Saturday, December 23, 2006

Home for the holidays

I'm home for the holidays this year, and yet it's been a painful, lonely time. It always is for me when I'm with family, but this year especially. These are people I'm related to, yet they're complete strangers. We spend time in front of a TV to avoid talking.

My parents moved to Florida after my freshman year of college, and then moved again from central Florida to Jacksonville, where they now live. When I come "home," I have no ties to the people or the place, and wouldn't come to Jacksonville, or Florida at all, if it weren't for my family.

I didn't get along well with my stepmom when I was growing up. I still struggle with anger, frustration, and the loss of a relationship I often wish we could have had. My stepmom (called Mom from here on out) had five miscarriages, and didn't have kids until I was ten. As a result, she overcompensated and smothered one of my brothers, and there has always been a rift between he and I. We've been pitted against each other and there's a wall between us that I have no idea how to cross, even though I sense there are times when we'd both like to find common ground. Instead, a heavy silence and awkwardness rests between us. My youngest brother and I get along well in person, though even between us I've felt tension this trip. I won't lie, some of it's been me. I'm wound tight these days and have anger toward something, I don't know what.

I'm 31, my brothers are 21 and 18, and yet we slip into the same roles we did as kids. I hear this is true of most families, whether the siblings are kids, teens, or are in their 30s, 40s, or 50s. How do we redefine roles, begin to see each other again through fresh eyes?

Yet I also know there are millions of people who would love to be with their families this year and can't. A blogging friend of mine writes posts about the war in Iraq. A girl I went out with once sent me an email to write our soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. Whether we're for the war or against it, we all agree that being miles away from home at Christmastime can be lonely and hard, let alone when we find ourselves in another country, and one where people are shooting at us.

Another friend talked to me about Advent, about how Christmas should remind us of an absence, yet this runs counter to our cultural impulses. This year more than others, I've gotten stressed buying gifts for family and friends, have hated the traffic in the city, and have wondered what Christmas is about.

And yet there remains a deep longing for peace, peace in the sense of Shalom, peace between each other (my family), peace within ourselves (freedom from tension, anxiety, anger, despair), peace in our communities (no more flipping the bird), and peace with God and the sense that God is present and that things really were meant for good.

I can't begin to tell you how many times I've wished that Christmas would come crashing down, that we'd have to start over, more simply yet more peacefully. I've found myself sitting in church lately longing and hoping that Jesus is someone who lived in history, that he was who he said he was, and that this truth has power in my life and in every life on this planet. I would love to forego the giving and receiving of gifts if it meant that I could find what I was looking for (and feeling like I was still missing) when I opened presents under the tree. I would love to forego a Christmas meal if it meant feeling full of hope, joy, and peaceful relationships. I would love to forego a holiday from work if it meant that the rest of the year I was part of something revolutionary and satisfying. And I would forego another Christmas pageant, musical, Santa Claus suit, or Salvation army can if I could see God walking among us.

More than anything else, this is what I want for Christmas.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

All I can say is best wishes ......

Love and light from me to you
Sarah mwa

Cliff said...

Thanks, Sarah, and same to you :).

Cliff

Anonymous said...

if i could, i would grant you that wish, but i aint God, heck im not even bruce almighty so ill do the next best thing and wish you a merry xmas and a happy new year.

Cliff said...

Thanks, Raghav. Hope you have a good holiday too! Great to hear from you.

Baron Ectar said...

Cliff - nice to meet ya. Ms. Enemy speaks fondly you and I am sure that you are just as good of a man as she says you are.

I only have time to read this one post - I will do my best to read more of you later.

Christmas is so stressfull - I miss my kids this Christmas but thankfully they are the only relatives that I would be forced to endure - I am going through some life adjustments myself with family. Trying to be the son they think I should be - the brother that they think I should be.

It is not easy this path - but I have faith we will find some peace amongst its roadblocks. I sure wish at times God would throw up a sign that said caution ahead or go this way dummy!

Merry Christmas Cliff

Anonymous said...

I found you through Baron..

Your post has so much sadness in it. It makes my heart hurt for you.

It's not many people who see the True meaning of Christmas....it's become so many things...gifts...money...things...food...yet there are so many people out there who don't have any of those things. those of us that do are truely blessed, yet we fail to see this.

I was just complaining cuz I didn't get my kids alot of "things" this year...just a few gifts each. But they do have 2 parents who love them beyond measure and who love to spend time with them. I hope they see the true value of this at sometime in their life, and make Christ a big part of that life.

Have a blessed Christmas, Madman Upstairs....I'll be thinking about you and your Christmas wishes.

Anonymous said...

ahhhh Peace.

The elusive, longed for, inner desire and yet needed world wide!

A Very Merry, Peaceful, Christmas to you Cliff. May peace find us all. Give me a call on Christmas, I would love to chat.
Kevin

Enemy of the Republic said...

Cliff,

I haven't gotten to any of my comments on my last blog, but I know what you mean. Part of me hates Christmas because of the commercialism. I also remember having to be with family that I couldn't get along with--that is very hard. I also know that Christmas is painful because my folks are dead--you know all that-- and I haven't reconciled my mom's death at all. I believe more than ever that Christmas should be for those who need, those who hurt--fuck the presents and all that. I feel a great burden on my heart for our soldiers, for the homeless, for inmates in overcrowded facilities, for the shut ins--I could go on. Christmas shouldn't hurt, and yet it does, whether we are living in plenty or not. Maybe that was the point of my slide show on my blog.


I hope we can talk soon, my good friend.

Brooke said...

So...you know when I told you I was jealous of you going to Florida???...I now have some new perspective from your eyes. I am one of many in the world who also understand the dysfunction of family. I am learning that all we can do is change ourselves.