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  • Ho Ho Ho… Pass the Pepto!

Ho Ho Ho… Pass the Pepto!

kdk December 19, 2003
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Read Time:7 Minute, 14 Second

Now is the time of year when I look back fondly — and longingly — at the days of my

youth. When I was a kid, Christmas was the best time of the whole year. I’d get out of

school for two whole weeks — two whole weeks with nothing to do but stay up late,

sleep in, eat cold pizza for breakfast, watch TV, shake the presents under the tree, get

bundled up in my long underwear and snow pants and a couple of pairs of socks and moon

boots and a turtleneck and a heavy sweater and a big puffy coat and a scarf and mittens

and a hat with a big fuzzy ball on the top, and go running outside and dig tunnels in the

gigantic snow piles in the yard, and hit the neighbor kids in the face with snowballs.




All vacation long, I’d gorge myself on the cookies that seemed to

magically appear in the kitchen. I’d eat gobs of cookie dough and shake more presents.

And when Mom wasn’t looking, I’d sneak around the house and search through the closets,

looking for Mom’s Secret Present Hiding Spot.



And then the Big Night

would arrive — Christmas Eve, the most exciting, spectacular, fantastical night of the

year. We’d go out for dinner, where I’d order my usual:

cheeseburger-just-ketchup-fries-and-a-small-Coke. Then we’d rush home.




There was a punch bowl waiting at home. And dishes full of nuts and M&Ms

and all kinds of candy — and plates full of every cookie imaginable. And even though I

hadn’t even digested my grease-laden dinner, I’d stuff myself with treats. And not once

would I worry about it going straight to my thighs.



Then came the

presents. I’d rip open package after package — gifts, so carefully and perfectly

wrapped. Inside I’d find all kinds of toys and fun stuff. And I’d lovingly admire my

new toys as I waited for my next present-opening opportunity. I’d wait as Mom and Dad

and my brothers opened gifts from me — gifts that I’d most likely never even seen before,

but gifts from me nonetheless.



When it was all over — when the presents

were opened and the living room was a red-and-green mess — I’d run around the house in a

sugar frenzy while Dad tried to assemble all of my new toys. Then I’d play and play and

play until I collapsed.



And on Christmas morning, I’d wake up and go to

Grandma’s to do it all over again.



Today, things are a little different.

Christmas is no longer a two-week frenzy of toys and sugar and snow pants. Now, it’s a

four-month panic attack.



In September, my husband and I start talking

about Christmas. After all, we need to plan ahead for traveling from family to family —

and we have to save up the vacation days.



Once the subject is on the

table, it never really goes away. From that point on, somewhere, in the back of my mind,

I’m fretting about Christmas, twenty-four hours a day. I’m worrying about what on Earth

I’m going to get for everyone — and how I can manage to spread the purchases over several

credit card billing cycles.



In October, I occasionally pick things out at

the store and think about buying them as Christmas gifts. But I don’t actually buy them

because I’m afraid I’ll find something better later. This continues well into

November.



Then comes Thanksgiving. On Thanksgiving Day, as I’m recovering

from my turkey coma, I open the newspaper and a million after-Thanksgiving-sale ads fall

out. That’s when it hits me that Christmas is right around the corner. And for the next

four short, panic-stricken weeks, I grasp every spare moment to rush to the mall, where I

drive around the parking lot for what feels like an eternity, trying to find a parking

space. Then I turn around and go home because I realize that parking spaces are opening

up because the mall just closed. After that, I bundle up and hike to the store. And when

I get there, it’s so crowded that I’m sweating to death in my gigantic parka and I can’t

really get very far into the store, so I grab three of whatever’s closest to the door and

hope that Mom will like the beard trimmer she’s getting this year.



After

the stores close, I rush home to wrap the gifts I’ve bought. I inevitably run out of

tape, but the stores are obviously closed, so I just use staples instead. Then, between

the hours of 11 pm and 7 am, I decorate the house to make it look pretty and festive,

send out pretty personalized cards, hand knit sweaters for my entire family, and bake

eighty-three dozen cookies, three cheesecakes, and four pans of fudge. And a partridge

in a pear tree.



And somewhere in there, I get a bit of

sleep.



And then there’s the pre-Christmas diet, during which I stop eating

for a couple of weeks so I don’t have to hold back too much at Christmas parties. And I

still end up buying low-fat eggnog, M&Ms without those fattening nuts inside, and lite

whipped cream to top the extra-heavy cheesecake that I just pulled out of the oven. And

each cookie I consume gives me such an overwhelming feeling of guilt that I can barely

taste the cookie because I’m too busy worrying about how many miles I’ll have to walk

just to burn it off. I eat just a tiny piece of French silk pie at the

party.



Then, the next day, when no one’s looking, I’ll go to the kitchen

and eat the three pieces that were left behind.



By the time those final

days before Christmas arrive, you can find me giving up on Christmas cards and

personalized, hand-knit Christmas gifts and stocking up on a stack of Burger King gift

certificates to hand out. By then, I’ve given up on watching what I eat — oh, my

conscience is still trying to make me feel guilty, but I’m too tired and desperate to

listen.



When Christmas Eve finally rolls around, I’m bloated, tired,

crabby, and broke. I spend the day baking even more goodies and trying to dig my car out

of the snow bank that swallowed it overnight. Then, when my family gets together, I eat

even more sugar-based products, tell my conscience to bite me, and sit down with

the family to open presents. The grown-ups do so when the kids aren’t looking because if

the kids see that someone else is opening a present, they shriek until they get something

else to open — even if it means unwrapping that beard trimmer for

Grandma.



In approximately ten minutes, it’s all over. The once pristine

Norman Rockwell Christmas setting in our living room has been turned into something

resembling the set of a movie, in which Arnold Schwarzenegger hunts down evil, plotting

elves at the North Pole and destroys them all. And while the kids run around in their

sugar frenzies, the grown-ups clean up the set and put the toys together. Then we finish

off the cookies and fudge and pass around a bottle of Pepto.



And once the

kids have finally collapsed for the night, we say our goodbyes and thank-yous and give

everyone hugs and load our trunks with our Christmas gifts — our socks and our underwear

and our shiny new wallets — and head back home, where the credit card bills

await.



Then we get up on Christmas morning and do it all again. We sleep

in for a while, and then we all bundle up in our long underwear and snow pants and

sweaters and boots and mittens and scarves and puffy coats and hats. And we go out and

once again dig our cars out of the snow piles, all the while wondering if it might be

wise to go out tomorrow and start doing some Christmas shopping for next

year.



And then we give up and make some snow balls and hit each other in

the face and then run inside to eat more cookies and play with the kids’ new toys.




And why not? Every year, we get 364 days to be grown-ups — but we only

get one Christmas.

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About Post Author

kdk

Kristin Dreyer Kramer has been writing in some form or another (usually when she was supposed to be doing something else) since the ripe old age of ten—when she, her cousin, and their two Cabbage Patch Dolls formed the Poo Authors’ Club. After a short career in advertising, Kristin got sick of always saying nice things about stuff that didn’t deserve it—so now she spends her days criticizing things, and she’s much happier for it. Since creating NightsAndWeekends.com in February of 2002, Kristin has spent her life surrounded by piles and piles of books and movies—so many that her office has become a kind of entertainment obstacle course. As if her writing and editing responsibilities for N&W.com weren’t enough to keep her out of trouble, Kristin also hosts a number of weekly radio shows: Reel Discovery, Shelf Discovery, and On the Marquee. She’s also a proud member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association (CriticsChoice.com), the Central Ohio Film Critics Association (COFCA.org), the Online Film Critics Society (OFCS.org), and the Women Film Critics Circle (WFCC.Wordpress.com). Kristin lives in Columbus, Ohio, with her husband, Paul, and their daughter, Anna. She welcomes questions, comments, and fan mail at kdk@nightsandweekends.com.
kdk@nightsandweekends.com
http://www.NightsAndWeekends.com
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kdk

Kristin Dreyer Kramer has been writing in some form or another (usually when she was supposed to be doing something else) since the ripe old age of ten—when she, her cousin, and their two Cabbage Patch Dolls formed the Poo Authors’ Club. After a short career in advertising, Kristin got sick of always saying nice things about stuff that didn’t deserve it—so now she spends her days criticizing things, and she’s much happier for it.

Since creating NightsAndWeekends.com in February of 2002, Kristin has spent her life surrounded by piles and piles of books and movies—so many that her office has become a kind of entertainment obstacle course.

As if her writing and editing responsibilities for N&W.com weren’t enough to keep her out of trouble, Kristin also hosts a number of weekly radio shows: Reel Discovery, Shelf Discovery, and On the Marquee. She’s also a proud member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association (CriticsChoice.com), the Central Ohio Film Critics Association (COFCA.org), the Online Film Critics Society (OFCS.org), and the Women Film Critics Circle (WFCC.Wordpress.com).

Kristin lives in Columbus, Ohio, with her husband, Paul, and their daughter, Anna. She welcomes questions, comments, and fan mail at kdk@nightsandweekends.com.

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