Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

23 December, 2024

Holiday, holidays, and covid

This is the first time I've signed in to No Kidding in NZ for over three months! As I mentioned on Monday (here) on A Separate Life, I've been away on an extended trip. Unfortunately, security issues required me to be quiet on the blogosphere about my travels, given that I’m open about where I live, I’ve posted photos of my house, and, unlike many years ago when we travelled for six months, my real name can be associated with this blog. So I didn’t want to advertise our absence too much. Unlike previous long trips, our friends are no longer working in the city, so couldn’t drop in and stay for a night or two every week, so we were a bit more concerned about security this time. I wrote and scheduled all my posts in advance, because I knew it would be too hard to do so on the road. I also find it horrible to log into blogger on my phone/ipad, so I really apologise that I haven't been able to respond to comments etc, even though I have been reading them. I am going to go back now and read them and comment! If you stuck it through to December with me, then I am very grateful.

I'll reveal much more about our trip in due course. We had a wonderful time. I got to meet up with some old ectopic-messageboard friends, unfortunately missed Bamberlamb due to scheduling, and got to meet former blogger and author Lesley Pyne in London just before we flew home. 

We arrived home last Monday, giving me plenty of time (or so I thought) to clean the house, decorate my tree, do all the seasonal baking, write some blogposts, and be ready for Christmas. Unfortunately when we got home I began ailing, quickly tested positive for covid the following day, and have been laid up ever since. Today is the first day I've even made it upstairs to my laptop. So much for plans.

Though on the bright side, if I was going to catch covid on the trip, coming down with it as we arrived home was the best possible time.

It will just be the two of us. That was always the plan. I'm pretty miserable, and need another nap on the couch, so unless I improve rapidly in the next day or two, there'll be little celebration here. That's fine. It's the end of a long year, and I hope for you it passes peacefully whether you celebrate or not. I'm looking forward to the rest of summer (having missed the start of it in Europe), and health returning.

Sending love 

Formerly-absent-but-now-returned Mali


PS. Here are some previous seasonal posts to help anyone who might be struggling:

Reclaiming Christmas – written way back in December 2010, only my second month of blogging (though my seventh year of No Kidding Christmases)

Holiday Season: If Money were No Object 

You are Not Alone

Childless at Christmas

My 2016 Annual Holiday Post

Four Rules of Surviving Christmas for No Kidding women

The Season and Traditions



05 December, 2022

Enjoying the Season

December has arrived. Quite how it is here already when it was May just last week (!), I’m not sure, but here it is nonetheless. Temperatures are warming. I sat out in a vineyard having lunch recently, and on a deck at a beach that evening. It would have been my father’s 94th birthday yesterday, but he has been gone now 17 years already. His birthday always makes me remember my first ectopic pregnancy. In the space of a week or so, I suspected I was [pregnant, tested positive, had some bleeding, and was sent to the hospital. As with many early ectopics, it then took about six weeks to diagnose definitively and then to resolve, with ongoing treatment. My second ectopic was the following year, and a few weeks later, but took about six months to resolve. The beginning of December is, for me, the beginning of ectopic season. So inevitably, when I’m happy that summer is arriving, and the windows are open and I can hear the birds singing or Christmas music, or see the first red blooms of pohutukawa, I might feel a little flicker reminding me of the grief I felt 20 and 21 years ago at this time. And the years that it took to recover. Now, I remember, but I don’t really feel the grief. I’ve grieved, but I choose not to torture myself by remembering how that felt, by letting myself feel that again, or by focusing on what I lost.

Twelve years ago, in the first weeks of No Kidding in NZ, I wrote about Reclaiming Christmas. I still believe we can all do this if we want to. Everyone can enjoy Christmas or any other special holidays they choose to celebrate. These days are not just for children – if we’re lucky, we all have magical memories of past years that we want to honour, or perhaps we want to create new memories, and there’s no timeline on what age you need to be to do that. One of my favourite reclaiming traditions is very simple. It is insisting I don’t get out of bed too early (can you guess I’m not a morning person?), and enjoying a simple breakfast of croissants and orange juice with my husband. Maybe one year we’ll go to Paris for Christmas and do it properly!

I put my tree up yesterday – it is early for me, but I decided to do so while I have a visitor in the house, and because I remember taking it down last time (only two weeks ago, it feels like) with regret that it was up for such a short time. Enjoyment of my tree is one of the key parts of my celebration. Who cares that no children will see the tree this year? I’ll see it! Friends will see it. I remember each of the decorations, where I bought them (Florence, Talinn, Bergen, London, Manila, Bangkok, etc) or who gave them to me (my nephew, my fellow childless Christmas-tree-loving friend, my sister, a friend, etc). I have a couple that always make me think of my Christmas babies that didn’t make it too.

I need to do some Christmas shopping this week, and – as long as I am not under pressure – I usually enjoy this. We’re also going to take a few days out to personally deliver some gifts rather than post them. December is one of my favourite times of the year to travel in New Zealand, so that should be fun. We’re going to catch up with friends just before Christmas at a favourite restaurant, I always do a baking exchange with another friend, and we have plans to meet up with others afterwards.

The whole present-giving part of Christmas is not a big deal for me. I like giving gifts, but don’t go over-board. I receive one or two gifts, and I appreciate them, but they’re never the focus of the day for me. My husband and I rarely exchange gifts. If we do, they’re often little surprises. Expectations are low, and I’m happy about that. I can’t be disappointed! Besides, our presents to each other are the trips we take together, and we know how much they cost!

If there’s one thing I dislike about Christmas (or other big holidays), it is the huge fanfare and anticipation for what is really just one day, perhaps even just one meal! Such energy, expense, effort, and angst for such a short day! I’m going to enjoy each of the lead-up activities, whether it is baking, shopping for our meal, seeing friends, delivering gifts, or just rejoicing in the lack of pressure. That way, I can find the whole process enjoyable. And I can eliminate anticipation and stress that might otherwise be unpleasant.

As for the actual day, even though we are going to spend it alone this year, I’m looking forward to a relaxed day, making the food we like, choosing a special wine, eating some of those treats I've made in advance (the berry mince baclava my friend made last year will be high on that list), having a peaceful day, maybe watching some corny movies, or weather permitting, taking a walk along a beach. Enjoying a peaceful drink on the deck with the birds. Hopefully we’ll get to do it all.

And, as I always say, in a flash the day will be over! The next day, life will be back to normal, and we will be looking forward to and enjoying the summer, to the New Year, and to the adventures of 2023. With the added benefit of yummy leftovers!

I hope you are able to look forward to the season this year, rather than dread it. Breathe deeply. Focus on what you love. Don't torture yourself with what-ifs. It does get easier, I promise.

27 December, 2021

Out of Office reply

My husband and I are spending time with my sister, her husband, their daughter, and Jeff the dog. Not a bad spot, is it? 

For more pics, check out A Separate Life

13 December, 2021

Some seasonal thoughts

I was going to start a campaign in today’s blog, but Jess beat me to it, by getting a publisher to change an image of a pregnant woman to highlight an article about fabulous No Kidding women embracing their lives. Go read her story on her blog – and a link to the article – here. So instead, I've turned my thoughts to December, and what it brings.

There has been quite a bit of activity around the place about dealing with the holidays when we have no children. Gateway Women have highlighted a conversation about reclaiming a childless holiday and Infertile Phoenix has reviewed it here, and has talked about following the advice she heard there.

I’ve written and talked about reclaiming Christmas (which is the prevalent holiday here in NZ, but applies to any holiday) for over a decade, and was interviewed about it a few years ago here, though to my disappointment, the phrase was edited out of the article. The journalist was most put out, as she really liked my approach, and wanted to emphasise that Christmas (in this case) is for all of us. I’ve joked recently that I should have trademarked the phrase “reclaiming Christmas!” But really, I’m just glad to see that it is reaching new people, and that they are all finding strength from the idea.

I’ve written about it before in these posts, as well as other issues around this difficult season:

Reclaiming Christmas – written back in December 2010, only my second month of blogging (though my seventh year of No Kidding Christmases)

Holiday Season: If Money were No Object 

You are Not Alone

Childless at Christmas

My 2016 Annual Holiday Post

Four Rules of Surviving Christmas for No Kidding women

The Season and Traditions

This year, Christmas is going to be low key. Our second Christmas without either my parents or my husband’s parents still feels a little weird, as we are so used to having others to care for at this time of year. But it means I have to follow my own advice. And so, I have my tree up already in honour of hosting some friends last week, and I have enjoyed doing the very limited amount of gift shopping that I need to do this year. (With two family birthdays on the 20th, I almost have to do as much birthday shopping as Christmas shopping!) I just have to pick up a book for someone, and something for my niece. Actually, that last item will be the most difficult! But at least I’ll get to deliver it personally. And lastly, I’m planning to do my Christmas baking this week. I usually make mini mince pies, and will do that, as they are little mouthfuls of scrumminess. But one of my friend’s brought a fruit mince baclava on Thursday and it was so good, I’m stealing the idea and will make some to take to my sister’s house, and to give to an aged uncle-in-law, and some friends who are probably tired of getting the mince pies. Neither my husband nor I are into big Christmas presents, so the emphasis is on food and relaxation.

In fact, this time of year, I like to focus on:

  • My tree and all my ornaments collected from all over the world that I love dearly.
  • Food traditions – old, and new, experiments successful or not.
  • Compassion for others who might feel alone and sad at this time of year.
  • The coming summer shut-down that occurs this time every year in NZ, and brings a very relaxed sense to the season.
  • Summer food and drink!
  • A very low-key and casual Wellington, a government city that empties out as the workers all go to the beach or the bush for a few weeks over Christmas and the New Year.
  • The year gone and the year to come, forever hopeful that it will be better.
  • Celebrating relationships in person, online, and on zoom.

That is not to say it’s all fine. Twenty years later, December is filled with memories of positive pregnancy tests, losses, hospital treatment for ectopic pregnancies, and disappointment. They usually pass quickly for me now, or hover without much pain, watching me navigate the month. I like to honour those little sparks of life who never made it here, but who helped make me who I am today. The best way I can do that is to embrace the life I have now, and live a good life. I know so many of you are doing this, and are shining the light for others. I hope that will be the case for you all.

 




21 December, 2020

The season and traditions

I put up my Christmas tree last week. The decorations always make me happy - the ones I bought on my travels, or that friends gave me, and even the ones I bought to mark my ectopic losses (at Christmastime 19 and 18 years ago respectively), although they are always bittersweet. As Tingting said here so beautifully, I do not feel that Christmas (or any celebration if you don't celebrate Christmas) is not for us, simply because we don't have children or grandchildren. It was hard for a year or two, especially with the memories of my losses so fresh in my mind, but after that I decided to reclaim the season.

One of my traditions is to always make some mini mince* pies - the recipe calls them baby mince pies, but for obvious reasons I refuse to call them that. I always make them. I enjoy them if Christmas is quiet, I give them away to friends sometimes, and this year I'm taking them to visit my sister. So that was my day today - making the pastry, the pies, juggling chilling the pastry, thawing the pastry (because I chilled it too long! lol), filling the pies, chilling the pies, egg-washing the pies, and finally baking the pies! It's a "Mali" Christmas tradition, and I'm fond of it. It helps me to know that Christmas is for me too.

Unfortunately, my husband hasn't always been able to do it. This year he sounds quite morose, and he has commented a couple of times that Christmas is not for us. As well as letting him know I have heard him, I have also commented each time that personally I refuse to believe that, and point out the fun we can have together. Of course, it is his first Christmas without either of his parents, and that may be playing on his mind too. I reminded him too that last year I didn't look forward to Christmas at all - it felt like an anti-climax (and it was). But by Boxing Day - the day after Christmas - it was all behind us, and at least here in New Zealand we could begin our summer holidays. That's the thing. Whether you dread Christmas or another religious or cultural day, like any of the Days that Shall Not Be Named, they don't last forever, and sooner than we realise, we can forget them and move on.

Wishing you all the very best over the next week. 

Sending love/Arohanui from New Zealand to you all.


Another "Mali" tradition
- a Christmas Meringue Tree


* fruit mince, which is minced dried fruit (sultanas, raisins, currants, dates, and apricots) with a few other ingredients including a good slug of brandy!



09 December, 2019

Four Rules of Surviving Christmas for No Kidding Women

It’s that time of year again. It began in late October, when I received and gave my first gifts. That was purely because someone travelled to NZ, and to avoid postage we exchanged gifts then. Then there was a hiatus. But by the end of November, friends on Fbk (you know who you are) were putting up their trees, Christmas music was appearing in department stores, and my inner grouch was coming out.

By early December, the season is well in motion. Remembering my father’s birthday also always reminds me of my first loss, because it was during that week that I first found out I was pregnant, and then first realised I was losing the baby. This year, my father would have been 91. My baby would have been 17, practically an adult. So December is always a time of loss for me.

These days, December doesn’t usually bother me. I’ve even stopped – like most people – sending a lot of Christmas cards, so don’t have that pressure any more. But this year, I will admit that I have been feeling gloomy. Some of that is just life’s restrictions. Some of it is feeling the absence of family, and knowing that friends will be focused on their own families. So yes, even when I am writing a post about it getting better, and becoming a time of year that we can embrace, I will admit to some feelings of sadness or loneliness.

That said, a few weeks of some pretty terrible spring weather, with gale-force winds and torrential rain over the last few days, have probably also contributed to my mood. So this morning, when the day dawned with sun and blue sky and no wind, I went for a walk, then out for lunch with my husband. It’s feeling more summery, the pohutukawa flowers are out, and my mood lifted. Perhaps just writing this (I’m inserting this paragraph at the last minute) has been therapeutic too.

Christmas Day this year will be very, very quiet, with just my father-in-law and an aged uncle to join us. I’m glad we can be there for them, as they have both lost their wives in the last year, and if Christmas is hard for me, it will be very hard for them too. That’s the thing. Their grief and loss this year will be much bigger than mine. I also know that once they go home on Christmas afternoon, I can take a huge breathe, have a mini Christmas mince pie and a cup of tea (or, let’s face it, a glass of red wine), and relax.

That always makes it easier for me. By Christmas afternoon/evening, my husband and I can relax together. We’re used to doing that now, to having some quiet time together on this day of celebration for so many. And I know how lucky I am to have him with me. In fact, just thinking of that peaceful evening now makes me smile.

You see, that’s my first rule of Christmas. It is only one day. I know that it’s not really – that as I said it started in October or November for most of us, and can be weeks of reminders of loss, and dread in anticipation. But when I’m feeling gloomy, and dreading the coming weeks, I also step back, and remind myself that it is really just one day. And I can get put up with pretty much anything for one day. Even if you’re surrounded by people who will dd to the stress of the season, remind yourself that it will all be over in a day, or a week, or by the New Year. Okay, perhaps more accurately, as I’ve mentioned in a previous post, I should clarify that my first rule of Christmas is that it passes.

My second rule of Christmas or any event or holiday is to give yourself permission not to participate. If it’s all going to be too much for you, then stay at home, eat toast, and hide under the duvet. Or – in our hemisphere – go to the beach, or treat the day as just the same as any other day. (As much as you can in NZ, where most shops are shut.) You need to protect yourself, you don’t have to be merry and pretend all is okay. Do what feels right for you this year. Because this too will pass.

My third rule of Christmas is to reclaim it, and make it your own. I don’t agree that Christmas is just for children. It’s what we make it. And so, when I can, I put my own stamp on Christmas. I make my own Christmas cards most years – though haven’t this year, as I have plenty left over from previous years. Being inventive with photos is fun for me. If it’s not fun – don’t do it! I have a tree and much cherished decorations – yes, I feel sad that I don’t have children who would love it too, but there are no guarantees that your children will love the same things you love. I design a menu that is simple but meets my tastes. I sleep in! (How many parents can do that?) I ensure my husband and I have a special but simple breakfast together in the morning, before I start cooking. And this year, because there will be so few of us to provide for, I have just decided that we will go all out on the quality of the champagne and wine! Embrace what you love, and reject what you don’t. It can be fun figuring that out.

When I have family in town, or when I’m visiting family, I’m surrounded by in-laws, or sisters, nieces and nephews, and these days great-nephews too. That was painful those first years – especially as my second ectopic pregnancy warned me that all was not well in a temperature reading one Christmas morning when we were having that big family Christmas. So for a couple of years, I avoided the big Christmases. One year, I had my parents (and only my parents) come and stay, and we had a lovely adult Christmas together. Another year, we took off to Europe, to get away from the reminders of home. Even though we couldn’t escape Christmas, we could escape all the reminders of the season in Wellington – the pohutukawa flowering (which hold strong memories of loss), the arrival of summer, the strawberries for Christmas dinner, etc. So it felt different, and that made it less painful. Simply changing locations within NZ – renting a tiny cottage one year – helped limit the painful reminders that, in those first years, are everywhere. And those early years, by doing things on my own terms, I slowly began reclaiming Christmas.

Now, 18 years after my first loss, 17 after my second, and 16 after ending our family-building efforts, I am able to love my family Christmases again. I love getting to spend time with my great-nephews, and my nieces who have grown into wonderful adults, and making memories with them. I enjoy spending time with the overseas relatives when they come back, and hosting them on Christmas Day. The thing they all remember about New Zealand Christmases is that they were Mali-style Christmases. And that legacy, whilst not the one I wanted to leave, is not nothing. In fact, it’s pretty cool. I’m happy to lay claim to that.

My final rule of Christmas is less relevant for me these days, but I still think it is very important. Be kind to yourself. (It’s a good rule for the rest of the year too.) If you’re surrounded by people, and stress levels are high, have small escapes planned, to get away with friends, or your partner, or just a walk or a drive by yourself when you can breathe. Maybe book a massage, or find a café that will be open when you can go and have a calm few hours away from questions or pressure or judgement or just noise. If it is the opposite, and you are seeking out noise and company, think about volunteering at a charity, or arrange get-togethers with friends. Yes, I know this is all easier said than done. But knowing you have an escape is proven to make it easier to bear the stress itself. And afterwards, reward yourself. Take a long bath, drink a good wine, binge-watch your favourite programmes, or curl up with music, pets, loved ones, or a book. Or all of those. Because this is the time of year when we should be especially kind to everyone – ourselves as well as others.

I know I have made this Christmas-centric, and I apologise to those who do not celebrate or recognise Christmas. It’s a big deal here in NZ, but much less for religious reasons and more for celebrations around the end of the year (much of the pre-Christmas chaos is due to end-of-year school events or work parties), and the beginning of summer and the lengthy summer holidays. Perhaps it is a bit more like Thanksgiving in the US, or other major celebrations (for example, Chinese New Year) involving families. So I think my comments apply regardless of what is being celebrated. Feel free to interchange any such event as you read this.

Quite a number of No Kidding bloggers are writing about Christmas this year. Jody Day at Gateway Women has written a couple of posts, one on getting through the season, and one suggesting great books for No Kidding women to give or receive. (Go buy them for yourself – there are a few I’m adding to my list.) Lesley Pyne too has very helpfully compiled a list of useful resources and blogs on her blog here. Mel at Stirrup Queens publishes an annual list of advice for those going through infertility, and much of the advice is relevant for us too. And I am sure there are others. Feel free to add them, or any advice you might have, in the comments.

I’ll add that my little book of memes, No Kidding in Brief, is available, both as a paper book, or as an e-book too.

Finally, all of my previous posts about the issue can be found if you click on this link here. They vary in mood, readers have left helpful comments, and maybe one of them, or of the posts above, will be what you need to read.