Not everyone’s winter holidays are all peace,
joy and light. Expectations are impossibly high, ratcheted up by every media
outlet in the country; possibly in the entire planet. In the Western world,
consumerism is strong and we’re continually blasted (starting these days well
before Halloween) with exhortations to buy that perfect gift for everyone on
your list. Not to mention decking the halls, preparing and consuming feasts,
putting on and attending parties.
All of this only highlights wealth disparities in
our society—or even just differences in economic security. I don’t think any
other time of year so acutely plays up the delta between the haves and have
nots. Indeed—between the haves and probably never will haves.
There are calls for charity, of course; we receive
blizzards of donation requests—which puts yet another stressor on some of us,
because how can we support them all? (Also, it pisses me off some, because why
should a hungry child only receive our generosity in December, when she’s
hungry the other eleven months, too?)
In fact, Advent is meant to be a time for
preparing to receive the Messiah into our midst, a time of quiet, of
contemplation, of inward anticipation of this Gift, not the kaleidoscopically
manic whirlwind of Hallmark Movie Channel festivities this month has become.
But turning inward and reflecting in the quiet can open you up to
less-than-joyful emotions, so I get it why people would rather double down on
holiday expectations than look into the darkness. It’s something I’ve struggled
with for decades.
All this is by way of me pointing out that
focusing only on joyous music in Advent doesn’t really speak to everyone. So here’s
something for those of us who are not finding the runup to Christmas entirely felicitous. I think it's timely for Advent 2 and the theme of Peace.
It should come as no surprise that “I’ll Be
Home for Christmas” was written in 1943 (first recorded by Bing Crosby). Its
lyrics encapsulate the longing of every soldier on every side in every war for
the past millennium to be with family and friends for the quintessential
family-and-friends holiday. Its wistful melancholy contrasts sharply with the
upbeat tone of the piece my parents used to play, “Home for the Holidays”. In
the latter, regardless of the Atlantic to Pacific traffic, people will make it
home. In the former—not so much.
Josh Groban’s cover of “I’ll Be Home” is some
years old, but we still have troops in harm’s way in both Iraq and Afghanistan—and
now on our own bloody southern border. Peace is something these men and women understand profoundly. They will not be home for
Christmas—so let’s have Groban.
I’ve always felt an affinity for this song; I
think it’s because—for at least two decades—I’ve not been able to figure out
where home is.
No comments:
Post a Comment