The Christmas Quandary
By Tiffany Lewis
When
I was little, I coveted one toy more than any other: a driveable,
kid-sized car. I would daydream about zipping through my
neighborhood, side ponytail whipping in the breeze, while
I waved at the neighbor kids from behind the wheel of my pink
convertible.
That
day never came, but I see myself again every time we go to
our local thrift store and my son climbs behind the wheel
of the kid-sized jeep, looking with longing at the real
engine, the brake, the rearview mirrors. He wants that jeep,
his jeep. I check the price tag: $30. I have no idea if it
runs. Really, we could get it if we wanted.
And
yet, there’s something that holds me back.
Before
I became a mother (i.e. when I thought I knew everything),
I looked with disgust at parents who stocked their kids’ playroom
like a toy store. I had strong opinions that being deprived
was good for children.
Then
of course I had kids, and suddenly it was my child
sitting in the Target toy aisle for thirty minutes, caressing
the Tonka Town play set. And I found myself doing the justification
in my head: It’s only one play set, seven dollars. We’ll
eat bread and frozen peas for a week. Think of his face when
he opens up the package and runs those little trucks along
the play mat.
And
so, the great confession. I want my kids to have the Thomas
the Train table, every Dr. Seuss book ever written, the kitchen
set, the bike that converts to a scooter, the tool set, the
little play house in the back yard, and the Harry Potter Lego
set. I could happily dump the whole lot at my kids’ feet,
just to see the excitement on their faces.
But
I think I’d regret it. Because I still believe, though I don’t
always act on this feeling, that less is better for children.
I
like to think my strength of character comes partially from
the Christmas gifts I received growing up: the no-name generic
Cabbage Patch in a plastic bag, the board game with half the
pieces missing, the mauve jewelry box with a giant rip across
the top, and the scratched-up old bureau.
I
didn’t know at the time that these gifts came straight off
the discount rack at Goodwill. They were my treasures. Now
that I’m a mother, I want to keep the same kind of second-hand
simplicity under our Christmas tree. But it’s amazing how
quickly children pick up on the commercialism of Christmas.
Our house has four manger scenes and no graven images of Santa
Claus, but when my husband asked our 2-year-old what Christmas
is for, he replied confidently, “Santa brings us presents!”
Where did I go wrong?
Every
year there is the collective bemoaning of the commercialism
of Christmas. I thought this was uniquely Christian, until
last year when I spotted an ad in the newspaper. It was for
a Hanukkah celebration, and featured a picture of a garish-looking
rabbi wielding a brightly lit menorah. “Come join Rabbi Yabbinowitz
for a Hanukkah spectacular!” the ad screamed. “Presents,
music, food for all the children!”
When
I told a Jewish friend about it, she shook her head and said,
“The fact that you even know about Hanukkah is a sign
of its commercialism. It’s not even one of our major holidays.”
So it is not just Christmas. It is society, consumerism at
large, trying to pull our kids in from every corner, snatch
them up for a buck-a-piece, free cookies included.
Which
leads to the real Christmas quandary. How can we put a buffer
between our children and the clutches of things? How
can we help preserve innocence, the kind that makes kids light
up when they see a sparkling Christmas tree or cradle a baby
Jesus in their palm?
My
older son sometimes cries out in the night, “I want to be
cozy!” I stumble in and pull the blankets up around his chin
and tuck them under his legs. Then he drifts back to sleep.
I want to keep him there as long as possible, in that safe
haven, away from Saturday morning cartoons, the Disney fiefdom,
Xbox, MTV, bullies on the playground, and that sense of entitlement
kids seem to heft upon their parents nowadays.
I
have this running daydream in my head of truly escaping the
world, of junking everything except my books – OK, and maybe
my food processor – and moving to the country, where we eat
off tin plates real, wholesome things like garden green beans,
fresh-churned butter, and ripe ears of corn. We’d eliminate
everything plastic and the kids would fashion cars out of
firewood scraps. I’d bake bread, wear calico, pull my hair
in a bun, and stop wearing mascara. The kids would run barefoot
and dig and muddy themselves up the way kids are supposed
to. We’d chop our own Christmas tree from our acres of wooded
land. At night, truly exhausted from a day’s real labor,
we’d sit by candlelight and read Tennyson, Bronte, and Twain.
And my husband ... well, my husband would last about a day
in the country before demanding his computer, his iPAQ, his
New York Times, and his electric razor. I married a man of
the modern age.
And
we live in a modern age. We are not Amish. So the country
thing will never work. We’ll have to be content with our
plastic world and structured park down the road, and learn
to retreat from consumerism in some other way.
Because
someday my son will learn that he can pull up his own covers
in the middle of the night and I will no longer be the center
of his universe. He’ll discover that there’s a vast television
empire beyond BYU football. He’ll petrify his brain with
a Game Boy and wear baggy pants and oversized white sneakers.
But
I will still love him, because he is my son, and so through
it all I will continue to remind him that candy canes symbolize
more than sugar in our teeth. That Christmas trees are green
for a reason. That every sacred song we sing during this
wonderful time was inspired by angels above. That gifts,
too, are a symbol of something far greater. That when we
rise on the “Hallelujah Chorus,” we are giving tribute to
a king who long ago gave tribute to the King of Kings. I
will continue to tell my little boys, still babes themselves,
of a God who was humble enough to come down as a babe and
grow to maturity. And I will teach that the real purpose
of Christmas is, as the poet T.S. Eliot once wrote, “Because
the beginning … remind[s] us of the end/ And the first coming
of the second coming.”
Last
week, while we walked home from the park, my son spied one
of those plastic manger scenes in someone’s front yard. “I
want to touch them,” he insisted. I hesitated, then unbuckled
him from the stroller. He tiptoed into the yard, paused for
a reverent moment, then proceeded to give the shepherds, the
wise men, Mary, Joseph, and baby Jesus each a sound kiss on
the forehead. Even Santa doesn’t get that kind of treatment.
I think my little boy will be just fine after all.