Monday, December 31, 2012

The Reason for the Season

My family, specifically my mother, had a tradition when we were little of holiday crafting.  Neither of my sisters nor I were particularly crafty, but my mom thought it was important that we felt like we had something to give at Christmas time and given all of our cash flow originated with her at this point, all we really had to offer was cheap labor.  So we crafted.

There was the year we made festive ornaments by painstakingly pinning sequins onto styrofoam balls.  Or the year we colored snowflakes and teddy bears on dish towels with fabric markers.  There was even a year in which we cross-stitched, the horror of which I won’t detail here but suffice it to say mom took care that subsequent years’ crafts did not involve needles. 

By far our greatest success was the toaster tongs, a fairly simple construction of two tongue depressors glued onto a piece of dowel rod, designed to remove hot items from the toaster.  My mother had stolen the idea from a far more engineering child than any of her own at a school craft fair, but we gave it that special Rinder flair by painting tiny blobular wreaths and holly berries on the tongue depressors – an enhancement that we all began to question when the tongs proved highly durable and were still being used in July.  

Our output was the stuff that grandparents dream of and the rest of the world views with a certain nervous curiosity.  For the aunts and uncles and neighbors lucky enough to receive their annual gift in person, the response was akin to how I imagine they would have reacted should one of their own children have brought home a wounded woodland creature, outwardly admiring the animal’s cuteness and the child’s initiative while inwardly devising any means possible to prevent this bunny (or stenciled napkin holder) from entering their home.  And yet despite these misgivings our loved ones oohed and aahed our creations tirelessly each year.  Clothespin reindeers!  Potpourri sachets!  OJ pencil cans! 

The truly tireless one, however, was my mother.  Not only was she the brains behind the operation, but as the years passed and our general enthusiasm for crafting waned she was also forced to be somewhat of a stern taskmaster, herding us into the dining room every Saturday in December and drowning out our moans and suffering sighs with Bing Crosby, Johnny Mathis and the sheer force of her crafting cheer.  Her enterprising spirit would have put the pilgrims to shame.  As it was, however, we kids felt that we were the ones shamed, forced to participate in what we considered children’s crafts well into our teenage years.

And yet now, many years later, Lindsey has initiated the same practice with her children, Alison reminisces fondly of the sequined ornaments, and even I find myself seized each December with a certain crafting je nes se quois.  As the air turns chill and the city becomes blanketed in icicle lights, there is a part of me that just wants to get out the felt markers and hot glue and, you know, make stuff.  At first I thought I could satiate this annual holiday urge via baking.  Classic case of correlation rather than causation.  Then I reasoned perhaps if I started my Christmas shopping earlier, that joyous spirit of holiday giving would be allowed to develop to maturation and could tide me over until January (when the holiday crafting inclination seems to dissipate on its own, supplanted by the New Years inclination to be a different person).  But shopping too proved not entirely fulfilling.

It wasn’t until I opened up the ol’ Macbook yesterday to begin writing my annual post that I realized-- this is it.  Misshapen, eclectic, a bit of a burden on author and readers alike, the rumball is my holiday craft project.  And as much as it may pain you dear readers, you know you can count on its arrival each late December to early January as surely as the driven snow.  Er, something.

So as we stand on the precipice of the new year, staring into the beady eyes of 2013, filled with a mixture of anticipation and indigestion, remember this – no matter what happens over the next 12 months, we can all meet back here next December 31st to toast our triumphs and laugh at our failures together.

Unless my toaster tong startup takes off on Kickstarter.  In which case, it’s been real. 

*This post is dedicated to loyal reader Jen, who consistently provides me with inspiration and the confidence that my post will have at least 1 reader.  Jen, your first pair of toaster tongs is on the house.  

**Blobular wreath not included.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

2K12: Most Attainable Year Ever

2012! A year of continuity and change!  A year of dreams and expectations and failure to meet those expectations! A year that begins and ends with the number 2!

Yes, I think we can all agree that the new year knows no limits at this point, mostly because none of us have even registered its arrival enough to stop writing “2011” on critical documents and rent checks. It is the annual ‘witching hour’ when every goal seems attainable, 24 hour days are rumored to contain 47 hours and we all believe ourselves to have heretofore undiscovered abilities and self control.  Gyms are packed morning and night, people are buying Groupons for juice cleanses and unlimited yoga packages, and we’re all pretty much convinced that we are going to be skinnier, happier, better people in 12 months time.

The end result of all this build up is invariably that we all wake up feeling like weak, fat losers by January 31 and immediately revert back to our old habits.  Which in all honesty are probably better than the new crazed habits we adopted for the first 31 days of the year.

Well dear readers, not this year!  In lieu of grand aspirations and subsequently grander failures, I have decided that 2012 will be the year that I make resolutions that can theoretically be accomplished by ordinary human people.  I will forsake the traditional overly optimistic new years resolutions for Equally Well Meaning But Realistic & Achievable Resolutions (EWMBRAR).

Allow me to illustrate with a few examples of typical resolutions and their EWMBRAR equivalent:

Resolution: Drop 2 pant sizes.
EWMBRAR: Throw away any pants that no longer fit.

Resolution:
Stick to a budget in 2012.
EWMBRAR: Make a budget in 2012.

Resolution: Volunteer for a charitable organization.
EWMBRAR: Donate to those less fortunate by leaving your phone in a cab.

Resolution: Learn to cook like Bobby Flay.
EWMBRAR: Learn to cook like Trader Giotto.

Resolution: Spend less time playing Angry Birds and more time reading.
EWMBRAR: Spend less time playing Angry Birds and more time playing Words with Friends.

Resolution: Be a better person.
EWMBRAR: Hang out with people who have fewer morals than you do.

For those who quickly master this concept and wish to take EWMBRARing to a deeper level, you may want to consider the following model for the Equally Well Meaning But Even More Realistic & Achievable Resolution (EWMBEMRAR).

Resolution: Eat a more balanced diet.
EWMBRAR: Don’t eat cereal for dinner.
EWMBEMRAR: Don’t eat cereal for dinner more than once a week.

Resolution: Run a marathon.
EWMBRAR: Run for the bus.
EWMBEMRAR: Run for the bus if you really think you can make it.

Resolution: Stop biting your nails and chewing on pen caps.
EWMBRAR: Stop chewing on pen caps.
EWMBEMRAR: Buy more pens.

Start now or even a week from now and come January 31 you will just be scraping the surface of your true EWMBRAR potential.  To that end, let me leave you with this sequence taken from my very own list:

Resolution: Write insightful and thought-provoking blog posts in 2012.
EWMBRAR: Write a blog post in 2012.
EWMBEMRAR: Write a blog post before January 4, 2013.

Check back in a year and 2 days to see just how far realism and lethargy can take me!