never get lost,
never turn into a plasticized version of the real thing, and never get tossed in
a trash can. And most importantly, if
we keep focused, nobody, including ourselves, will wonder what we are.
Merry Christmas!
I wish I could write a comment as eloquent and humorous as your stories. They are hold your sides from laughing funny, yet sweet and inspiring at the same time. How you marry those traits into story after story is pure magic and a true gift. Thank you for sharing your talents and brightening my day!
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