Making The Cut: When Christmas Is Painful

It is no secret that my mother died a few years ago. I have written about it a few times here, including when I shared about the difficulty of the first holiday season without her. As anyone who has experienced loss can tell you, it is often the most unexpected moments that hit you the hardest.

I can honestly say that even three years later, the process of doing holiday cards is one of the times I miss my mom the most. It is one of the times that I can genuinely hear her voice raving about my choice of cards and my children in their photos.

I am beyond honored that The Huffington Post is sharing a post that I wrote about what it feels like when Christmas is painful. When you have to make the cut in the Christmas card list that you wish you did not have to make.

When Christmas Is Painful

We are closing comments here today in hopes that you will share your thoughts over at HuffPo instead. It would mean the world to me, and I can promise you that somewhere my mother will be sharing them all beaming with pride.

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Making the Cut

I wrote this post originally 2 years ago. The first Christmas without my mother. It has never actually run on this site before. I am sharing it today, because the words remain true even 2 years later.

Christmas cards are both the highlight of my year and the bane of my existence. I absolutely love receiving them and honestly look forward for the eleven months leading up to the arrival of certain cards because I know that they will make me smile. I clear off doors worth of “art” work by my children so that we can display our cards, and I always feel sad when the second week of January hits because we must finally take them down. There is something so heartwarming about seeing all the cards with photos of smiling children and knowing, from experience, of all the creativity and hard work that people (mothers) put into making sure the cards best represent their families.

Because once the advent of photo cards happened, simply getting the right Christmas card photo(s) is a chore, or has been in years past for me. The outtakes could probably be a card in and of themselves, but honestly, who wants that displayed, every year, on their mantle? I always imagine during the home photo session that if I were on a hidden camera reality show, the following clip would be the scene they would use right before they brought some sort of expert to coach me through how to really be a loving parent.

Nothing says holiday joy like:

“Stand over here kids.”

“Now, hug your sister. No, I said HUG your sister … don’t crush your sister!”

“Do you children even want presents this year?”

“I have Santa’s phone number, and I am not afraid to call him and cancel Christmas right now if you don’t do what I say!”

“Stop crying RIGHT.THIS.MINUTE. And smile, This is all Mommy asks of you once a year, and you can’t even help me here?”

“Mommy is sorry girls, mommy is really sorry … I am not calling Santa …can you both just smile and then you can have popsicles?”

And on and on we go until in the end I consider doing what I did last year, which was using a card of crying Santa pictures.

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But this year I got really smart and turned the whole thing over to my amazing photographer friend. She perfectly captured exactly who my girls are at just this moment – and all I had to do was buy the dresses and show up. That, my friends, is the ticket to Christmas magic!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

But the accompanying stress of Christmas card season was not over, as I was then on to the next phase of the Christmas card process, which is always fraught with challenge for me … the annual cutting of the list.

Because I love Christmas cards, I never want to remove anyone from my list. Ever. If I had my way, I would exchange cards with every person we have ever known. However, time and money prevent this from being possible. Also, as life would have it, my list seems to grow each year as the girls get older, and we fortunately add some new friends to our lives, which makes the cutting even more necessary. So, I pulled out the list and began to make my way through it, finding that some names were easy to add to the delete columns, while others were a little harder, but still necessary.

But then the unexpected happened. Even though I should have been prepared. I came to my mother’s name. Ouch. You see, in the final couple of years before she died, my mother was in a nursing home, which meant that I had to send her card there. That alone had been a bit of a transition for me to make, but now I came to the point where I had to permanently remove her name from the list. It seemed pathetic to leave it on there because obviously this reminder would probably be no less painful next year, but it also felt so strange to just backspace over it, as though it had not existed at all.

The same backspace action that I gave to the neighbor who moved or the classmate of Abby’s from last year who went to a different school. Except in this case, it was my mother. It was my mother who would not be receiving a Christmas card; and my mother, in fact, who would not be seeing the professional photos of my children for the very first time. She would have LOVED these photos, would have wanted to talk about them for hours, definitely would have wanted to purchase every single one, despite not having a place to put them. In fact, honestly, it probably would have annoyed me, but she would have loved them. And it makes me so sad that she won’t see the card with the photos, and just as sad that she is off the list, just like that. There is no button for “regrettably delete.” It was all the same to my computer, but not all the same to me.

So, here we are, right? It is the season of hope, of love, of joy, of peace and of longing, I suppose. But I can’t help but think about how many people in creating their own cards, the ones that I have hanging on my door and the ones I will never see, went through the same process of cutting and culling their list; and might have had the sadness and pain that I did when I culled mine.

These cards, for me anyway, serve as a reminder that we are all in this together, that once a year we all remember each other and take the time to say so, even to those who can’t get a card anymore.

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Sometimes More Than Books Are Found At The Library

Finding friends among bloggers is absolutely, hands down the daily gift of toiling away at this little blog of ours. Even though we have never actually met in real life the majority of the people whose words inspire us and make us laugh, we are connected.

One such connection is to our friend Ilene who writes the amazing blog, The Fierce Diva Guide To Life, which we are always anxious to see come across our feed with a new post. (In blogger speak, a feed is what we use to stalk check in on our favorite writers.) She just has such an incredible way with words and always leaves us nodding our heads or sniffling into our keyboards.

Recently, we read one of her posts and immediately called each other. It was that total psychic friend connection, as we had both read it almost at the same time. Our words were almost identical. We were both in tears and knew that we had to share this post with our readers.

It is about love and loss and connection and the tiny little moments that truly matter. Here is a glimpse….

“A.” worked at a desk on the ground floor with a stack of paper 1040’s to his right. He wore a business suit and tie. I took him to be around 80.

I had gotten his name from my mother, as in years past, he and my stepfather worked side by side offering free tax preparation assistance at the public library.

I had been hiding from my tax returns this year. Fortunately, during the days when I made money, I had the good sense not to spend all of it on vacations and designer handbags and put some away.

Yet, more recent times called for a different kind of sensibility. I put those handbags up on eBay. I sold off some of the money that Wall Street had held for me for the past decade. And while I “sold high” to get the most bang for my buck, selling high meant I owed “the man” in on the action.

Please click on the link below to read the full post from Ilene. Comments will be closed here so that you can share your thoughts on this beautiful post directly with Ilene.

http://fiercedivaguidetolife.typepad.com/blog/2013/03/love-and-taxes-.html

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Thank you Ilene for allowing us to feature you and share your words with our readers!

 

 

Shelter From the Storm

The images of the destruction from Hurricane Sandy are just devastating. The heaviness in my heart for those impacted by this storm is immense. I have no doubt that many people are writing about this event, often from a first-hand perspective, and those not writing about it are more likely simply living it.

When I got my children off to school today, I turned on the news and began to see the images and hear the stories. They were all overwhelming, but when I heard about the back-up generator failing at New York University Medical Center, I felt my heart stop and my stomach drop. As a former hospital nurse, I instantly felt the nightmare of that scenario. To be completely honest with you, it was probably one of my biggest fears while I worked at one of the major trauma centers in my city. The thought of having to evacuate even the most stable patient is overwhelming, but when you realize that many of the patients who had to be evacuated from NYU were critically ill, it is almost unimaginable.

Forget the multiple IV machines and other medical equipment needed to keep these patients alive, you also have to take into account the fact that many of them were on ventilators. Ventilators, by the way, take power to run. And when that power fails and the back-up power fails, they have to be operated by battery packs. Sounds simple enough, right? Except when you realize that switching over to battery packs on patients who are LITERALLY being kept alive by mechanical ventilation is not something that you have endless amounts of time to do. In fact, you will have to manually ventilate the patient (as in push air with a bag by hand…you have seen it in the movies and on TV) until you can safely get the battery pack in place. And this is not just one patient, y’all. It was many, many people, including infants in the Neonatal Intensive Care unit. In the middle of the night. With a hurricane raging outside.

Ambulances lined up and waiting. Photo credit: @bananarams on Twitter

You have to get all of these patients, who are most likely unstable on a good day, out of the hospital and through the flooding streets to nearby hospitals. Which, by the way, I would be willing to guess were already a little overwhelmed themselves. There is no way to adequately prepare for this scenario. You can have every disaster code in the world and every practice drill you can imagine, but when reality hits you go into pure survival mode. Literal, lifesaving survival mode. Because as the medical professional in the situation, it is your job, it is your ethical code, it is your moral responsibility. And I would be willing to bet that it was really, really stressful. As if critical care medicine isn’t stressful enough, right?

One example of the amount of effort needed to move a single critical patient. Photo credit: AP Photo/ John Minchillo

In all I have read that NYU evacuated 215 patients to various area hospitals. Of those 215, ABC News reports that 45 of them were critically ill. When you have a family member who is critically ill, you often feel a sense of comfort to know that they are in the hospital getting care. Somehow you feel as though that insulates them from any other potential danger or disaster. Turns out that is not always true. In fact, it turns out that the one place you would really want to believe will always have power can actually lose it. So then your faith turns to those in charge, and you trust that they will ensure your loved ones’ safety. Only this time, they will be doing it in the dark.

To all of the medical professionals who handled this situation like the professionals that they are, my heart is with you today.