Category Archives: Christmas

Peace on Earth and Bad Dogs

????????On Saturday, people who I love will gather at my house and celebrate Christmas Eve.  We’ll have delicious finger foods, wonderful desserts including a blueberry pie with Blue Bell Homemade Vanilla ice cream.  If you don’t live where they sell Blue Bell, my deepest condolences, you really should consider Texas as a vacation destination just for the ice cream.   Tomorrow I will be cleaning and organizing like a fiend and that will include dusting the tops of tall things I usually don’t worry about for the people who are taller than me and can see them, and the dreaded cleaning of the fridge because people will be opening it.  It will get it done, all will be fine.

Today, however, has been a different story.  It started out okay; I went to my favorite grocery store to pick up some last-minute items, some rolls, stocking stuffers and items for our gift exchange game, rolling my cart down the aisle to Christmas carols, feeling very Christmassy.  I enjoyed the trip, all went well.  I came home, put everything up, steam cleaned my rugs, washed some other rugs and basically just did a few things, and finally decided to go and get my nails done.  That was nice and I love my sparkly red fingernails and toes which is very unusual for me as I am not a girly girl, but it looks festive for Christmas.  Still feeling Christmassy.

My dogs had been outside for this short time while I was gone, so I came in first, let them in, patted each of their furry heads and went out to the building to talk to my husband for no more than 5 minutes.  I walk back through the mugginess and light rain to the house, thinking about  filling up the stockings, and as soon as I enter the living area I see it.  Two of the gift bags from under my tree are now confetti and to add insult to injury, someone (I have my suspicions) peed a circle on my clean rug and the Great Dane has peed on the corner of the couch.

Let me explain something, this tree has been up for 3 weeks and the presents have been under it since last weekend and nary a dog has even glanced in that direction.  I have been so impressed and proud of them, but it was all a rouse.   And, this was no peeing emergency; they had just come in from being outside for over an hour.  Ugh.  Apparently, it was only the shiny bags and bows that needed killing because the gifts inside were unscathed, even if Sophie the giraffe’s packaging didn’t fare so well.

I guess the really galling part is that none of them, other than Peaches who is the tattle-tell of the bunch, had the decency to act appalled at their wanton behavior.  One of them even had the audacity of think I was playing a game while picking up the minute particles, now stuck to the wet rug that had not finished drying.  I take a deep breath, pick it all up, and discard the debris.

It’s all quiet now, most of them are laying on their beds like all is right with the world, which, I guess in their world it is because Operation Gift Obliteration was a success – they got in, they got out, and I don’t have a clue who to blame, although if Peaches could talk I would have known immediately.  Shasta is lying by her bowl, guarding it, Lady Bug is lying at my feet and my husband just shook his head when I told him.  The cat Star Christmas Lights Hanging from an Eavehas no comment.

I’ve re-wrapped the presents, stuck on a new bow, and made a barricade around the tree and announced to them that their reign of terror is over because my brain is bigger than theirs and I have opposable thumbs.   I’m tired now, one of my fingernails is smudged and I’m drinking wine out of a small plastic mug.  I think I’ll make some chicken fingers, with gravy because everyone knows cream gravy combats stress, and later I’m going to have some Blue Bell ice cream with my husband while we sit and watch whatever re-run is on TV – all is right with my world again, at least for tonight.

Peace on earth and goodwill to all, even bad dogs.  Merry Christmas.

©2011-2012 itsa5doglife  All Rights Reserved.


Turning to Snow

rainIt’s really nasty out today.  Cool, rainy and sloppy and the dogs want no part of it.  Going out will be a challenge for they are delicate and melt in the rain.  In reality they are smelly beasts who are now spoiled past any resemblance to their wild canine origins.  Yes, seven dogs is beyond ridiculous and add two cats and you have absurdity, but you do laugh a lot and that counts for something.

It’s about 60 degrees and I’m wearing flip-flops which is normal for Christmas in Southeast Texas.  In fact, I should probably get a pedicure since I will want to wear my dressier flip-flops on Christmas Day.  I often wonder what it would be like to have a Christmas with snow and wear warm winter clothes, including gloves, a scarf and hat – none of which I’ve ever had to wear all at the same time.  You live out here and winter accessories are an afterthought, something you come back inside to grab because your ears are cold or because you just remembered that you have those winter items somewhere in your closet and they would look nice with your coat…and flip-flops.  I believe flip-flops are a year round accessory and should not be dismissed as an all occasion shoe.

I wasn’t always so casual in dress and footwear.  For years in my 20′s working downtown Houston, I wore the required office attire that included a dress or skirt, a full slip, pantyhose and high heels.  That’s a lot of clothes in the scorching southern heat, especially when you have to walk four city blocks to get to your building, but I was young and I didn’t think anything about walking around in heels all day.   That’s probably why my feet hurt so much now.  Office casual is now the trendy thing, but sometimes I miss the more formal workwear, it seems more professional  and elegant.

Working downtown in your 20′s is fun only because you don’t know any better.  When I started working at age 18, I rode the bus since I couldn’t afford to pay for parking, but I look back now and remember sitting with my girlfriends laughing and talking or reading all the way home.  We didn’t have cell phones so you were forced to just sit back and relax until your stop.  On Fridays at lunch there was always something going on downtown, a concert in the park or in the lobby of one of the buildings so you’d take your sandwich and drink, and find a place to sit and enjoy the music for an hour.  I remember at Christmas one of the banks always had a huge gingerbread house display and they served free wassail and gingerbread so my office friends and I would walk the few blocks outside or maybe through the tunnels underground to get there, along with all the other workers escaping from the work day routine.  Things change, they always do.  The bank that served wassail closed, the economy tightened up and the free concerts went away, but that was a good time, when expectations weren’t as grand and time moved a little slower.  I’m glad I got to experience those things.

starI heard a quote yesterday, “You either improve or you decline, you don’t stay the same.”   I’ll be 49 this May, I’m in the autumn of my life, preparing for the coming winter over the next decade or so, and I’m both elated and afraid.  I know there are losses coming, that’s what winter brings, but as with winter, it’s the natural order of things.  Still, if I allow myself to dwell on it, I can’t breathe.  I don’t want to be that person that is ruled by fear, barely breathing, just tipoeing through life.  I want to embrace the season, run in the sloppy muddy rain with the dogs, cry when I have to and laugh when I can.  I am finally here, I no longer care who sees or judges.  I want to say at the end of my life, “I’m glad I got to experience those things.”  I’m ready for the coming winter, I’ve got my gloves and flip flops ready and you never know, the rain might turn to snow.


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