The Widow Vibe: Going 'Spare'

2 minute read time.

 

What with digging myself out of the snow to get to work, worrying about the quickly depleting supplies of fuel to keep the various antiquated heating systems fired up, slithering back over the icy roads at lunch time to let The Hounds out, I hadn’t had much time to think about Christmas.

 

Not that Christmas could be completely forgotten – that would be impossible with all those relentlessly insistent jingle-bells and sparkly intrusions on our consciousness. 

 

I had, however, been resolutely avoiding the shops:  there are all those things there that might have been bought if it had been other than it is. The Christmas cards were neatly stacked behind an empty vase to be dealt with later  - perhaps next year.   Several invitations for ‘the day’ had been fended off with ‘I’ll- let-you-know-nearer-the-time.’

 

 

Christmas could be survived if it was firmly ignored.  

 

But on one of the ‘snow days’ when I couldn’t get to work, I was struck with the grim reality of what Christmas might be like from now on.  

 

It was the woman on the radio who was responsible.

 

I don’t know where they get them from, these women who they wheel out every year at Christmas time, but you know the type;  the ones who make their own decorations, who bake the sodding/brandy-sodden cake in March, who probably even knit the stockings in which to lovingly place the little darlings’ teensy (expensive) gifts.

 

While I was staggering in with the last of the un-Yule logs, there she was, on the radio, Christmas Super Woman enthusing about her fabulous festivities. 

 

Everyone, she crowed, was involved.  The youngsters peeled the potatoes and set the perfectly themed table.  Even the first of her three husbands had been known to help with the Brussels sprouts. 

 

I exaggerate – a little - but you get the picture. 

 

She really got my attention, however, when she mentioned the fact that every year they always had a ‘spare’ to join the Yule bash.

 

She sighed a slightly martyred sigh as she said it, clearly thinking herself very noble and generous for inviting such sorry creatures as society’s ‘spares’ (the recently divorced, the terminally unmarriageable and, I assume, the recently widowed) to participate in her family Christmas.

 

So there was the miserable truth -  from the mouth of Christmas Super Woman - I have become a ‘spare.’  I am now one of those  who are invited for Christmas because they are unattached, floating disconsolately in the world of happy couples and families.  I have, it seems, the potential to be someone’s good deed in the season of ‘good will.’ 

 

“Bah! Humbug!”  to that I say. 

 

Having survived this Christmas – just – with two other ‘spares,’ next year I intend to simply disappear somewhere, even if it means that my newly sprung snow-shovelling muscles are required to clear a runway at Heathrow. 

 

Suggestions for destinations anyone? 

 

Best wishes to you all, my dear Maclanders. 

 

Xxx

 

PS  Christmas marked six months to the day. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Anonymous
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hi Grace,

    If you are doing nothing at the weekend my path could do with a good shoveling.Its my Bad Back you see. BAH HUMBUG.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Take care and look after yourself Big Hugs Love Sarsfield.xx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Somehow, I survived Christmas with the support of my family and some amazing friends.

    I have survived the first event in what will be a year of firsts.

    I returned home yesterday to find shoals of condolence cards and messages of sympathy.   It is sad that so many “friends” are breaking their silences now, without so much as a visit or phone call to Gary in his last months.  They of course will be “supporting” me at Gary’s funeral.  I cannot prevent that, but they will not be invited to his wake.  

    I take comfort in the true friends who did keep in touch.  These same friends are there for me now, quietly offering comfort.  When train services were cancelled and my visit to my family in Essex seemed in jeopardy, to be told “you don’t need to be alone”, meant so much.

    In his quiet unassuming way, Gary touched many lives.  The testaments of genuine sorrow and respect from former colleagues and true friends, mostly delivered on foot after tramping through snow and ice mean so much and give me solace for the dark days ahead

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    From one Mclander to another Humbugs used to be very popular sweets till Dickens villified them with his Christmas quote. I well remember having to do an excercise in English comprehension based on three children entering a sweet shop and the first ordering a quarter pound of humbugs. The shop keeper a frail elderly soul had to walk to the rear of the shop find a pair of steps and return to lift down the jar and dispense the sweets into the waiting scales. After serving the first child she returned the steps to the rear of the shop and then asked the second child what it wanted " A quarter pound of humbugs" was the reply. So off to collect the step ladders a second time and dutifully weighing and selling to the second child the required humbugs. The Shopkeeper at this stage had a brain wave and turned to the remaining youngster and enquired if they too wanted a quarter pound of humbugs and having recieved a negative response shuffled away with the steps and placed them in the rear of the shop. On return the third child was asked what it wanted and the reply was, "2 ounces of humbugs please" I think at this stage the shokeeper was going "spare". I forget what we were supposed to be doing with the piece of english but I never forgot the moral of the story. Three out of three victorian children liked humbugs. Albeit not all of them could afford a full quarter pound.

    PS

    I have forgotten what snow looks like.

    PPS

    Spares are always useful.

    PPPS

    We have loads of Turkey to spare,

    PPPPS

    As a rule I never listen to the radio.

    PPPPPS

    I shall expect a visit next year down under where the weather will make you forget Christmas. How can you be dashing through the snow in T shirt and shorts.

    Charles xx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    I can see that next year there will be a trip down to dig Sarsfield out, put in a few visits to various friends and  'in-laws' to raise some money for benevolent funds in my new role as a 'spare', then it will be Canada, followed by a tranformation to beach bum on Bondi in my T shirt and shortsi!  

    Dear Daffie and Clare - you know that I am thinking of you both and am with you in spirit.  

    Becky - I do hope that all is as well as it can be.  

    Huge hugs to Mo and Leisha, as always, and a bucket of humbugs to Charles.  

    HopeKj - I do hope that you hang onto your sense of humour too.  It is very hard at times, I know.  It sounds as if you are doing a wonderful job being there for your father.  I will be thinking of you.

    Sarsfield - you are a star!  I am loading my shovel into the car at this moment, although I suspect that the thaw will have taken care of the worst of it by now.    

    Lots of love to you all,

    Grace xx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hi Buzzie, don't know if you remember me. But just spent my second Christmas, and with a lot of alcohol, I survived it pretty well. Yes, feel very spare myself, too. But we WILL survive, and we WILL enjoy life, in spite of all the rest.

    love,

    Pat