For some people, holidays evoke images of close, loving families straight out of a Norman Rockwell painting. They love their families and cherish the memories of the past and love everything about seeing their families for Thanksgiving.
For others of us, spending time with families sounds like a terrible idea, because it makes us feel lousy and it brings up bad memories of the past. What’s more, family-oriented holidays can be times when there’s an unspoken conspiracy of silence to pretend that the rest of your family’s history never happened.
For those of us who see extended families that way, it’s more Norman Bates than Norman Rockwell.
Another family holiday coming around reminds me again of the fundamental split between these groups. For some people, it’s a wonderful time. For others — including me — it’s just a reminder of families who were more painful than loving.
What’s worse is that most of those who attach pain to family still go through the motions of pretending to be part of something loving and special. But the maudlin things that families say to each other on family-oriented holidays are rarely consistent with how they relate to one another for the rest of the year.
I can never decide whether this inconsistency is sad or funny. I guess it’s both. This is why so much of life is self-satirizing to me. If you had a Norman Rockwell family, that’s great. But that’s not what I want to talk about. I want to talk about the way others of us feel — because it seems to be considered impolite to admit that the other side of the coin exists.
Eviction leaves me sifting through collateral damage of a broken life
Ignore the happy face it presents: Coercive state points a gun at you
We’re all prisoners of a culture which demands that we conform
Double standards seem like the only standards most politicians know
If I perform well enough for you, will you give me love, approval?
Are you living the life you wanted when everything seemed possible?
Advocating peace requires more than hating those who start wars
Beauty queen’s suicide leaves me pondering lesson of Richard Cory