Sunday, December 6, 2009

You'd Better Watch Out

I can feel the panic rise up in me as Christmas approaches and I get left behind with no shopping done, no cards bought and not even an inkling of an idea on what presents to get for anyone. I am to Christmas organisation what Tiger Woods is to domesticity.

As the festive season approaches imperiously like Tiger’s wife with a three iron, I felt I really had to get a move on this week and so I sourced our tree and put it up at the weekend. Notice I said “sourced” rather than “bought”. I realise that most people do simply buy a tree, but I have to study the form card, check prices, needle drop, whether it’s potted or not and whether they pick up the carcass after Christmas. I really should get a hobby.

This year the tradition of newspapers panicking us over the festive tree has been followed to the letter because, year after every blinkin’ year, they tell us there will be a shortage due to adverse weather/ blight/pests/pesticides/swine flu/the millennium bug/ or famous golfers driving in to them - and this year is no exception. I believe there is a press officer who each year releases a story to keep prices inflated on behalf of the Nordic Arctic Fir Federation. This NAFF Press Release lands on editors’ desks each year as sure as cigarette ash and Katie Price's bottom.

The tradition in our house is that we share the load. I find the tree, pay for it, carry it to the car on my own and lift it in, drive it home, unload it, put it up, get all the tinsel and baubles down from the loft, decorate it and then the kids tell their friends to come see the tree they put up and decorated. That’s called sharing in our house. This year they did help a bit and the three of us worked away listening to Christmas carols, full of the Christmas spirit, exchanging greetings like “watch out you’ll pull it over” at the top of our voices while Silent Night played in the background.

This year’s tree is nine feet tall and came wrapped in a hairnet that took twenty minutes plus two Stanley knives to cut through. When released from its bondage the branches sprung out like an opera diva released from a corset, sending bits flying everywhere and blinding people five miles away. With the Christmas albums playing in the background and mince pies warming in the oven, I made the mistake of decorating the tree barefoot meaning as each bauble fell off and smashed on the floor my feet had more slashes than a Guns ‘n’ Roses lookalike convention. The soles of my feet resembled Gordon Ramsay before the Botox.

Next, out come the decorations for the rest of the house, made up mainly of figures the girls have made at school over the years out of pottery or empty toilet rolls. The pottery figurines of three wise men are so oddly shaped they look curiously arty, and one day I’m sure we’ll con some art critic in to paying fortunes for them. The angel is made from a toilet roll with a ping pong ball on the top and some macaroni for hair, and pasta shells for hands. It’s ten years old now and has become a family heirloom we’ll never part with, though we may eat it one day.

So, the Coia household is waiting for Santa now. All I have to do is make a list, buy the presents, wrap them, get some chocolate food in, buy the Christmas cards and stamps, address them, post them, and put the lights up in the garden. If Santa could just put off his visit till, say March, I might be actually ready.

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