a Xmas cookie & a hard place

Christmas is an American holiday. Jesus might have been born in Bethelehem and St. Nick a Byzantine, but Christmas… oh see, Christmas… that’s as American born as Hugh Hefner & Ted Danson. And, like reality shows and Italian cooking, the standard for Christmas is born from an American ideal. Think: Christmas tree with lights and the cookies for Santa and Charlie Brown. Somehow, Christmas has the United States to thank for what it has become today, and on a yearly basis Americans make Christmas bow down and cry ‘UNCLE.’  So, you can just imagine how odd it is for most people to discover that I don’t really want to celebrate Christmas… not in America… not in India… not in a box…not with a fox… not in a house… not with a mouse. You see where this is going?

I must be a Communist. I’m sure that’s what you’re all thinking. And so, because I think that that’s what everybody’s thinking, this year (like many years before it) I ended up saying ‘umhm’ while everybody else said ‘Amen’ during a Jesus filled grace. I wasn’t too good to eat the meat free items surrounding a roasted ham at the home of a very nice American family who took pity on my poor, lonely, unmarried soul. They were sweet and the company was nice, but I got to wondering why it is that everybody thinks that celebrating Christmas comes with your citizenship.  I’m not so sure if its the commercialization or the accepted lying to kids, but somehow Christmas has become just as American as Thanksgiving.  And the expectation for celebration is high.

Really, nobody makes the kinds of excuses to celebrate Hannukah that they do to ease their way into getting Christmas gifts. “It’s not for Christmas per se. It’s a holiday party.”

Word? So, when is the last time we had an office holiday party for Muharram?  SIlencio.

Most Americans are culturally Christian (think cultural Jews vs. religious Jews), but I’d consider myself culturally Muslim. Religiously, I’m neither. So, when Christmas time rolls around I’m always discombobulated. If I’m home, then it’s supposed to be like Thanksgiving pt. 2, but in Jesus’ name for my grandma’s benefit. And if I’m abroad then it’s an excuse to get together and tout American traditions… you know, the Christian ones. And no matter how much I may be internally stricken, the pull of free food that I don’t have to prepare or clean up after always lulls me out of my bed — where a good cultural Muslim should be on both Christmas eve & day.

But, my one ‘dare to be true,’ non-Christmas celebrant action was anticipatory of next year. I told my housekeeper that next year her annual bonus would come on Diwali, instead of Christmas – since I don’t celebrate the latter. Didn’t I feel like an ass when she asked me if I wasn’t Christian. No, not if I was Christian. Literally, she asked if I wasn’t. Because (get this) she is! How I ended up with the one non-Hindu, Indian housekeeper in all of New Delhi, I’ll never know, but I felt just as crappy for assuming that Diwali was a ‘safe’ holiday as I’d previously felt for going along with Christmas rites for the sake of ease.

Not celebrating Christmas should make life simple. It is as safe as safe gets. No gifts to give or receive. No special meals to prepare. No expensive tree to buy, disassemble or throw away because it keeps shedding leaves and/or bugs. What else could you ask for? I’ve found, however, that this time of year is actually personally trying; dare I say, it is an opportunity to give in to or resist some complicated American social & cultural norms.

Perhaps there’s a multicultural hand book that I have yet to read about not being opportunistic about eating free food and giving in to celebrating the superficial meaning of a holiday to which I don’t subscribe. If it’s out there, please don’t wait until next Christmas to buy it for me.  In the event that it doesn’t exist, perhaps I should think of Christmas as just the beginning of a whole slew of opportunistic holiday celebrations that I fully intend to superficially participate in.  I already have plans to throw paint at my coworkers on Holi and to do whatever people do for Diwali. And, let’s face it, if I got a day off for some Jain hiero Astrian astrological holiday (and there was free food involved) I’d be up in there too.

Over the last two days, I’ve eaten more chocolate chip cookies than Santa. How self-respecting and self-righteous can I pretend to be in the face of fresh baked goods? After all, I am still an American. Expectations adjusted.

My Moon My Man

Even Sheree Whitfield knows that with all her strength of personality and hamstrings, she still needs her ex-husband to teach Kairo how to be a man. It is so intuitive to believe that it would take a man to teach a boy how to be a man; but it is only when baby girl becomes black girl lost that it becomes just as clear that a man plays a vital role in teaching a girl how to be a woman.  Among many other things, an ideal father-daughter relationship teaches a girl that she’ll be protected and that she’s worth protecting; it instills in her certain expectations that she can’t undo.  Her ability and/or inability to trust and interact with men is usually fixed on this primary relationship, but the ideal is hard to come by. I had an ex-boyfriend once say that ‘all women have daddy issues‘ (no, my ex is not one of the VSB writers, though that might could make him a cooler human being). And he, I still believe, is correct. To my mind, it is one of those inherent truths that doesn’t fit neatly into a box of right or wrong.

I’ve found myself thinking much about my father and my father’s father and my mother’s father and their fathers. I think about my relationships with them and how they’ve affected me –  inspired & disappointed. I think of my brother and my cousins – and their kids – and the way they live manhood. And I wonder what of those experiences and if they ‘curse [we] to repeat the same cycle. I’m breaking…’ out. I think of my experiences with them and their experiences with their mothers and my mother. And somehow I’ve come away with a mixed bag of hmmm…

My dad’s dad was the man in his day, let him tell it. And he used to tell anybody who would listen. (My grandma told me later that she thinks most of it was completely untrue, but he said it like he meant it and, because of him, I like a man with conviction.) He nabbed a model wife, traveled the world shooting photos for the armed forces and beyond, and was forever known in his old age as ‘Allen, the hot dog man’ round about Broad Street. Granddaddy was his name and he was no angel. Nothing about his spirit transcended the carnal. But that dirty old man was my granddaddy and I’ll cut you in the streets today if you wan’ run come test his memory.

I remember the time I was working at a law office for the summer and I stopped at granddaddy’s hot dog stand for lunch. Some suit was also there when I showed up and when I needed to go back to the office, the suit ended up walking my way. Suit behaved perfectly normal, no funny business with a 15 year old. Ten minutes after I’m back at my desk, the receptionist tells me that my grandfather is in the lobby. He came to make sure that I was ok. He wasn’t sure about that suit and wasn’t takin’ no kinda chances. No pomp and circumstance about it; no hug or cheek pinching. Just that real real… you can’t bullshit a bullshitter… that every girl needs to have in her corner of the ring.

And now that he’s not here anymore, I’m much more protective of the other men in my life. I don’t take them for granted as much as I used to and I recognize that sometimes they need me to let them know that I still need protecting. Being called gal ain’t never sound so sweet as when grandpop says it. And he too, ain’t cut from that sensitive cloth. Every time I tell him I love him, he says ‘ok. Now you be good now, yuh hear?’ Yes, grandpop, I can read between your lines. This is the same man that left Sumter County South Carolina, because he didn’t want “to pick no more cotton.” He has used the same glass mug since I can remember (how don’t you break something over the course of using it for 2 decades?) and he has personally nicknamed each and every one of his grandkids, and perhaps great grands too.

Through these men and my own father, I have learned that not every father is perfect. But I am grateful that all of my fathers have been present. Somehow I find that important today, in a time in a place where a woman is identified as her father’s daughter until she becomes her husband’s wife. I find myself becoming nostalgic when I hear of a dad going to the States to help his daughter move into her first apartment, or when they go to see her graduation. I see how giddy grandfathers get when they head out of the house to meet their grand daughters outside of school or at the school bus; they walk her safely home. They seem to have a sense of purpose and surety that their daughter needs them, that without him things will not progress as they should. And with my dad so far away, I can’t help but understand that these men are right.  When I let him, my dad does my blocking and my bidding, and I sure could use some of both right now.

Men here don’t live by the same code of conduct (perhaps also ethics) that I am accustomed to. One thing they do respect, however, is a woman’s father.  If she comes from a line of men of valor and honor, she inherits the same.  A wise man once said, “Get in good with a woman’s father, you in good with her.” And Black comedians never lie.    I never thought this Barnard woman would cling to some nugget of personal positivity from an old world adage that contributes to India’s missing girls, but I’d be lying if I denied that I get a little teary eyed about the thought of being without my dad and my grandpop in this life, and my granddaddy in the next. They are three very different men, who have parallel flaws and parallel triumphs, all of which converge at me. Damn it if I wasn’t the best thing they ever came together to create. My brother ain’t so bad either… They done good ya’ll.

They done good.