Sunday, December 15, 2013

2013 Layne Family Christmas Letter

The leaves are gone, the skies are cold and gray, and the Sunday paper is eighteen inches thick.  Must mean it’s time for the pagan celebration of Sol Invictus once again.  Oh – and Christmas.
Except for Hawks winning the Cup, the Bears hiring a new head coach then firing their defense, and the Illini proving themselves worthy of a berth in the high school badminton playoffs, 2013 will go down as the most uninspiring and uninteresting year in recent history.
This will be our first Christmas without Don.  Not one to fall prey to maudlin sentimentality, Don was never a willing participant in the holidays, but more a victim of the season’s unreasonable expectations of joy, peace on earth, and goodwill toward men.  In an ironic Dickensian twist, the La-Z-Boy in front of the fireplace will be without its usual occupant this year – his one eye trained on a football game, the other feigning interest in the children opening gifts, and the other asleep – as a roaring fire fills the house with smoke.  Never again will he regale us with his very special version of Here Comes Fatty with His Sack of [Excrement], nor remind us that the true meaning of Christmas is humbug.  And who to tell and retell the same off-color jokes, over-mix the drinks, or snore through dessert?  In spite of himself, he will be missed. (For more on Don, visit thelaynebrain.blogspot.com.)
In an example of life imitating 1970’s network television, Amanda and Allyson have evolved into the Odd Couple.  Amanda (aka Felix) is convinced she contracted the flu, typhoid fever, and polio, along with one as yet undiscovered disease this year, the symptoms of which include itchy scalp, a foul temper, and pronounced narcissism.  Conversely, Allyson (aka Oscar) is altogether unconcerned with both domestic and personal hygiene, leaving in her wake a trail of grime and chocolate that keeps Karen following close behind with a sponge and 55 gallon drum of Pine-Sol. 
 
Now a fully armed and operational teenager, Amanda continues to both impress and irritate in equal measure.  What she lacks in good sense she makes up for in volume and hysteria, preferring to communicate only via text and shouting.  She has been working hard at her three dance classes – which she practices nonstop while doing homework, during meals, and while sleeping – but also at spending all of her parents money on boots she refuses to wear, opting to walk barefoot between indoor venues lest they become soiled.  Her straight A’s almost make up for the fact she’s late for everything, and we are all looking forward to high school next year where she’ll have new people to yell at.
 
According to her coaches, Ally is to fastpitch what “chopped” is to “liver.”  Having now transitioned to travel ball, Allyson intends to be the first pitcher ever to play Division I softball without first attending middle school.  Likewise, nephew Jayson is again the talk of his Pee Wee football team, no doubt because he is larger than all of the varsity players on the local Hoover HS team and many of the Auburn University offensive linemen. 
 
The clan crammed into the car and traveled south this summer visiting the Carolinas and Savannah, GA.  Moved by lessons of the Civil War, Amanda and Allyson spent most of the trip fighting over issues on which they both agree.  Inspired by their visit to the Biltmore Estate, the girls formed new opinions of how a modern middle class suburban family should live, leaving Karen to contemplate which of the seven rooms in her home she might convert into a library, solarium, and stables.
 
The family devoted one full day in Charleston to touring the USS Yorktown.  Initially disappointed to discover Yorktown wasn’t a shopping mall, Amanda and Ally wound up enjoying themselves, marking the first time they willingly spent an entire day inside a place of any historical significance that didn’t feature a shoe store or food court.  And yes, Paula Deen does fry everything she serves at her restaurant in butter, including muffins, pizza, and coleslaw.
 
Upon turning 50, Karen intensified clearing the clutter from her life to the point the family is convinced she’s accepting bribes from the local waste hauler.  It’s degenerated to where if you can’t find something important, look in the trash.  Thank goodness for the Apple Find My Phone app.  No one has seen Mark in weeks.
 
Taffy continues to challenge the neighborhood skunk population to regular duels.  Skunks 4; Taffy 0.
 
To say Mark has enjoyed his new career choice would be an insult to joy.  Of course the insurance has proved beneficial to pay for his broken finger, rebuilt shoulder, and breast implants.
 
If nothing else, Christmas provides a much anticipated interruption in the humdrum drudgery of daily existence.  As Johann Wolfgang von Goethe noted, “A man can stand anything except a succession of ordinary days.”
 
Merry Christmas to All, and to All Good Grief,
Karen, Mark, Amanda, Ally, and Taffy