Halloween is over and it is safe to bring up the subject of
Christmas lists.
The kids know exactly what they would like to receive
Christmas morning and request educational toys, lots of books and one
thoughtful child has asked for a pair of runners for school. Your heart!
A lottery ticket yields a tidy sum. Nothing too obscene just enough to get you
over the festive season.
The kids wave good bye from their grandparent’s front door
as their mother and father head off for an afternoon of Santy shopping.
What luck! The shop
is practically deserted and everything on the kids’ lists is in stock. Better still the 3 for 2 offer is still
available and you save almost €200.
The shopping is completed quicker than expected and
everything is packed into the car. A cup
of coffee is in order.
The coffee is sipped at such a leisurely pace it goes
cold. Conversation is free-flowing. Suddenly a screaming toddler perched on top
of a heaving trolley catches your eye.
You feel deeply for the red faced, sweating and stressed mother who is
only barely holding it together. That
could be me, you think as your husband catches the waitress’s eye and orders
another two coffees.
On the way back to the car there is a missed text from your
own mother. “Kids are fine. Why don’t you get your hair done and go out
for a meal. I can drop them off in the
morning. Xx”
Why not?
It is Christmas morning.
The kids wake quietly and in good humour at 8am. Everyone troops downstairs and opens their
presents with loud and effusive thanks. “This is great! It’s exactly what I wanted.” “Look at my new runners. They’re deadly.” “This is the best day ever!”
Dinner appears on the table as if by magic and afterwards everyone
gathers in front of the roaring fire to watch the Christmas matinee on TV.
Oh look, is that snow?
It is. What a wonderful end to a
perfect day.
Reality
Summer holidays are over and the Christmas adverts begin to
appear on television. Perfect timing. Just in time for the headaches to start.
The first Christmas list is slapped in front of you on 25th
October with the dire warning that “it’s not finished and I will probably
change my mind.” The others want
everything they see on the television. They
get so caught up in the festive hype they even request the pink buggy and a
rock star Bratz doll. But boys, you’re
boys!
You begin to pay special attention to the catering size mayonnaise
jar on top of the fridge and the superman tin can on the counter top. Neither of them are full. Write a reminder on your shopping list to do
the lottery at the weekend. Even 500
would help at this stage!
You take the kids to the biggest Tesco’s in the county and
try to get them to pick one big (ish)
toy and one small (practically
invisible) toy. The plan is for Mister
Husband to take them outside so you can smuggle their choices out to the
car. You act so suspiciously the
security guard is two feet away from you at all times, his walkie talkie radio
thing halfway between his ear and mouth.
A random toddler gets elbowed out of the way as he reaches
for the helicopter your three and a half year old liked the look of. You don’t care if the toddler fell over – he
has a padded bottom doesn’t he. That
helicopter was only twenty quid!
At the check-out and you are informed the Star Trek torch
thingy your five year old selected is “not on file” and should not have been
“out on the shelf” as it “cannot be scanned” therefore “is not for sale at this
moment in time.” You receive a
sympathetic smile from the mother sipping a coffee with her husband in the
little coffee shop on the concourse who has heard everything.
You are taking the toys in from the back of the car when the
three year old catches you red handed and asks who are they for? You distract with two packets of buttons and
spend the rest of the day shouting over him every time he tries to tell his
older brothers all about “the Minecraft Lego and helicopters in mammy’s car.”
It is Christmas morning.
You hear something. Laughing and
shouting. It is 2am and the kids are
awake. The kids are awake? The
fucking kids are awake! Tears are
not very far away. Yours. You
stumble out to them and tell them Santy hasn’t been yet and they’d better go
back to sleep quickly. No, you most
certainly will not go downstairs to check!
How do I know he hasn’t been? I
just do, okay. Please, please, please go back to bed! I know it’s Christmas and no I am not crying,
I am just very tired. Go on back to bed.
Just for a little while. Listen! Did you hear that! Bells!
I hear bells! Quick! For the love
of god, quick! Don’t let him see you out of your beds. Go, go now while you still have time!!!
And it really is Christmas morning. Everyone is downstairs in their pyjamas. The sitting room is buried under wrapping
paper, empty boxes and silver bits of tin foil from the chocolate coins the
kids found in their stockings. The noise
levels are at an all-time high. The
television is in competition with the new X Box 360. The dog keeps making off with Steve from
Minecraft and all you want is a cup of strong coffee but you are loathe to make
one for fear of missing any of the excitement.
The first hug of the day is delivered by the five year old who almost
knocks you over with the force of it. “I
love Christmas and I love Santy. I love you. I think I love everyone. This is the best
day ever!”
Ha ha ha, I'm going mad....I thought you actually had won a substantial amount on the Lotto....well, there is still time. We had a day out for our youngest girl's birthday today and oh it was just manic all around, I'm officially making myself housebound now until Christmas is over! (Hope you all have a very happy one!)
ReplyDeleteThere certainly is still time Joanna! I believe the euro millions is disgustingly high at present. But I won't be greedy. I'll stick with trying to win under 3 million on the Irish one.
DeleteLove it! I'm firmly in reality! Merry Christmas!
ReplyDeleteOh me too, me too!! I'd say those in the Perception realm are few and far between!
DeleteSounds like our house.... Wish I could say the "perception" version!!
ReplyDeleteOh you're not as smug as the "perception" version, Emily. They don't sound like they'd be any fun at all. I mean their kids wanted runners for Christmas. fffttt. Borrrring! But I would like the lotto win! :)
DeleteSuch a funny post. I didn't read the title so I was reading the first half thinking 'you lucky b1tch'. Then I got it. The reality bit is so true. Definitely our house too. Happy Christmas!
ReplyDeletelol at the lucky bitch part! Chance would be a fine thing. But as Joanna said above, there is still time. Have a lovely christmas!!!
DeleteLove it.... I'm living your reality but any day now that lotto win will arrive ;)
ReplyDeleteLove it.... I'm living your reality but any day now that lotto win will arrive ;)
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