I am convinced there is a third or maybe fourth thread running through this time of year. The first is the birth of Christ which, for better or worse, has receded in terms of importance for most people. The second is the bacchanal of spending - the fear that you have spent too much or not enough or that the toys or pants will not suit the child or will be mocked in the playground. To my mine there is a cure for the first: get some religion of not. Either you will take to the story or you will not but make the call. For the second, all I can say is get some spine. We buy less for the kids than others but it has always been so. There is a small theme of austerity in all the largess in a Scots family Christmas, the time of excess coming later at Hogmanay just after New Years Eve has passed. The third may be the sadness and badness that happens at times like this of social pressure - if the wheels are going to come off, you can bet this is when it will come to pass. What can be done for that?
After all these, however, there is Yule. The winterfest. The longest night. Yesterday marching the seven year old through downtown shops with a list, past the new outdoor skating rinks, a Victorian choir singing carols and even a trumpeter on Princess Street, me handing her loonies to put in those outstretched hands and also treats for her own, it was about the merry - the merriness of a shared holiday. Summer holidays are the slackest time, when laying down in public space is an activity to be planned. But Yule is collective as, even if you are not gifting or not remembering, you are at half speed except in retail. My family was in retail and fifteen years ago this day I would be pushing the poinsettias, flogging packets of holly but even at that all minds on the back side of the counter were aiming towards the days of nothing when naps and sherry sips and, yes, one more small sideplate of that would be nice. All a big reward for something or other never needing being quite defined.

Comments
Mike - December 18, 2005 11:08 am
I love Christmas, but I'm not religious. I'm not 'anti-religion' either, though I'm not sure my treatment of Christmas makes it into the 'spiritual' category. I try to bring your first and fourth points together and celebrate the beautiful Christmas story as a symbol of the birth (and strengthening) of human compassion, both in me and in others; the longest night, but also the week in the year when the days start to get longer, the birth of light and hope in the year, the birth of it in me, etc. I try to think of it that way, anyway. And just partaking in the collective merriness, as you say.
Alan - December 18, 2005 11:22 am
I suspect you and I are wee Campbellite pagans at heart. It would be interesting to know more about the mid-winter celebrations in the homeland circa 1600 or so. I have heard that the McLeods only began with the Gaelic after that point, still pretty much working in old Norse. I wonder how much of Odin and Thor (and all the other Marvel Comics characters) were being toasted in the longhouses.
Arthur - December 18, 2005 11:32 am
Odin and Thor
Isn't that a movie with the title song by Alanis?
Arthur - December 18, 2005 11:36 am
On a serious note: when I entered this country 5 years ago, I was shocked when I actually experienced the Christmas madness in North America. I have mixed feelings about this, naturally.
GR - December 18, 2005 7:33 pm
It is easy to imagine Alan's ancestors in the cold and wet, wearing skirts.