very
year I say to myself that I'm going to try to write every day, even when
I'm not at home. And every year, I end up just kidding myself.
This time, I even brought a floppy disk with me to save any entries I may
have been inspired to write while visiting in Pittsburgh. The disk
never left my carry-on bag.
So, every year I get to sit here and try to describe
the busiest two or three weeks of my year, all at the same time, a task
which is compounded further because everything seems like a blur to me
(cursed jet lag).
So, I'll try to go day by day, remembering my
events and thoughts and feelings.
Wednesday, 12/22
I am starting to become disenamored with redeyes.
Usually, when we come home for Christmas, we take the overnight flight
from San Diego to Pittsburgh, thinking that it saves us a day of vacation.
After years of straggling off the plane feeling like zombies, then nearly
getting sick on the car ride home, and finally crashing for a five-hour
nap -- thus obliterating any day we would have saved in the first place
-- I think I'm done with all of that, unless we're forced to go the night
before to avoid blackout dates or something.
We may have actually been fine, but the one guy
on the whole plane who kept his light on for the entire flight was the
one sitting right in front of us. So, instead of sleeping, like any
sane person would have done, I listened to two CD's, read the US Airways
complimentary magazine, and watched parts of "Inspector Gadget" without
listening to it.
Thursday, 12/23
One of our many trips to the mall. We just
about finished our shopping (although not completely -- that's right; we
were two of those pathetic people still out searching for presents on Christmas
Eve, although with the traveling we did, at least we have some kind of
excuse).
As if it wasn't hard enough to get all of our
Christmas shopping done in two days, I had to make another stop -- to buy
a suit. Before we left -- actually, the day we left -- I finished
up the arrangements to go for an interview during my vacation. In
all the hustle and bustle ("silver bells, silver bells...") of the season,
I never got to buy a new suit, and wearing an old one was considerably
out of the question -- in fact, about twenty In-N-Out Burgers' worth of
being out of the question.
Friday, December 24
Every year, I get roped into playing the organ
(huh huh huh, he said "organ") at my old church. It's a combination
of the fact that I can't say "no" to anybody, and the fact that I never
get a chance to play out here because I'm about the sixth or seventh string
keyboardist at our current church (we have a very talented congregation,
I suppose). This year was no exception. This causes a couple
of problems, though -- I'm used to playing on a chinsy Lowrey play-a-whole-orchestra-with-one-finger
organ, and the one at our church is probably twice as big. I'm not
used to the stops (for you non-organists, the buttons that create different
sounds on an organ), and the foot pedals are a different distance apart,
so I spent all night playing wrong bass notes and having chimes ring at
the most inopportune times. Still, people came up to me and said
what a great job I did. I think it's because, to everyone there,
I'm still sixteen years old.
Amazingly, we didn't go out after church and look
at the Christmas lights, which is usually a family tradition. I'm
not sure how we got out of it, actually, since my father is a sucker for
tradition, even more than I am. I think the threat of my wife getting
carsick in the back seat while we wound through endless residential neighborhoods
was enough of a drawback. Besides, it depresses me to see how they've
built up almost every square inch of land around my childhood neighborhood.
Nothing gives me Christmas cheer more than suburban sprawl.
Friday, December 24
Every year, I get roped into playing the organ
(huh huh huh, he said "organ") at my old church. It's a combination
of the fact that I can't say "no" to anybody, and the fact that I never
get a chance to play out here because I'm about the sixth or seventh string
keyboardist at our current church (we have a very talented congregation,
I suppose). This year was no exception. This causes a couple
of problems, though -- I'm used to playing on a chinsy Lowrey play-a-whole-orchestra-with-one-finger
organ, and the one at our church is probably twice as big. I'm not
used to the stops (for you non-organists, the buttons that create different
sounds on an organ), and the foot pedals are a different distance apart,
so I spent all night playing wrong bass notes and having chimes ring at
the most inopportune times. Still, people came up to me and said
what a great job I did. I think it's because, to everyone there,
I'm still sixteen years old.
Amazingly, we didn't go out after church and look
at the Christmas lights, which is usually a family tradition. I'm
not sure how we got out of it, actually, since my father is a sucker for
tradition, even more than I am. I think the threat of my wife getting
carsick in the back seat while we wound through endless residential neighborhoods
was enough of a drawback. Besides, it depresses me to see how they've
built up almost every square inch of land around my childhood neighborhood.
Nothing gives me Christmas cheer more than suburban sprawl.