Overlooking Darkness
There is a tradition
That was never mine
That everything be done on Christmas Eve
Tree, decorating (house and tree),
Dealing with presents,
Maybe making special food
All be done that night
Whew, how can that be
Without the help of elves who
Have switched folkloric chores from
Cobbling shoes?
I think maybe it was the way of immigrants
Brought over like so many things we do
In timelines we can’t count
With working families
Whose jobs were not done ‘til then,
Stores would have to have stayed open
Christmas tree lots
Maybe hot-chocolate vendors
With those bags of chestnuts
All to relieve all of the rest, once a year
A whole day off
Maybe the day after
(maybe)
I do remember Jews and Muslims
Seventh-Day Adventists
Atheists, agnostics
Filling in for services
Firetrucks, utilities, hospital needs
So Christians had time off
I remember, looking another way
For wanting all this time
The special lights
To stay
Inside a mind of memory
A human heart of longing
Too sweet to go for, now? in the world
We have,
We might add a little
It could be a gift
C L Couch
Image by Kohji Asakawa from Pixabay
December 16, 2019 at 6:43 am
the first part made me smile. the succeeding made me nostalgic and heartfully warm. love. love could be the best gift we can offer. not just on this night but throughout.
December 16, 2019 at 10:25 pm
I’m grateful for your smile. Yes, you’re right, love is the best. The universe is biased by gravity; God is biased by love. And what better model (even models) could we have?
December 17, 2019 at 2:39 am
Correct! Nothing more!