Meh-ry Christmas

After dealing with several days of aggravation regarding a lease that had discrepancies compared with what I had discussed with the leasing agent, fees that were not mentioned, and requirements he did not tell me about (i.e., needing to cover 75% of the wood flooring with rugs, when of course the ones I already have aren’t the right sizes), all I wanted after I got home from my office holiday party this afternoon was to turn on my tree, have a mug of peppermint tea, and relax in the soft, pinkish glow of the lights.

Except the tree was already plugged in.

And the lights were all off.

I would not leave the tree lit overnight, so it must have blown while I was in the home office writing before I went to bed, and I didn’t unplug it, thinking I had already pulled the plug.

I had extra lights, so I thought I would just take everything off the tree, put fresh lights on, and redecorate.

And then taking the lights off became like a cage match, so I quite literally cut the lights off the tree, being that they aren’t working anymore anyway.

And then I saw that the tree was shedding like a real one that had been kept up for three months and carted to the curb in February.

And then I was done. Done with 2025. Done with smarmy landlords. Done with packing and making arrangements and worrying about where I’m going to be living two weeks from Monday. Done with everything.

I cut the lights off the tree, stuffed the tree in the box, and threw it all into a dumpster, which I then proceeded to half-fill with all kinds of crap. Journals with the first ten pages torn out after I gave up writing in the things by the first weekend in January. Old clothes. Old sheets. Old towels except for some of the little ones that I used for Inigo’s bed on his shelf in his cage and for him to stand on when I gave him a bath so he wouldn’t slip off my finger. Kitchen gadgets I was given in the 90s that I haven’t used in at least 15 years that I keep lugging from apartment to apartment. Five years of Forks Over Knives, from which I made approximately two recipes. Vegan protein powder because let’s face it, it’s gross. The half-full bag of Inigo’s food, that I bought about a month before our goodbye in March 2023, which had expired a year ago but I just couldn’t bear to part with because the smell reminded me of him. Jigsaw puzzles I put together once and knew I wouldn’t put together again, though I kept the bird-themed ones friends have given me because I haven’t put them together yet.

There will probably be at least another half-dumpster full of stuff to throw out, but I’ll get to that this weekend.

At any rate, I still haven’t signed the lease and I’m about to apply for another apartment tomorrow but I want to take another look at it on my lunch break. If I had any courage at all, I would throw out every dang thing I own except for some clothes, mementos, documents, and cherished feathers, and go live off-grid in a yurt. Seriously, I’m just that done with everything.

So here are all of my ornaments, which I will pack up tomorrow.

A pile of Christmas ornaments.

I did go to see the State Christmas trees on Sunday, though I couldn’t get all the pictures I wanted because the Forest Service police ran everyone out of there as soon as the sun set. I don’t know if it was because a crew was still taking the scaffolding from last Friday’s ceremony down, which wouldn’t make sense because it was far from the trees, or if it’s some kind of Trumpian bullshit to go along with the roving quartets of National Guardsmen in D.C., but it put a damper on things. The little kiosk shop where they sell the White House ornaments was closed, too, so I wasn’t able to get this year’s ornament.

Not that I have a tree to hang it on.

I’ll try to post more to Holidailies, but this move is the worst of my life and it’s sucking every ounce of holiday spirit out of me. It’s involuntary (hooray, mold) and it’s a downsizing of pretty decent proportions as I can’t get the same size and type of place I live in now because my salary was frozen for three years while rents kept going up. These giant corporate landlords own the vast majority of apartment buildings around here and they put you through the wringer with criminal background checks, looking in your bank account, calling your employer, on and on like it’s a matter of national security—which is the height of irony because Virginia has the quickest eviction proceedings in the country and they can just throw you out. No joke, if you are just six days late on your rent, in Virginia they’ll give you a “five-day-or quit” notice and if you don’t either pay up or move out in five days, they’ll have your stuff on the curb by the end of the month, if not sooner. There have been news stories and documentaries about how fast evictions take place in Virginia.

Then at least where I live, they often hike the rents at LEAST 10%, often 15%, sometimes 20% when you get a renewal letter, so that you either accept price gouging or have to keep moving and can’t put roots down. Imagine paying $2,500 a month for a 700 sq. ft. apartment and getting a renewal letter telling you your rent is going up to $2,750 or even $3,000. Then the day after you move out, your apartment will go onto the market for what you were paying. It’s quite a racket, and many tenants just move to a different unit in the same building, but what a hassle that is in terms of changing your address on everything, including your license.

So I’m dealing with all of that and am moving two weeks from Monday but don’t know where I’m moving to.

In other words, bah humbug.

Purple Christmas

Pantone’s Color of the Year for 2026 is “Cloud Dancer.”

Or, more accurately, white.

I think this captures it:

Oh, how deadly dull. Haven’t we had enough of white, beige, and Millennial gray home decor? Bland decor has gone from trend to standard, and I absolutely hate it. It’s a snooze-fest, and heaven forbid you spill anything on it and it’s not Scotchguarded. I’ll give a slight nod to bland bedrooms, as then the snooze-festiness is an advantage. My own is done in gray, black, and white, though it has purple accents, but that’s all. Otherwise, give me color, a whole riot of ’em.

Just for Pantone’s aesthetic offense, I’m going to share my holiday wallpaper with you, which is decidedly NOT Blah White.

Christmas ornaments and a candle on top of a book.
Image by Zoe on Unsplash

My choice is a bit defiant. Purple is my favorite color. About 12 or 13 years ago, while looking at Christmas decorations in a store with one of my sisters, I picked up a purple ornament.

“NO, Zenzalei,” she said. “Not purple. That’s not a Christmas color. NO.”

It was like she was talking to a dog.

Well, here’s one of my favorite ornaments. It’s from a set of five that belonged to my parents and featured different magical townspeople. The other colors are pink, blue, green, and yellow. My mother used to say that the green was Coco, the blue was Jehanne, the pink was Annette, the yellow was herself, the purple was me, as those were all of our respective favorite colors or variations thereof. (Annette’s is red.)

A purple Christmas ornament with a small figure of a dark-haired girl inside.
The only case you can put me in. Mom said.

Oh, and the ornament I picked up? I went back and bought it when my sister wasn’t around. I keep it as a reminder not to let other people tell me how to express myself, and instead to create a world of my own, one that brings me comfort, joy, and peace, one where I can be me, purple and all.

A purple and gold Christmas ornament.
So there.

Small Joys

Oops. Got caught up in some journaling, so I’m late on this one.

Today Holidailies says: Share your best advice for surviving the holiday season.

I’ve answered this last year, on December 3. My answer was to protect your peace, namely by saying no to things and people who disrupt it. You don’t have to do all of the things and you don’t have to see all of the people.

This year, I’m suggesting saying yes, but to the small joys that can still be found in an ever-demoralizing world. There’s a lot going on around the world, as there always is, with war, natural disasters, economic instability, and social upheaval. If you’re in the United States, 2025 has been a whammy of political insanity. For all intents and purposes, the country is collapsing under a regime led by a megalomaniac who has one foot in the grave and wants to ruin as much on his way out as he can. Wherever you turn, there’s bad news.

And yet, wherever you turn, there lies the opportunity for a small joy.

Fill a bird-feeder and watch our feathered friends flit around. Look at how the sun shines on their feathers, listen to their little chirps and songs.

Make a giant mug of hot chocolate. Dump in some marshmallows and top it off with whipped cream. Sit under a quilt, take a sip, and let the whipped cream dot the tip of your nose.

Listen to your favorite music. Play the same song over and over again as many times as you want. This song has 1,046,490,278 plays on Spotify. I think I’m responsible for those last 278 of them. The music sounds like we’re being flung out into some kind of giant cosmic nightclub. I love it.

Call a friend you haven’t spoken to in a long time. Let the friendship pick up like it was just yesterday. Listen to how happy they are to hear from you. You’ll hear it in their voice.

Sleep late. Like, really late. Past noon. Get up, have lunch. Then read a good book. If you need a nap, take a nap.

Put on something comfortable and stretch. Feel how everything extends and loosens up.

Hold the door open for someone else, just to do it.

Make a donation to your favorite charity.

Light your favorite candle.

Watch your favorite comedy. Or spooky movie. Or musical. Or drama.

Help your kids build a snowman.

Draw something fun on the sidewalk with sidewalk chalk.

Play solitaire with real cards. Or have a game night with friends.

Stroll through a museum.

Get on the floor and romp around with your dog. Let your cat judge you both.

Take a hot bath with a million tea lights around you like they do in the movies.

Look up at the stars.

Scroll through your phone at pictures of the good times.

Go down a YouTube rabbithole of old commercials. Send the links to friends your age. Every time I see a montage of commercials from the 70s and 80s, it’s like I’m a kid again. “I had that! And that! Remember that?”

Buy something small on sale that you never tried before. I’ve discovered vanilla cream seltzer for 89 cents for a 33-ounce bottle, and the other day I managed to snag five of them for a dollar.

Small joys like that are sustainable. They’re what will get us all through both the season and whatever earthly turmoil surrounds us. Post ’em if you’ve got ’em. I’m always looking for fresh ideas.

A Christmas ornament in the shape of a snowman, with a small tag that says "joy."