I remember the first holiday when I had nowhere to go.
I was twenty-two years old. I had just graduated from college, and in a few weeks I was moving to London. It was Christmastime. It would have been the last Christmas in my childhood home, as the plan was to sell the house sometime the next year. Would have been, because my dad and his girlfriend decided to go on a romantic getaway for Christmas instead. I made plans to spend Christmas with my boyfriend and his family. But then we broke up like a week beforehand.
And I had nowhere to go.
*
I read an essay in the New York Times last week that hit me hard in the gut. Life: An Unspooling, it was called. The writer, Rachel Louise Snyder, was writing about loneliness:
“I imagine myself alone in ways other people are not…. People who know where they’ll go on holidays and with whom and for how long. People with plans. With extended family they complain about, but then spend the most important days of the year with.”
I imagine myself alone in ways other people are not. There’s the rub, isn’t it? We have these ideas in our minds, maybe even expectations, about how things are, about how things should be, about the way other people live their lives. We feel the rawness of the intersection of how we imagine other people live and how our own lives fall short of this ideal. And all of these mental gymnastics make the loneliness ache that much more acutely.
And then there’s that feeling of free fall. Because there are most important days of the year, however arbitrary they may be, and to have nowhere to go for them–to lack that comfortable sense of belonging–it is hard. And knowing there are many people who also lack that certainty about those important days doesn’t lessen the loneliness of it.
Those of us who know this reality have to create anchors in other ways. And there is no instruction manual on how to accomplish this.
*
I read this essay in the Times, and then I got in my car and drove to the movies to see Mr. Holmes with one of my close friends.
Oh, Mr. Holmes. The movie is a meditation on loneliness. Every character is lonely in his or her own way, alienated in his or her own way, and the loneliness we see is profound. Alienation between father and son, between mother and child, between two best friends, between husband and wife, between oneself and one’s aging and failing body. People who fail to understand one another, who let each other down in terrible ways. Who feel like they do not belong.
Oh, this movie. I love it, I hate it, thinking about it now makes me want to cry, the ending is sublime. I want to find my own field somewhere and a bunch of big white rocks (even as I was watching, I thought to myself, where in the world does one obtain rocks like those). I want to remember the people who are not here anymore. The people whose absence still speaks. The people who, in their own ways, have taught me about loneliness, all unknowing.
*
This last Christmas I did my best to let go. It was actually a very good Christmas. I spent Christmas Eve and Christmas Day with two of my favorite people, and I looked through the year’s photobook for the first time, and I spent time with Nala, and I ate well, and I Skyped with my sister.
Tree Day, however, I spent alone.
Tree Day, for me, is perhaps of an equivalent importance to Christmas Day itself. It is the first Saturday of December. It is the day I go pick out a tree and bring it home and string up the lights and decorate it. It tends to smoosh out into two days and sometimes even more.
For last Tree Day, I thought about asking around and trying to find someone who would go with me, someone who would help me carry the tree in from the car, someone who would decorate with me and perhaps even listen to the occasional memory ignited by one of the many old ornaments in my collection. I thought about it, and it was an exhausting thought, and so I just went by myself and hoped for the best, and then a neighbor I didn’t know helped me carry the tree into the apartment, and everything worked out.
I was happy because my anchor held. I could do it on my own. I could let go, and I wasn’t deeply unhappy about it. I was just a tiny bit unhappy. And I was still able to create the beauty I wished to see.
But I was also sad. Because I knew–because I know–that I will always want that. I will always want people I belong to and who belong to me. I will always want one or more people who will of course spend Tree Day with me because it is one of my Most Important Days. I will always want a place to be.
It’s okay. It’s okay that I will always want this and I won’t always get it. But it is also sad.
*
I want you to know the only reason I can publish this piece is that I’m not feeling particularly lonely right now.
Also, the holidays are still a safe distance away. I won’t start to feel a hollow pit of dread until at least October.
I hope you won’t feel sorry for me. I hope, instead, that you will experience some kind of resonance, reading this. That you will think of your own way of being lonely, whatever that looks like, and that perhaps its edge will be slightly dulled hearing about one of my ways. That you will gain a greater appreciation for the place you have to be, or that you will find courage in not having that place, in knowing that the not having is workable and that it doesn’t mean there’s anything wrong with you.
That perhaps we can continue to understand each other better, you and I.
*
I spend a lot of time feeling deep gratitude towards the people who give me less obvious places to go.
I don’t know if these people know what they’re giving me. Every invitation, whether accepted or not, I gather them up and they become part of that all-important anchor. They help me remember my place in the world.
I did not have to spend Mother’s Day alone. I did not have to spend Christmas alone. I did not have to spend Thanksgiving alone. There is no price that can be put on things like this.
That Christmas, back when I was twenty-two, it had a happy ending. One of my best friends from college invited me into her home. Her entire family welcomed me and included me in all the festivities. To this day, I think about the generosity and warmth they showed me, and I tear up, and it changes how I see the world.
They didn’t have to offer me a place to go. But they did.
It meant everything to me. It still does.
A very thought provoking post which I understand too well
I remember the second Thanksgiving I spent out in California. All my college friends had gone off to their families for the holiday, and I was saving my money for plane tickets home for Christmas (cross-country; always cross-country), and by the time it really sank in that I had no plans, the grocery store was even sold out of frozen turkey pot pies.
And then my landlady — I was living in a rented bedroom in her house — invited me to come spend Thanksgiving with her family down in Gilroy, and so I did that and her family all made me feel welcome and I helped with last-minute cooking and it was a very warm-fuzzy thing.
Very poignant. I’ve spent the last couple of Christmases and Thanksgiving’s contemplating these circumstances. Coming from a family that used to have 20-30 people for the holidays growing up, it’s been hard losing so many loved ones.
This was a therapeutic read. It made me think of tree day, and the excitement I felt as a kid when I felt like we all went out and found a tree, cut it, and got all sappy and cold and had needles everywhere and had a fantastic tree, that was worth all the mess and sap and fuss. The tree smelled amazing. As a pagan, the tree is very central to the whole holiday.
Then, I thought of living alone so many years. I thought of my decorated juniper bushes. I feel bad about cutting down a tree for just me, so I have fantasies of going into the mountains and finding a tree and adorning it. I adorned all the trees in my yard last year, and, even though I have roommates, I did it alone and I’m not sure they noticed until I pointed it out, I felt like I shared it with nobody, except maybe the people who quietly noted it and appreciated it.
Every year that I have roommates, someone owns a plastic tree. It doesn’t make financial or time sense to spend $100 and two days and the life of a tree, when you can just set up a plastic tree, it looks better (because the leds are built into it.) it’s less of a fire hazard and all you do is plug it in. I can’t argue with that, but emotionally, it always bugs me.
My dad has a plastic tree too.
Now I’m fantasizing about having a pet tree, that I care for all year. Or, maybe if someone did ask me I would be elated to make a big friends’ tree together.
That was an awesome movie…but I gotta say you are beating Wal-Mart to the punch by getting your Christmas lights up (in a post) in August! Damn girl…can’t you wait at least until after Labor Day? :)
Think back to a time in your life when you were strong, when you did something you didn’t think you could do. What resources did you have – what people, energy, support did you have?
I wanted to thank you for this post. I have been struggling with this, completely unable to put it into words — how it feels to spend the holidays alone. I have spent the last several hours crying, feeling utterly alone for all the reasons you wrote about — it is October, and today my boss asked if I could work overtime through the holidays because he knows I don’t have family to visit. I found this post cathartic — that I am not so alone in this sense of isolation. And with the holidays coming up quickly, I am feeling it harder tonight than usual. Thank you, thank you for posting this.
Beautifully written, I think many of us can relate.
I think I want to see and relate to the movie you spoke about. The last few Christmas’s have been hard and each year is worse than the last. My parents separated in their late sixties and therefore would not celebrate Christmas on the same day so I would have one over for A big Christmas Eve dinner and then cook again on the big day for the other. All of this was also done to show my two boys that Christmas was for families to enjoy. Well as the years went by, my mother decided she wanted Christmas Day at her place and that was all there was to it. Then my dad who lives out of town decided he was getting to old to drive into the city for a few hours cancelled out. Now as the years have gone on I and my sons have become young men and now want to go visit their young single friends for late night Christmas get together after spending a sort of family dinner at my mothers along with my brother and his wife I feel that my children and many others have lost the true meaning of family and memory’s of Christmas. I wonder has Christmas been kidnapped by facebook and all of the other instant messaging apps that our young adults can’t seem to let go of? Have we let them become zombies to the new world of technology? Sure I put up a tree every year and stare at what each decoration memory held, but in truth I just would like to book a hotel room, pack a few good books along with some Red Wine and enjoy some stress free Christmas me time alone from snotty fighting ” But Why Do We Have To Go? I Want To Be With My Friends!
Are we losing out to an old Tradition or are we just getting Old?.. Are my tears for not? Maybe just feeling sorry for myself or for happier days that my never return. By the way I did raise my boys to have compassion for others and we did not have much. They have never been in trouble with the law. They are just like others… internet zombies.
Hi,I’m a mother of three,unfortunately im on house arrest for the yr….so this thanksgiving I’m going to be alone because I’m not about to stop my kids from having a greatly deserve thanksgiving with family😊I’m trying to give the unwanted,homeless or the lonely a nice thanksgiving by inviting them to spend thanksgiving with me😊if anyone is in need of good food and company please email me. irishhippi8@gmail.com i would go and help out at shelters but again I’m on house arrest. Thanks 😎
Thank you for this. I needed it. ❤️