Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Not Silent Night

Being alone is rough. Being alone on Christmas, I think, will just plain suck.

No kids. No loved ones. No special someone. Nobody to enjoy a cup of egg nog (does anyone actually enjoy egg nog?) in front of a fire (if I had a fireplace) with.


No squeals of joy from little ones when they see what Santa brought them this year.

It would be easy to mope. To get down. To say "screw this" and turn Christmas into a 12-pack induced pity party.

But as I stood on my balcony tonight, pondering my first real Christmas all alone EVER in my life, I realized it could be much worse.

I could be alone, and homeless.

I could have nobody who cares about me...which I know is not the case.

I could be hungry and not sure where to find a meal.

I could be estranged from my childrens' lives and not know that they like raisin bran more than cheerios, and donuts over bagels.

I could be fighting for my country halfway around the world, worrying about being blown up by a guy with a garage door opener, away from my loved ones with no chance of seeing them anytime soon.

Or I could be gone from this world, dust in the wind, and not be able to wake up Christmas morning and take a deep breath of the cold air and thank God for being alive this day.

So Christmas Eve, I'll put on my snow boots and trudge through whatever amount of snow down the street, go to a Christmas service, and thank God for what I have in my life:

- Two amazing sons who never cease to amaze me or bring a smile to my face.
- Countless friends who are always there for me and always find a way to make me laugh.
- An amazing family who has helped me out through some rough times in the last few years (Thank you Mom, Dad, Dave, Jim, and your families).
- The fact that I understand that my life is not about my possessions, my income, my things, but about who I am as a person, and how I treat the people around me.

Standing on the balcony alone tonight, I heard from across the street ice skates shushing across a rink, and the sound of a puck being smacked off a stick, then hitting the rink wall with a loud "thump." As the snow lightly fell, I heard the sound of a shovel scraping against a sidewalk, scratching its way from clean white to dirty gray. From a distant snowbank, the sound of children taking delight in the early stages of the "stormegeddon" can be heard.

What a beautiful, peaceful and not so silent night.

Merry Christmas! May your nights never be silent.

4 comments:

Donut said...

I'm sitting here with tears in my eyes. You're a good guy Steve. AND....I like the fact that your boys like donuts.

Randee said...

I am crying too...and I'm Jewish :).
I woulda bet on donuts over bagels!! :)
You were in my thoughts today (I am not just saying that, check your phone for a test...8pm tomorrow there is the season premiere of High School Reunion (I think I told you about this before)...it's a good show and will once again remind me that going to my reunion is not top on my list of "to dos" for 2010. Even tho we dont' talk often, I have thought many positive prayers and thoughts for you thru the past year. Have a wonderful weekend with your boys!
Randee

Heidi said...

Beautiful. And bittersweet. This will be me next year when my son is with his father. I think I'll come back and read it again then. I hope you have a lovely New Year.

Unknown said...

Steve, thanks for referring me here. A very heartfelt, well-rendered piece. I like the gratitude list. It gets to the heart of the life you were living; what really mattered in the face of your initial downer mood. Well played, grasshopper.