FRESH
YARN presents:
Accidentally
Great
By Paula
Killen
For me, perfect
events rarely inspire fond memories. That's why I love the holidays. Especially
Christmas. Christmas is an accident waiting to happen. Jesus himself was
"accidentally" born in a barn and it worked out pretty great
for him. And for everybody else as well. There is almost no reason
to tell a story unless something bad happened. Ask Jesus.
I was nine
years old before we had a great Christmas. Sure all the others
had been swell, presents food people, blah. The Christmas before, my Grandmother
had crashed her Cadillac into our brick wall and that was cool, but not
great. I grew up in Southern California, so no snow or sleet ever
encroached on our holiday; dry turkey was a drag, but not a calamity.
We were thrifty, middle class--we always had more than enough. Until the
great Christmas, I never much pondered the "have" and
"have not" of it all. My younger brother and I would cry when
the Grinch stole Christmas, but the Grinch always brought it back again.
Booo Whoville. So big deal.
We were beach
people. I'd only seen snow once. So when it was announced that we would
be spending Christmas in a rented cabin up at Big Bear Mountain, I was
confused. In the '70s, Big Bear Mountain was cool. We weren't cool; we
were Republicans, the poster people for the nuclear family, small, white
and resistant to change. It was shocking! The trip would require a sweater,
a hat, and mittens. Stuff I didn't have. I wanted to be cute in Big Bear.
Cool not cold. Dad said that what we didn't have, we'd buy in Big Bear.
It was so nuts. We were going to spend money, play cards in a cozy cabin
and possibly learn to ski? This incredible break with tradition was the
first risky thing my parents had ever suggested we do. It was like they'd
handed me a pack of cigarettes and said, "Let's all smoke."
The trip was clearly going to be dangerous.
My younger
brother Jefferson dashed off a quick note to Santa, informing him of our
travel plans. God forbid he couldn't find us! My mother, an organizational
genius, attended to every other detail of the trip. Our brand new beige
Volvo sedan was loaded to the gills with everything Christmas would require.
A tree, ornaments, suitcases, and our pet guinea pigs, Winnie and Pooh.
Dad put snow chains for our tires in the trunk. We hooked a U-Haul trailer
to the hitch and stuffed it with wrapped packages, food, firewood. The
works! We would be roughing it for a few days. We were prepared for an
emergency.
And we were
going it alone, no boozy grandparents, no stupid cousins or third wheels.
Just the four of us were heading up that mountain and that felt somehow
profound.
We left at
8am on Christmas Eve morning. Forty minutes into the two-hour trip, my
brother and I engaged in the usual fight over space in the back seat.
There was no winning, there was a clear dividing line and yet
my
brother was a snitch and a whiner. Half my size, he managed to beat the
crap out of me regularly. He'd get pumped up on pure rage and attack me
with plastic strips of Hot Wheels track. Or simply bite me. He was an
ass. We called my Dad "Prickles" because he had a buzz cut and
his tiny hairs stood up on his scalp like millions of angry thorns. He
also could have a pretty prickly disposition while driving. He ruled everything.
The temperature, the door locks, the radio, the passengers, the other
cars. The whole GD highway was his. He was not hip to taking junk off
us kids. He didn't want to tell us more than once. He was not having a
fight. He told us, "Goddamn it. Quit!" We didn't. So, Dad said
that was it. We would not be stopping to eat, or go tinkle, or anything.
We were not allowed to speak until we got to the cabin. My mother was
no help. She just sat there.
There was
silence as we started up the mountain. Silence when we spotted patches
of snow hanging in the trees. Silence for more than an hour.
Then my mother
asked my dad, "John do you smell something burning?"
My dad said,
"No."
Mom said,
"Really? Because I think I smell smoke."
"I'm
sorry, but there is no smoke!" My dad resolved.
Mom insisted,
"John, I think there's a fire!"
Dad smiled.
He was about to win this round. "Honey, where there is no smoke,
there is no fire."
"Then
why is the paint peeling off the hood of our car?" my mother asked
coyly.
We were just
at the crest of the mountain. Some men in yellow vests were fixing the
road. Traffic was slow; there was a long line of cars behind us. Suddenly
the men in vests were waving their arms, recommending that we GET OUT
OF THE CAR IMMEDIATELY.
Flames leapt
from the hood, the car filled with smoke. Someone yelled, "IT'S GONNA
BLOW!"
My
father decided that it would be a good time to park and assess the situation.
There was a sudden burst of flames.
Our Volvo
was now burning on the side of the road. My family flew out of the car
and froze; we were just inches from the edge of a cliff. Other people
had stopped; they were running and screaming up and down the highway.
My brother remembered the guinea pigs in the back seat, and ran back to
get them. My parents screamed and ran after him and dragged him back as
flames engulfed the entire car. It appeared that the guinea pigs were
toast. A brave man with a fire extinguisher put out the fire. The car
sizzled and then sort of belched and shifted forward. It nearly rolled
off the side of the cliff, but the weight of the U-Haul held it back.
A light snow fell.
We hadn't
been in Big Bear long enough to buy a sweater, hat or mittens. I had on
a hang ten T-shirt and shorts. My brother was crying. My mother's purse
was still in the car. My father had his wallet and a vague plan to hitch
a ride down the mountain and rent a car. He walked across the two-lane
highway, flagged down an RV and disappeared down the winding road. My
mother said, "I told your father I smelled something burning."
We waited
by the side of the road for many hours. We were cold and hungry; we all
had to tinkle, and it's all we talked about. My mother found the courage
to go back to the car and verify the fate of our guinea pigs. I'd seen
smoked fish before and figured they would look similar, maybe just fatter
in the middle, with burnt hair. My brother said they could still be alive.
Bullshit! But they were still alive. My mother pulled her charred purse
and the guinea pig box out of the car. My brother and I held Winnie and
Pooh in our arms for warmth.
An elderly
couple with New York license plates pulled off the road to look at us.
The old lady rolled down her window and asked for a damage report. I dramatically
recreated the scene, made sense of the fiery chaos that had left us freezing
by the side of the road. The old lady clapped her hands and said that
our Christmas was probably ruined. I agreed. She said that she was Jewish
and didn't celebrate, but that she had a joke that might cheer me up.
"Why
did Hitler commit suicide?"
I didn't
even know who Hitler was, but played along. "Why?"
"Because
he got his gas bill."
I laughed
and laughed. Old lady was pleased with my response. She gave me an apple.
They pulled away and my mother said not to eat it because the woman was
a witch and the apple was probably poisoned. This was rich -- a witch,
a poisoned apple, my mother suddenly cracking wise. Where had I been all
my life?
Twenty thousand
hours later my father returned with the rental car it was very dark and
we were very blue. I had gone from feeling 100% alive to utterly brain
dead. My mother wouldn't let us fall asleep for fear that we would nap
and die. For insurance reasons we could not take the rental car into the
snow, so going to the cabin was out of the question. A tow truck came
and took our car and the U-Haul away to wherever they take those things
to die. So long, presents and Christmas dinner. Goodbye cruel Big Bear
Mountain.
We arrived
home. We had nothing. It was still Christmas Eve.
The next
morning, Christmas, confirmed my brother Jefferson's worst fear. Santa
had indeed dropped our presents off at the empty cabin in Big Bear. We
went to Denny's for breakfast and sat amongst other dejected Holiday Losers.
The melancholy was delicious. We went to a tree lot and all they had left
was a scrabbly little branch that reminded me of a Charlie Brown Christmas.
We took it anyway. This was my family's greatest hour; the four
of us bound by the same pain. We said things like, "At least we have
each other." I never knew what it was like to have nothing before.
I felt poor and outcast by fate. By accident, I had been thrown onto the
"have not" pile. And burned
It was wonderful
-- magic really. For weeks afterward I would pick the scab of that wound
and weep with joy. I had been singed by the spirit of the season, and
survived.
So now when
I say, "Have a great holiday," here's what I mean. Have
an accident. It will bring you fond memories for years to come. If something
disastrous happens, it will eventually turn out to be a story worth telling.
Maybe the greatest story ever told.
Ask Jesus.
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