Merry Christmas.
Except it doesn’t feel so merry yet. Last week I
had dental surgery, to the tune of $6,000.
Robert has come home from work today . . . with Shingles. Grandma wants to
die and talks about it incessantly. A plumber is upstairs right this minute
completing a $700 repair. Last week we had to buy a new dishwasher.
Sigh. Life happens, even three days before
Christmas.
Still, there is balance, even when the scales tilt.
After a stressful preparatory season, the choir program at church was
beautiful. They sang well and the listeners seemed moved. The singers watched me and responded
to what my hands were trying to communicate. We made music together. That alone
is a minor miracle.
Other events might not be called miraculous, but
they are joyful. While eating dinner last night with friends, a group of
carolers stopped by. What could be better than smells of spiced yams wafting
through the kitchen while listening to “Silent Night” and “We Wish You a Merry
Christmas.” And did I mention we join together as friends and family every week
for Sunday dinner? Laughing, discussing, solving the world’s problems.
Then yesterday I had lunch with some of my favorite
women in the world. We call it therapy lunch, because we have a tacit agreement
to talk about anything and share each others' lives in a unique way.
And I can’t forget the gift delivered by my
neighbor. After having the tooth procedure last week, my post-surgical
instructions said I shouldn’t have carbonated sodas. I called the dentist’s office,
and the receptionist told me I should refrain for two weeks. Really? Two weeks?
That seemed like a long time.
On Sunday morning, I asked a dentist in the choir
about this (who also happens to be an excellent tenor). He said that didn’t
sound right and mentioned that his instructions said nothing about carbonated
beverages. Later that day, he came to my door with a brown paper bag wrapped in
a red ribbon. Inside . . . a can of diet Coke. It may be my favorite present of
the year.
So . . . even though life is messy, bills never
end, and health can be fragile, the little joys of life and minor miracles are
enough. Merry? Maybe not. But Christmas always brings the promise of better
things ahead.
Merry Christmas.
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