City sidewalks, busy sidewalks
Dressed in holiday style
In the air there's a feeling of Christmas. . .
And on every street corner you hear
In the air there's a feeling of Christmas. . .
And on every street corner you hear
Silver bells, silver bells,
It's Christmas time in the city
Ring-a-ling,
Hear them ring,
It's Christmas time in the city
Ring-a-ling,
Hear them ring,
Soon it will be Christmas day
--“Silver Bells," Bing Crosby
Dear Thi,
October brought us to All Hallow’s Eve and Dia de Los
Muertos, occasions that pay tribute to spirits crossing that fine line between
this life in which I live and the next, in which you reside.
We visited a
pumpkin farm, carved a pumpkin, harvested bright-orange persimmons, and spent a
night trick-or-treating.
November brought us to Thanksgiving, when temperatures
drop, we don cozy sweaters, and spend a Thanksgiving weekend in a warm familial
atmosphere to get ready for the coming of winter.
December comes upon us soon, and we are exactly one month
away from your birthday. As soon as Thanksgiving hits, the shops stock up with
merchandise to entice consumers to spend on Black Friday and Cyber Monday. Christmas
songs start playing on the radio to further push the festive holiday spirit.
This season brings on the worst commutes with shoppers eager to get their Christmas
shopping done, workers getting back to the swing of things after the gluttonous
Thanksgiving break, and students stressing to finish up the fall semester with
finals, further aggravated by earlier nightfall as we push our clocks forward
to adjust to standard time, and as the first heavy rains of the season flood
the parched roads and clogged drains.
I drive to and from work hearing the song “Silver Bells”
several times a day. People have their clear favorites and dislikes when it
comes to holiday music. For the record, I hate the slow, droning tune of “White
Christmas.” But “Silver Bells” affects me a different way; it always instills
within me a sense of melancholy, that we have gotten to the end of another
year, punctuated by the hub-bub and rush of holiday shopping, decorating,
wrapping. Having lost both my grandmas around Christmas and New Year, the
holidays are a reminder of who remain with us, and who have departed. This
year in particular, it fills me with a sort of dread and heart-pounding anxiety
as your birthday draws ever closer.
Zoning out during the grueling commute home after the sun
has long set, or during the middle of the night as your brother and father
snore beside me, I am enveloped by the darkness. There is the feel of the cushy leather
examination bed covered in a crisp linen sheet under me, a fresh hospital gown
on my skin, slippery gel on my belly, your image on the TV screen bobbing
about, ever so still. I was convinced you were napping, dear Thi. I was
oblivious when the ultrasound tech hinted at something being wrong, not a smile
or a joke during the briefer-than-usual sonography session. There is the feel
of the doctor’s warm hand on my arm when she paused in her questions to tell me
there is bad news, that they couldn’t find your heartbeat. How could that be,
when I heard it beating away so strongly at my last ultrasound, that I swear I
could still feel your movements just a second ago? How could the only thing I
wanted for my birthday, for this Christmas, be taken away in an instant after
20 weeks of gestation? A shiver coursed through me when I heard the news, a feeling
of somehow “failing” in the worst way possible. In the days and months that
followed, I was numb, as if winter had frosted over my heart, and tears poured
relentlessly, as torrential as the rain.
During Thanksgiving weekend, we jumped aboard Christmas
festivities earlier and got our tree up, along with our indoor decorations.
Everything assaults my senses and memories with bittersweet reminders, from the
smell of fresh pine that I came home to after I delivered you, to the garlands
that I used to deck the halls, broken-hearted when I pulled them down last year
without a daughter to celebrate. I once again hung up the customary four
stockings at our fireplace, knowing in my heart that there should’ve been a fifth.
Luc marvels at the Christmas lights on the fresh tree; we create the magic for
him even as it wounds our hearts to remember you.
Soon we will string up lights on the outside of the house.
Soon we will take him to see snow for the first time. It is almost another year
gone round, one that we survived by rote repetition of our daily routines,
putting one foot in front of the other and going through the motions. The pain
ebbs and flows, then crashes back in like a tidal wave as the sights and sounds
of the season come upon us once again. Bundle up, sweet Thi, and keep warm
through the coming of winter. Brace yourself against the rains and winds that
pelt you and threaten to knock you down, for soon it will be Christmas Day.
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