Last night was the kick off: wine and wine and wine and some rum punch in an historic building crammed with homemade gingerbread houses. There were older gentlemen in tweed, ladies in Burberry, and me in my nicest jeans. There was cheer and good tidings and naturally, the whole thing rolled into a bender at a Small Town bar even though me and my neighbor pinky swore we wouldn't. Pinky swearing never works. Not with all the Rockwelliness and the wine. And the beer. And the... well, yeah, the beer.
Here's the thing about Small Towns and Christmas time: it's one long credit card fueled drunk until January 2. It's gets dark and cold at like what? 3:00pm? so you gotta get things twinkly and dressed up in pine swag and ogle candy houses that look better than the ones you live in. You gotta forget your pinky swearing and stroll over to the pub, belly up with your neighbors and all your new friends, tell your secrets and some jokes and take the long way home.*
*Not because you meant to, but because you were too busy chatting and hahaha-ing to realize how far out of the way you had walked.
Charity abounds! Like the guy buying all the drinks at the bar, and the very nice anonymous person who pulled all the plastic, newspaper stuffed ghosts off my tree (and left them on my doorstep). I appreciate it all. Actually, I appreciate the drinks more than the passive aggressive "it's christmas Picket! the ghosts gotta go" but hey, whatever. It's Christmas time and I got love in my heart and probably more booze coursing through my veins than blood.
Tomorrow the tree comes in and the lights go on and it will be a Christmas miracle when my head stops pounding.
Better Rockwellian than Machiavellian...
ReplyDeletePicket, I'd belly up to the bar with you any time.
ReplyDeleteEven at Gates :)
Better Rockwellian than Dickensian, also. It's sorta grim here in the rust belt, so I liked reading about this; thanks!
ReplyDeleteAnd left them on your porch! Sorry Mizz Picket...I know this one is all about your Christmas juju and buzz and all. But I just can't get around that they left them on your porch!
ReplyDeleteYour town sounds all jovial and picturesque and collaborative and historical and ...shit...it soounds incredible. I think I'd like to live there. I'd find some people to play cards with if I did.
ReplyDeletelast night was a good time for us all at the picket house.
ReplyDeleteI hope I get a little bit of that fun stuff soon! :)
ReplyDeleteCan I presume you were using the "they're the ghosts of Christmas past, present and future" excuse before your tree got ghostjacked?
ReplyDeleteSounds like way too much fun...love a Rockwellian Xmas. Miami / Xmas...kind of a joke.
ReplyDeleteThat ALL sounds so lovely. I wish the price for charming wasn't the bitter cold. HoHoHo
ReplyDeleteSounds like you're getting into the spirit (or at least the spirits). I'm still struggling - I'm trying - just can't find my Christmas spirit.
ReplyDeleteIt all sounds lovely, but did you have to endure the never-ending Christmas carols or did someone bring bills for the jute box?
ReplyDeleteI wish my small town was more like your small town. We all compete to light the town, but no one leaves their house (especially when it is this f-in cold out).
ReplyDeleteI would belly it up with you too!
Oh, Ms. P., you would have LOVED our booze-soaked party yesterday. And next one we have (which I hope is not for a LONG, LONG time--have mercy on me, MiL), you're invited and should totally come, distance be damned.
ReplyDeleteSee, now I used to follow the golden rule, "Liquor before beer and you're in the clear; Beer before liquor will get you sicker."
ReplyDeleteBut you mentioned you started with wine, so I'm not sure how that fits in. Because if wine is technically liquor, then that means my golden rule isn't worth a crap because you sounded pretty hung over.
I'm just hoping our family Christmas eve doesn't end up a frat party like last year. Jager-bombs and all. Us hungover, and my kitchen floor all sticky and black on Christmas morning.
ReplyDelete