With
Thanksgiving a mere two weeks away, I cannot help but cast my mind back to last
year’s festivities, when I flew back east to Connecticut for that yearly
get-together with…(fade in ominous chord)…the fam.
Hoo boy.
For those of you with
odd families—and by ‘odd’ I mean families that actually get along whenever they’re
together—you will find this column funny (or, at least, I hope you will). For those of you out there with normal
families, you will probably be nodding your head knowingly as you read, and
will feel better at the end because you will realize that you are not alone in sharing
blood with those lunatics, liars, and convicts-in-training that we gather under
the woefully inadequate, laughably misleading umbrella called, ‘Family.’ You may call them ‘brother,’ ‘sister,’ and ‘Aunt
Maude.’ Later in the day, the police
will call them, ‘drunk and disorderly,’ ‘assailant with a deadly weapon,’ and ‘Black
Friday klepto-woman.’
People in my family
don’t being covered dishes with them.
The bring bail money.
Here’s how last year
went:
Once at the house and
divested of mukluks and a down-filled coat that made me look like the Sta-Puft
Marshmallow Man, I hand my mother the pumpkin pie she’d asked me to make (there
was a file baked inside—couldn’t afford bail money that year). This pie
is made of freshly-processed pumpkin, not that tinned crap. This results in a
lighter color and the flavor is remarkable.
So my mother feels
compelled to remark.
“Looks sort of
anemic, doesn’t it?”
“Top it with a unit
of O Negative, then. Where is everybody?” The driveway was a sea of
cars.
“You’re the first.”
“Opening a used car
lot?”
“Overflow from the
neighbors’ big do.”
“So . . . what?
The family’s going to park on the street, like I did?” The house is on a
hill with a 50-foot driveway.
“Looks that
way. We just wanted to help out. You might try loving your fellow man a
little more, Carson. Your snarky attitude is unbecoming.”
All this from a woman
whose dirty look can open clams at twenty paces.
But okay, I’ll go
along. She’s getting older. She’s forgotten that where she spits,
grass never grows.
“What can I do to help?”
I’m hoping quite a lot. My mother is not the best of cooks.
“Nothing
really. It’s all done. We can go sit and talk until everyone else gets
here.”
“Well, before we do
that, how about if I go and scatter some salt and sand on the driveway—it’s
pretty slick out there.”
“In a minute. I
have something I want to discuss with you.”
Oh, God.
When we are seated,
Mom drops the big one. “I think your father is having an affair.”
Holding in explosive
laughter, which, having nowhere to go, travels downward, instantly inflating my
ankles, I said, “Mom, Dad is 83 years old.”
“Yes, that’s right.”
“He’s legally blind.”
“Right.”
“He only has one
leg.”
“Yes.”
“And a colostomy
bag.”
“What’s your point?”
“I can’t believe you
just asked me that.”
So, after Mom dries
her eyes, I posed the big question.
“How do you know,
anyway?”
“He’s started wearing
thong underwear.”
Most people, mainly
women, wear thongs to avoid underwear lines showing through their pants.
I’d really like to know who my father thinks is looking at his ass.
“That’s it? Thong underwear?”
“And he’s using that
Axe cologne.”
“Ah, I take it he’s
losing his sense of smell, as well, then?”
“This is not the time
for jokes, Carson. Oh, and he’s letting his hair grow longer.”
My father has had a
crew cut for as long as I’ve known him. “Perhaps he’s finally decided to
leave the 1950s behind?”
“I don’t think so.
“Okay, so who
with? Any idea?”
“Oh, I know exactly who
with.”
Evidently, according
to my mother, Pop has become enamored of the local Postmistress . . . who is
92, uses a walker, and is nearly deaf. Getting the mail is never a
peaceful pursuit if there is anyone requiring front desk service. At
Christmastime it's bedlam in there.
“So what are you
going to do about it? Have you talked to him?”
“No.”
“Why not?
Talking to me
isn’t going to get it resolved.”
“I don’t want to
discuss it anymore.”
“You don’t have
to. I’m going to go talk to him.”
“No. It has
nothing to do with you. Leave it alone. Let’s just have a pleasant
Thanksgiving, all right?”
Yes, kindly readers,
this is Thanksgiving in my house.
The aged relatives
begin arriving, with only minor gashes and contusions from slipping on the ice
in the driveway on the way up from the street.
Once everyone is
comfortable, Mom hustles us into the dining room to eat “before everything
dries out.”
Food is passed,
plates are loaded, wine glasses filled and it begins.
My Uncle Dan starts
things off. “So, how’s life with the Buckinghams?”
My mother bursts into
tears and dashes from the room.
“About the same, I
see,” he mutters.
By the time my mother
composes herself enough to return, Aunt Shirley is already on her fifth glass
of wine and her seventh filthy joke. This doesn’t play well to Aunt Mary,
who is a nun. My brother has decided to use his considerable talents as a
career waiter in a diner to instruct the group on French serving and is
launching food all over the room. Dad is still looking for his
fork. My cousin Lois hasn’t taken her face out of her pocket mirror since
she arrived, and has answered at least six calls on her Bluetooth, since she
knew we’d all want to hear her side of each conversation. Aunt Anne has
removed her wig and is beating my cousin Donald with it—I have no idea
why.
The only reason that
there is no gunplay this year is that, when Mom wasn’t looking, I sneaked Valium
into the stuffing . . . a lot of
Prozac. By the time the football game started, the family members who
weren’t unconscious were actually getting along, and even I was a little less
snarky.
So, odd family or
normal, I wish those who celebrate it a Happy Thanksgiving, free of bloodshed
and weapons charges.
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