Protect Your Peace

Today’s Holidailies prompt requests advice for surviving the holiday season.

My best advice is to learn how to say “no.” So much of holiday stress comes from overcommitting. Yes, I’ll make the cookies. Yes, I’ll make something for the office pot luck. Yes, I’ll put up all the decorations. Yes, I’ll attend this…and that…and the other. Yes, I will put up with Auntie Mabel’s and Uncle George’s political/racist/sexist/homophobic rants and go to their house for the sake of keeping peace.

There’s no law saying you have to do all of that. There’s no law saying you have to sacrifice your own enjoyment of the season by running yourself ragged and spending time with people you find ghastly.

On that last point, the last time I spent Christmas Day with anyone other than myself (and Inigo, when he was alive), it was with an ex-boyfriend’s family. Several members of his family irritated me and seemed to get off on trying to be offensive and push people’s buttons. For example, one of the cousins and I don’t eat meat. Their way of expressing their opinion about that was to wave turkey legs in our faces on Thanksgiving. Real juvenile stuff.

On this particular Christmas, in 2013, Barack Obama was in his second term as President and some people in that family didn’t like him, including my ex’s father. Someone in my ex’s family—probably his mother or someone else who was on my Facebook at the time and saw me celebrate something Obama did—VERY IDIOTICALLY told him I had voted for Obama. Now, see, for the first few years of the relationship, I actually liked my ex-boyfriend’s father: Like his son, he told funny stories about the jail where they both worked. He had a dry wit and interesting hobbies, and he and his wife loved to collect all kinds of antiques and collectibles that they picked up at estate sales and painstakingly organized throughout their home and in the basement.

Unfortunately, once he found out I voted for Obama, every time I saw the guy, it was “your boy did this” and “your boy did that.” I had managed to tune him out for a while, either ignoring his digs or saying things like “I’m so liberal, I believe you’re entitled to your opinion.” Then slowly but surely, the hate started to come out. It was always there, to hear my ex-boyfriend tell it, but now his father and other people in that family felt neither compunction nor allegience to good manners and it became pretty apparent that there were a lot of racists and homophobes among them. Not all, as some of the cousins were pretty cool, and more than one confessed to finding the bigots annoying. They appeared to be in the minority howver, and of course the bigots would have shouted them down or even targeted them if they said anything.

And this Christmas the bigots were in rare form, especially my ex’s mother’s brother and my ex’s father. They stopped shy of using the N-word outright, but they didn’t have to say it. It was there in their undertone. Unfortunately, my ex and I were seated between them so I was hearing it in stereo. Better yet, my ex had told me he voted for Obama both times, yet his family didn’t know. (Looking back on it, and the general lack of integrity he revealed to me over the last couple of years of the relationship, he might have been lying to me. I’ll never know.) So there I was, 47 years old, kneeing my 37-year-old boyfriend under the table to try to get him to tell his family to lay off. Finally I said, “Yeah, well, your son voted for him, too,” which got me both a bug-eyed glare from my ex and kneed under the table myself. So I kneed my ex even harder, like, “Then tell them to shut the hell UP!”

No balls, that guy. It was his mother who put a hand up and said, “TOM” and he reined it in.

Until everyone else went home but my ex, my ex’s brother, my ex’s brother’s girlfriend of a couple of months, and me. Then O Holy Night, what diatribes we were subjected to. I don’t even want to share what he said here. It was beyond vicious. It was also malicious and aggressive toward the brother’s new girlfriend. She was a vet tech and this guy told a story of how my ex-boyfriend’s pet gerbil had some kind of growth over his eye, so he put it in a shoebox, took it out to the backyard, and shot up the shoebox. The poor thing wasn’t dead when he opened the box, which he described in detail, so then he shot at it directly. Why on EARTH would someone tell that story in front of a newcomer he KNEW was a vet tech? Not only was I incredulous at the whole nasty display of cruelty, myself, when I searched her face, I saw there were tears in her eyes. Needless to say, she broke up with my ex’s brother shortly after that.

If I had only been dating my ex for a couple of months, I’d have been out of there, too. I already had seven years in, though, and my ex lived far enough away from his parents that they couldn’t just drop in and ruin a date night.

I did, however, refuse to see them again after that. About a month later, they invited my ex and me over for dinner after my ex and I had a dental appointment near their house. I had told my ex repeatedly that I wasn’t up for going, both because I tend to feel sore and don’t want to eat after dental appointmens, and because, frankly, I didn’t feel comfortable around them if his father was going to behave that way. My ex relayed none of this to them (see? no balls). Then he was nearly an hour late picking me up for the appointment, whereupon he told me we WERE going to his parents’ house afterward. As I was already weary of his various and sundry other crappy behaviors and in that place where a woman thinks “if I’m going to be alone in a relationship, I’d rather just be alone,” and come on, if you know me at all, you’d know that I will not be coerced, forced, or otherwise dragged anywhere because a man says so, I don’t care WHO he is, that was the end of that relationship.

Looking back on it now, and having spent the last six years writing about mental health and neurological conditions, I have more than a sneaking suspicion that my ex’s father’s behavior had to do with his health. He had been recently diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease and both the condition and the medications for it can be disinhibiting. My ex’s parents may have been feeling bad about the whole thing and were trying to make it up to me, too, as apparently they picked up some of my father’s artwork to gift to me. I didn’t know that at the time, though. All I knew was that I didn’t want to be subjected to another string of epithets and invective.

And if that’s what you might be facing this holiday season, you don’t need to subject yourself to it, either. Protect your peace, even if it means hurting a few feelings.

No snowflake tonight. I didn’t finish it last night. But here’s my fortune from tonight’s takeout. After reliving all of the nonsense above in the telling, I’ll take it.

A fortune from a fortune cookie that says "Your Wednesday will be filled with love, happiness, and harmony."

Fun Ahead!

I figured out a way to get to the Holidailies prompts: Just go to one of my entries from last year where I linked to a question and once on the prompt site, hit “reload.”

Today’s prompt asks “What have you been most looking forward to this holiday season?”

As usual, I’m looking forward to socializing. First there is the now-annual trip to see the state trees with a buddy. Then there’s the office party, which will be a three-hour cruise on the Potomac River.

Go on. Sing it. You know you wanna.

“A THREE-HOUR TOUR…”

Glad that’s out of your system.

A picture of the actor Bob Denver portraying Gilligan on Gilligan's Island.

I’m hoping to meet a few friends for brunch as well, do a couple of trivia nights, and top it all off with seeing John Oliver at the Kennedy Center on New Year’s Eve.

But I’m also looking forward to a whole week off. Usually I wait until after New Year’s to take a week off as a way of taking one for the team at work because most of my team members have kids. This year I’m taking the week of December 30 off. If I don’t take the time off, come the first paycheck of January I’ll have 240 hours of vacation time there and it will stop accruing.

OH, HELL NAW. Ya girl here has NEVER maxed out on vacation in her 36-year career. I prefer to keep it hovering around four weeks–not close to maxing out but enough that if I ever decide to chuck it all and live in a yurt, I have a whole month of income coming to me. If I hadn’t had to cancel my two-week trip to Portugal earlier this year on account of my cardiac rehab, I wouldn’t be close to maxing out, but I really should have taken at least another week off between March and now. Shame on me, as I’m a big proponent of work-life balance. Also, to be perfectly blunt, once I’ve been in a job for more than a few years, if I don’t take a week off every four months or so, my writing starts to suck.

We can tell.

I heard that!

At any rate, I’m looking forward to relaxing for most of that week. No alarm clocks. Maybe a solo trip to the Smithsonian. Maybe lunch with a retired friend. But mostly a lot of goofing off.

What are you looking forward to this month?

Today’s snowflake. I had to turn the saturation way up or you wouldn’t be able to see the colors. Unfortunately, turning the saturation up also turned the cast of the light up and now it looks like the paper is 40 years old. Sorry about that.

A snowflake colored with glitter pens.

Holidailies 2024!

Happy Holidailies! Holy smoke, Holidailies is 25 years old this year. This is my favorite writing project, and I’m glad to see it’s still going. Last year’s was a blast, so let’s see if I can add to some of the magic.

You may or may not notice that this website looks a little bit different from last year. I couldn’t bear to see Inigo’s name get smaller and smaller in my tag cloud, so I got a new template. Or, a new-to-me template as this one is Twenty-Fifteen. This one makes more sense to me because the place to leave a comment is at the end of the entry so folks don’t have to scroll up to the top to leave one. See also, I can still fool around with background images and color schemes without having to deal with block editing and all of that other stuff that drives me batty about WordPress.

Anyway, it seems the random prompt generator thingie at Holidailies isn’t functioning, so I thought I’d kick off with a Sunday Stealing as it’s about one of my favorite topics: books.

Has reading a book ever changed your life? Which one and why, if yes?
Yes. Bambi by Felix Salten. I read it when I was nine years old and it shaped the way I view animals.

Do you prefer to read fiction or non-fiction?
Fiction. I read a lot of medical journals for work and that’s enough non-fiction for me. When I read for pleasure, I prefer to escape into a different time and place.

If you could be a character in any novel you’ve read, who would you be?
I wouldn’t. Novels are based on one of three types of conflict (human vs human, human vs environment, or human vs self) and good writing involves depictions of a fair bit of suffering, and I wouldn’t want to endure either.

Has reading a book ever made you cry? Which one and why?
Yes. The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill. Let’s just say a hawk is involved.

How many books do you read a year?
Not nearly enough. I’m very pressed for time, so if I read three or four, I call it a win.

Name a book you had to read, but hated. Why did you hate it?
I’ll catch hate for this, but the Bible. Twelve years of Catholic school can do that to you. Plus, the writing is just so bad with all the ye, thee, thy, and thine stuff. Unto you I say BLECH.

If someone wrote a book about your life what would it be called?
You’ve Gotta Be Kidding Me: Tales of a Long Island Girl Inside the Beltway. The dust jacket would say something like, “Washington, D.C. is full of blowhards, mansplainers, and pretentious snobs who think their doo-doo doesn’t stink. Enter Zennie. She’s snarky. She’s real. She doesn’t have time for their hot air.”

Have you ever written (or started to write) a book?
I’ve partially written three. Never did finish them. That’s one thing I absolutely hate about being a reporter. When I get home from work, I don’t want to write anymore unless it’s something like a blog or journal entry. Fiction requires a lot of thought and I just don’t have it in me. It wasn’t like that with every writing job I had, but my current workload takes a lot out of me.

If you could pick a book you’ve read to make into a movie, what would it be?
I wouldn’t. The movie is never as good as the book.

What was your favorite book as a child?
See Bambi, above.

What are you reading right now?
I’m reading two books, actually. The first is Dawn Empress by Faith L. Justice, about Pulcheria, sister to the Eastern Roman Emperor Theodosius II. I absolutely dislike the protagonist, though—she’s religious and that’s a turn-off for me in reality, fiction, and historical fiction about real people—so  when I had to take a trip for work, I downloaded Breakdown, an Alex Delaware mystery by Jonathan Kellerman, and am enjoying it much more.

Hmmm… Going back to that question about being a character in a novel, I suppose I wouldn’t mind being Alex Delaware’s girlfriend Robin Castagna. She makes guitars for a living and I can think of a few rock stars I’d love to have as clients, though if memory serves me correctly, she was a target in one of the novels.

In other news… The National Christmas Tree will be lit on Thursday, so as soon as I get down to the Mall and the Walk of Peace, I will start posting photos of the state trees like I did last year. I’m not sure if I’m going to post my own ornaments this year. I have to take a look at them when I put up my tree, which probably won’t be until either December 7 or 14.

However, I got the Finch app this weekend and one of my daily goals is to do something that makes me happy, so here’s a snowflake I colored with glitter gel pens. Sorry for the bad photo. I already started the next one and forgot to take a picture of this one before I folded the book back. Oops. Looks like the white glitter ink doesn’t photograph, either. Really, those spaces are colored in! Live and learn! The book is 50 Snowflakes to Color by Kameliya Angelkova. Gel pens are Tanmit 80/160 in the cloth case, currently selling for about 20 bucks on Amazon, 80 colors with one refill each. (No affiliation, but sometimes folks ask.)

A snowflake colored with glitter pens.