Craig updates a previous letter and begins an annual tradition.
Sorry I’ve been gone so long. I had to bury my Father.
It’s okay, I know what you’re thinking.
He had a variety of co-morbidities and pre-existing conditions. Some years back he had a brief battle with bladder cancer. Heart disease runs heavy through my family. He was a large man most of his adult life, for which he never blamed anyone but himself. Despite these, his passing at age 69 was relatively unexpected for our family.
At the start of 2020, he was feeling great. The economy was good and his retirement finances were solid. More important, he and mom were going to enjoy their 40th Anniversary. His daughter was to marry in the spring and he was readying himself to walk her down the aisle. His first son, yours truly, and his daughter-in-law were expecting his first grandchild in the mid-summer. I don’t know a word that exists sufficient enough to describe his excitement for the year 2020 to come. It was going to be a big year.
We all know what happened next.
The baby showers were canceled. Same with the birthing classes. And then the dinners and the weddings and the honeymoons. Visiting family members and loved ones was discouraged and, in many cases of the elderly, also canceled. And then the schools and the sports and the theatre and the music and the movies and the reunions and the churches and the restaurants and the ladies nights at the bars and the small businesses and the pretty much whatever else you can think of was canceled.
Our family did the best we could celebrating my sister and her new husband with immediate family in a make-shift ceremony in her apartment. Despite briefly losing my day job and my wife’s business being temporarily shut down halfway through her pregnancy and the uncertainty over what was going to happen next and the worries over the effects on the baby, we all powered through.
Fortunately, my employer figured out how to get by and I worked through the lockdowns. And even though I wasn’t allowed to go with my wife to her doctor appointments and we couldn’t really see as many people as we would have liked or celebrated with family and friends to share in our immediate joy, we considered ourselves lucky to have spent a secluded 3 days in the hospital delivering a healthy baby boy.
Dad didn’t agree with most of the government mandated restrictions and, quite frankly, neither did I. God forbid we expressed that view publicly…or should I say, Science forbid? We’d darkly joke that once we started joking about it and making fun of it, the invisible COVID monster would hear us and come for us.
So he and we abided. Begrudgingly, but we abided. We had to wear our masks and “socially distance” and listen to the infantile reminders to wash our hands as the infinitely wise Dr. Arwady and Dr. Ezike told all the good little boys and girls of Illinois to do if they wanted a treat and wanted Santa to come. We abided the requirements because the Dr. Fauci’s and others had the whole world whipped into a hysteria the likes of which I’ve never before seen nor do I hope to see again and because you couldn’t live a relatively normal modern life without doing so. We abided the requirements even if it meant that, rather than walk his daughter down the aisle as planned, Dad walked her from her apartment bedroom to the apartment living room. Yes, we abided, even if that meant Dad didn’t get to show off his first grandson to family and friends and all around town and, trust me, he would have wanted to every minute of every day.
As I alluded above, Dad was never the type to worry his family over things that were bothering him. That was extra true this year with some of his children preparing for some of life’s biggest events and the last thing he was going to do was put his kid’s major life events in jeopardy.
So, until the hospital visit that first week of October, Dad hadn’t really mentioned to anyone in the family that he hadn’t been feeling great since the spring. There was a brief moment at the end of the summer where he mentioned he thought his eczema was flaring up again and he was checking into that. He was a little tired but, hey, who was he to complain? None of us had been feeling great with all of this in our lives.
I should probably mention that Dad didn’t die of COVID.
His official cause of death was renal failure. For those who don’t want to search, his kidneys gave out. We’d find out toward the end, kidney failure can cause a similar type of itch to the aforementioned eczema.
I don’t blame his doctors and I don’t blame my Dad. He’d known his general practitioner for decades and he mostly wouldn’t have wanted to bother him and get in his way while they were trying to deal with whatever it is this was or will ultimately turn out to be.
In case you forgot, it’s a sad truth to life that death is coming for us all and there are other health problems that exist. And, in case you forgot, without that sad truth, none of us would know the sweet.
Would Dad have gone to the hospital sooner or pushed to see his general practitioner about how he was feeling sooner if there were not mandated lockdowns? If everything he saw on television and the internet were not filled with fear porn about an invisible monster coming to terrorize and ravage our families? If everywhere he went he didn’t encounter terrified people suddenly forced into a stark confrontation with the reality of their impending death?
I don’t know. I doubt it, if I’m being honest. He could be a stubborn bastard.
I want to be clear this is not an elegy. I did write something about him and there’s a lot more within myself than I could ever fully put down on paper. In any case, what I have to say about him and how I felt about him is for me, him, and God alone.
I am keenly aware that not everyone is given as much as he was. Still, I admit I’m sad and angry that this was the last year he got to experience.
I mostly just miss my Dad.
This opener is just to provide you some context. To try to briefly explain where I’ve been and why I’ve decided to start this annual New Year’s column. Going forward, I’m not sure if I’ll publish it on New Year’s Eve or New Year’s Day, but I’m going to try and rewrite this same piece every New Year’s.
This is the second time I’ve rewritten this, having originally written it around the 2018-2019 New Year’s. I know John Kass at the Chicago Tribune does something similar on Christmas Eve, and I’m sure he borrowed the idea from someone else, so I’m borrowing it from him because I like the idea.
I may just need something to pull me out…
Anyway, though our readership here at the Chicago Journal is small, I want to thank you who are here for taking the time. I know you have an infinite amount of content to consume on the internet. Most of it better than what’s here. Still, it’s humbling to receive even a minor note on something you’ve written and published online and, to those of you who are here, I do appreciate you.
Best of luck in 2021. Hopefully, the coming year is a little more kind to us all.
For Auld Lang Syne…
I’ve been thinking about Auld Lang Syne.
Without going into the long history of the impossible to not know song, Auld Lang Syne is a Scots-language poem written in 1788 by the Bard of Ayrshire, the Ploughman Poet, the Soul of Scotland, Robert Burns and set to the melody of a traditional folk song. Parts of the poem and its sentiment, of course, existed long before the young Rabbie “borrowed” and added his own lyrics that he would later turn in to James Johnson at the Scots Musical Museum but, for the most part, we have him to thank for the song sung in the present. After it was published, it quickly became a favorite of Scots and customary to sing at Hogmanay (also known as New Year’s) and soon spread to the English, the Welsh, and the Irish, who all subsequently brought the tradition with them as they emigrated around the world.
Each New Year, after largely forgetting about it for 364 days, I’m struck by how much I like the old traditional. Each year, I wonder why it’s not heard more often in American life and why I don’t force it to make more appearances in my personal life (I do remember we sang it in the Boy Scouts at the end of some of the big events).
And why not? A song can be sung at any time. There’s no requirement that a cultural cornerstone is to be only celebrated at a particular moment even if the particular moment is the cause celebre for the cultural cornerstone.
No, I don’t have a favorite version. I enjoy hearing a crowd sing it together. I’m comforted by Julie Andrews’ soprano as it pirouettes through the years. I could sit quietly next to a fire with a glass of whiskey and drift off to Dougie MacLean’s soft timbre as YouTube’s interminable algorithm takes over.
I suppose, due to its proximity, Auld Lang Syne has been unfairly maligned. A casualty of contiguity. Lumped together with the Christmas songs and tossed in the half-ripped cardboard boxes held together by duct tape bought during the Reagan administration on top of the cheap plastic ornaments and the lights that will be wrapped and tied perfectly but, when they’re pulled back out of the attic next year, are guaranteed to be twisted into a knot that would impress a Phrygian.
But Auld Lang Syne is not a Christmas song. A Christmas standard is far more specific and linked to seasonal or religious prerequisites. That’s why we look down on the neighbor who keeps the Christmas lights on the house a bit too long.
I also suppose that part of Auld Lang Syne’s magic rests somewhere in its power to induce nostalgia and bring long-hidden memories from the depths to the surface. Sure, given the right context and depending on individual memory, a Christmas song can provide a proper pang of nostalgia but so can any number of melodies or popular music. But I would challenge anyone to name me a singular Christmas song that can evoke the same universal visceral reaction that Auld Lang Syne delivers.
And Auld Lang Syne is not a New Year’s song even if it’s THE New Year’s song. What I mean by that is it wasn’t written for the occasion or the season as most Christmas songs have been. Over the last couple of centuries, the music has become almost a holy hymn to a moment lost in a twilight of time where, like the day, the year is not yet gone and not yet come. It just so happens to have the je ne sais quoi, the seemingly quintessential combination of the sad and the sweet that blends so well with that ethereal moment where the clock strikes and the calendar turns. A mysterious quality that makes it a perfect accompaniment for the moment, where it serves almost as a bookend in a rotunda library. To the ouroboros, the point where the teeth bites the tail.
It’s a song with a unique ability to be heard as a somber song of reflection while, at the same time, it can be heard as a song of hope for the future. And it’s a subtle nod to the latter that it’s actually the first song you hear in the New Year, not the last you hear in the old. A song of goodbye, a call of forge on, a peak where the explorer can rest and gather himself and take in his surroundings. To not only look back upon the path he’s traveled, but look forward to the unknown landscape ahead. Or perhaps better said, a craggy platform in the mountaineer’s eternal climb, where he pauses to look down before once again turning his face toward Heaven and his next foothold.
Maybe it’s just me? Overwhelmed by the aforementioned moment of nostalgia for yet another piece of life left, another breadcrumb tossed on the floor of the forest, another length of Ariadne’s thread drawn in the dark.
And how would I know any alternative? I’ve only lived life with Auld Lang Syne as part of the soundtrack. All I’ve known came after Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians cemented the tradition firmly in the modern American commercial spectacle that New Year’s Eve has become.
It’s possible. I doubt it, but it’s possible.
I do admit I’m a sucker for nostalgia. I can’t help it. A victim, maybe, although that doesn’t sound like the right word. As I view it, a person could be confused into thinking nostalgia to be a fine drug. It sounds like a prescription you’d see advertised during daytime television.
But nostalgia isn’t the drug. The drug is life, lived. Man, alive.
A person doesn’t get nostalgic during bliss. That’d be silly. Nostalgia is the withdrawal from the drug. Withdrawal from life experienced.
Like a drug withdrawal, nostalgia is a dirty little trick but a good one. A trick to get you to crave what’s not there. To want it. Need it. To be so overcome by the lack of it that you demand more and ignore all rhyme, reason, and sense to get more. Nostalgia is the longing to return…the pang…the hunger of the soul…to return to the something that caused the heart to beat a little harder, the laugh to be a little louder and last a little longer, the mind to focus a little sharper. A yearn to return to the freedom to feel life grab hold of you and let it take you and show all its gifts and possibilities. For if you could just get back to that…time…that place…those moments, it would fill the absence in the present and make it all better.
But, and there’s always a ‘but,’ just as with any drug and any withdrawal, when we’re lost in this nostalgia and we look back with this indescribable fondness for the perceived better, we forget, intentionally or unintentionally, conscious or unconscious, the moments that weren’t ideal or didn’t go as planned. We forget what we went through to get the drug in the first place. The time, sacrificed. The money, wasted. The relationships, strained. The difficult and the treacherous can be so easy to forget and who wants to remember that…stuff? As Doug Larson, the long-time journalist from Door County, Wisconsin said, “Nostalgia is a file that removes the rough edges from the good old days.”
Further, how many times can we really return to an old experience? Like under control of a drug, once the body is used to a certain amount, the addict needs more in order to get the next level high.
So is nostalgia something that’s there to drive us to the bigger and the better, again and again, that ultimately leads to our destruction? Or is it a part of our comeuppance?
But that, too, seems so black and white, does it not? It can’t be something so simple.
Do we dismiss nostalgia as foolish? That its only purpose is negative and to hold us back or cause us harm?
Do we only look forward? None of us can go back, after all. Impossible. And even if, theoretically, we could, there’s no guarantee that changes to events of the past would return us to our present self with just those unsightly little bits missing, swept under the rug. In fact, the ultimate conclusion is most certainly the opposite. That any little change made would create an avalanche of difference until our present self and life would be unrecognizable and incomprehensible.
Of course, we’re too smart for that. It’s never that simple.
One of the reasons I’m a willing sucker for nostalgia and try to allow myself to feel it is it’s a reminder of just how much life I once felt flow through me. A reminder of how many laughs I once held inside. When I focus on it hard enough it allows me to remember, most importantly, how so many more there are to come.
These days, whenever I find myself looking back on a particular memory I try to pause and think a little harder about the lost moments that came just before the images, thoughts, feelings, and sensations I actually remember. As I’ve grown, it’s these subtle lost memories that have become some of my new favorites to try and recapture. To try and return myself to the center. A nostalgia addict attempting to get as sober as possible. That’s a bit melodramatic but all I mean by it is, selfishly, I’m trying to learn to appreciate smaller and smaller amounts of the drug of life.
I’m rarely able to recall these lost moments, of course. The moments lost would have been the memories I actually remember if I could recall them but, for me, it’s become something akin to a prayer. I admit, I can’t even rightly explain why this has become something I do other than it’s an attempt to acknowledge the lost moments that drifted away from me. That evaporated or went entropic from my mind.
Maybe, in a way, it’s me trying to remember the friends I’ve allowed to do the same? To be more mindful of and thankful for the strange feeling of serendipity when the highway buddy best friend you’ll never know, who seems to totally and completely understand the speed you want to travel and your passing strategy and cruises with you for mile after mile on a long road trip, takes the exit ramp and they’re gone forever. To better recognize the spirit in the person I sat next to at a corner bar once who I never even knew their name but they told me a funny story and they told it in a charming way that had a noteworthy and unique ending line that became part of my own vocabulary and idiosyncracies and how that small little piece of that barfly became a part of my own story and I wonder how many people have taken a peculiarity or oddity or eccentricity of mine and made it a part of their lives and I think about how these good things can be as contagious as bad viruses.
I don’t know. Auld acquaintances, and all that. I’m beginning to ramble.
Never once in the lost moments before my greatest memories have I known what was truly coming next. Never once as the dawn broke have I known what the day would bring and never once as it expired have I known what would wait for me on the other side. Never once. The best moments in my life have been unexpected…
But no matter how hard I try to reach through the mist of my poor memory to only grab hold of the good, the bad are there, too. The worst moments in my life have also come unexpected…and the most honest I can be with myself is to realize and confront the reality that there are more of the bad coming all the same as the good.
Knowing this, it’s the little calm moments in the eternal before where I try to focus and prepare myself to react to the inevitable storms. Too many forget the calms before the storms.
Don’t get me wrong, I certainly remember all the storms, just as much any other person, but it’s the acknowledgment, however muted, of my naivete and ignorance, where the outcome and possibilities were endless. And it makes me hopeful to know there are more new experiences coming, no matter how small, and, further down the line, an experience that is guaranteed to make me feel nostalgic anew. New experiences that may not end well and that may not end as anything significant at all, but where I rest in awe in the anticipation of what they could become. In awe before the inescapable unknowns and the undiscovered unforgettables. And that new nostalgia will be the direct result of life, lived.
There’s a quote I use way too often from Owen Wilson’s character in the completely ridiculous and over-the-top fantastic Michael Bay popcorn movie, Armageddon. As he’s getting strapped into the rocket, another character asks how he’s feeling and he replies, “I’m great! I got that excited/scared feeling. Like 98% excited, 2% scared. Or maybe it’s more…it could be…it could be 98% scared, 2% excited but that’s what makes it so intense. It’s so – confused! I can’t really figure it out…”
If we focus hard enough, every single moment of our lives could be described that way.
As a pretty good writer pointed out, all the world’s a stage. We have our exits and our entrances and, in our time, each of us will play many parts, but the stage stays the same and, if we’re being honest, so do the stories. But that doesn’t mean our time on the stage is worth any less than any other’s and, I think, it’s an acknowledgment from Burns’ lyrics that it’s the opposite. That we should be honored to share the stage with these acquaintances. And further, to walk the same floors and trace the steps of these same lines that wind back through the ages to the beginning. The long thread through the dark. The realization that we’re all still just sitting around the eternal campfire telling each other stories and making each other laugh or cry or wonder to keep warm and make it through another night just like all those that came before. That maybe this day too, in some far off future, will be a long, long ago to sing for.
Yes, even the year 2020.
It has been a challenging year for us all. Of that, there is no doubt. But, I promise, 2021 is coming. Which, the reality is 2021 may not be any good either. But 2022 is coming. And so is 2023. And so on. You get the idea.
Ultimately, this all adds up to the individual’s realization they’re more than mere individual. That while they’re an individual they’re not just an individual and that they’re part of a family. That they’re not just an individual part of a family but that they’re also a part of a community. That the Trinity outside reflects the Trinity inside.
I’m not saying anything new, of course. This can generally be summed up and easier understood with, “it’s the little things,” but there’s no fun in brevity. And, sometimes, we need to wade through the superfluous redundancies and get lost on the way in order to find where we needed to go.
What matters, and always has, is the time spent together. Whether we’ve lived together directly as in a marriage or simply lived on this world at the same time, just as we all have a home we all have a place in the long line before and the long line beyond. This is our time. And it is our solemn duty to make our time the best we can.
We’re all old acquaintances, whether we know each other or not. Whether we shared a common time or not.
Which finally brings me back to the tradition of Auld Lang Syne.
We need these little traditional reference points to bind us and keep the knot strong. For if it is the little things that make us, us, if we have no little things that join us together through time, we don’t have an us at all. If there be nothing to remind us of the lights of the stage or the fire we’re forever around together, always, the nights will be cold and dark.
Burns’ lyrics never declare whether the days long since were “good,” nor do they denounce them as “bad.” Sure, once upon a time they picked the daisies fine, but that was a long time ago and a lot has happened in the in-between. Sure, once upon a time we shared a river all day, but now we are a sea apart. No, we can’t go back but no matter. We shared that time. So raise a glass, friend.
We lost many this year. There was much anger. But we were here together.
Burns implores us to, just for a moment, let it all go and raise a glass to something as sad and sweet as memory itself. And, more than that, someone shared life with us once whether we knew them well or never knew them at all. We may never be here again but we’re worth a cheer because we are.
As I mentioned at the beginning, now that this is done, I’ll likely forget about Auld Lang Syne again until a few seconds before midnight when the sudden moment of nostalgic clarity washes over me as it feels as if the whole world begins singing in tune to a simple song we all know despite never having practiced together or even never having met the people next to us. Try to remember, I’ll be singing along.
And I hope you sing with the world. For the world sings for you.
For old time’s sake.