Thursday, December 22, 2016

ABOUT CHRISTMAS EVE 15 YEARS AGO




 For as long as I can remember, and most likely from the time I was born, I spent every Christmas Eve except one with my parents until they died, my mother in 1991 and my father in 1995. (in 1959 I spent Christmas in Santa Fe with college friends.)   With only one or two exceptions, this family tradition continued from the time my children were born until last year, my first Christmas Eve without any of the children.  It was only a matter of time before this lifelong tradition would give way to a newer order of family, but understanding the inevitable could not erase some of the sorrow and loneliness of that experience.

Shortly after Christmas, Patience and I visited Paducah KY, and in a matter of weeks made the decision to sell the practice and the farm and make Paducah our retirement destination.  In the months that followed the slow and inexorable process of letting go of place, friends, and so much of what has become familiar in our lives has been at work, both at a conscious and unconscious level. Although I anticipated much of the change, I have been a little surprised by the nature of letting go of family.  I am feeling a sense of detachment from my children that is difficult to explain...certainly not a lessening of my love or my commitment, but a feeling that we are all moving into a new stage in our relationship.  It is one where the bonds that hold us together as a family are now longer, looser, and more flexible (but no less resilient), allowing us all to move freely in the directions of our choice. 

As a result of all of this I no longer expect Christmas Eve to be a gathering of all our children, though I have not given up hope that it can be.   If circumstances allow us to be together (This year we shared the evening with Sara and Dave and Beth and her family) then that is an appreciated bonus.  If we find ourselves scattered, that is OK, a sign of our family's evolution and maturity and the birth of new primary families.

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