Hi
everybody! I’m accused of writing less-interesting letters these days, but art
imitates life, as they say. Here is
Maria’s emergency email on 3 Dec. 2019, after reading my first attempt (which I
wrote in the
afterglow of Thanksgiving): “Dad wrote a depressing Christmas letter that I
have rejected so now he says
he would like each of you to send him a paragraph about your most memorable
moment of the
year--good or bad, serious or funny.” I think the main problem is “grown up”
children: accomplishments
are incremental and largely invisible to parents. There’s a reason people don’t make family
movies at work, right? And so the weeks roll by in a blur of sameness. And the
parents’ current
routine looks shockingly similar to rejected material from last year’s letter!
Some may think it wrong
that our neighbors’ two-year-old twins—and their infant sister—are the most
interesting element of
our lives, but just you wait and see. Consider what our own family members said
about that
memorable moment of their year and then decide for yourselves what you want to
read.
Riley
(taciturn son-in-law): Yet to answer the request. Enough said. No need for
quotation marks or to place my
commentary in brackets. I nominate the ER trip after too much Tylenol for tooth
pain.
Hannah
(anxious, resilient daughter): “I drove to Chicago. I slept in my car
sometimes. Gas prices were cheaper
in the Midwest. Driving in Chicago was terrifying for 2 minutes, and then I
adjusted and became
really aggressive like everyone else and it was good. When I got to Chicago, I
ate lots of food, went
to lots of plays, and made fun of Renoir. Is that anything?” [Well, is it? Most
people love a good road
trip, I hear. She went solo, by the way, and it seems to be an extended
“moment.”]
Hailey
(affable daughter-in-law): Free-rode on Jordan’s terse response below. Enough
said?
Jordan
(laconic son): “Jordan went to China. Hailey works really hard and her career
is on the same trajectory
as an 86kg projectile shot from a trebuchet.” [He doesn’t usually refer to
himself in third person. He
did come back. Where did that career metaphor come from? Who even talks that
way? Here’s what
I know: every projectile goes up and then down. So which stage of the
trajectory are we tracking?
Meanwhile, did you picture many memorable moments there?]
Brooke
(tender, tough, comparatively verbal daughter): “I guess one of the most
life-changing
memorable
moments, or series of moments really, was getting and working with my very
first speech and
language client. It was sometimes really difficult and exhausting, but overall
very rewarding.
It was cool to see him actually progress! And then on the last day, he gave me
a gift and card, hugged
me several times, and told me I was a great teacher. It was a very sweet and
rewarding moment.”
[Did it rate a selfie, or is that against privacy norms for speech-therapists
in training?]
Maria
(compassionate neighbor): “I can’t remember.” [I believe it; she sleeps too
little and relies too much on her
phone to remember everything. She is compassionate to neighbors, nonetheless.]
John
(fallible narrator): “Lying on the exposed concrete kitchen floor, having
finally mastered use of the wrench,
I watched a little spray explode into a powerful stream of hot water shooting
from under the
dishwasher across the floor. I yelled and screamed and desperately tried
(again) to close the valve
under the sink. I yelled for Maria to shut off the main supply valve, then did
it myself. We threw down
towels to slow the spread of hot water across the room.” [Such terror, rage,
and impotence
crammed into a minute. But is it interesting? Liverpool 4-0 over Barcelona was interesting,
but it also wasn’t really us—except that I yelled that time too, in dazed joy.]
And look at
that! We’ve reached the end of the page. So, what do you think? Should next
year’s letter simply tell
the stories of Neal, Glen, and Anna? To clarify, they are not our kin; they
have family of their own.
But it might make for a better letter. You decide. And you’ll never walk alone!