Sammy in his element |
How many of you are still running around preparing for the
Christmas celebration or secular family festivity? Buying that last minute gift
you’d forgotten or were chasing down since a bazillion days ago? Or making last
minute changes to your travel plans, house-cleaning for guests, mailing of
cards or parcels or meal preparations?
Well, you’re reading this blog post … That means you’re
sitting down and taking a minute to relax and regroup. That’s good. Remember to
breathe… while I tell you a story…
I’d just finished a three-day drive through snow and rain
storms from Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia, to Toronto, Ontario, where I’m staying for
two days before catching a flight to Vancouver to spend Christmas with my son
and good friends on the west coast. Talk about fast living.
I move around a lot these days. It helps me to appreciate
some of the most simple things in life and reminds me of what I love most about
Christmas: how it focuses my heart and reconnects me. I don’t mean just with
relatives and friends either, although the season certainly does that. I’m
talking about my soul and the universe itself.
Before I became an itinerant, Christmas bustled with my responsibilities
as primary caregiver, social coordinator and hostess of major parties. After I’d
said goodbye to our visiting friends and done the dishes and tidied the house,
after my husband and son had gone to bed, I sat in the dark living room lit
only with the Christmas Tree lights and the flickering candle, and listened to soft Christmas music.
My male cat found his rightful place on my lap and settled there, pinning me
down with love. And there, as I breathed in the scent of wax and fir, I found
myself again.
Most of us think of Christmas as a busy time, of getting
together (often dutifully) with family and friends, exchanging presents and
feasting. Christmas is certainly this, but that is only a shallow view of a far
deeper event; and I don’t mean only for Christians.
Whether celebrating the holy light of Hannukah or the birth
of Jesus, or the winter solstice, this season provides us with the opportunity
to meditate on far more than the surficial nature of the symbols we have come
to associate with the season: the Christmas tree, presents, turkey dinner,
Santa Claus or Saint Nicholas—most of which originate from pagan tradition, by
the way.
Says Lama Christie McNally (author of The Tibetan Book of Meditation), “once you dive below the surface,
you will discover a beautiful clear place—like a diamond hidden beneath the
rubble. It is your own mind, uncovered … Tibetans say we have only just begun
the process of awakening—that we still have quite a way to go in our
evolutionary process. And it has nothing to do with building spaceships or
computers. The next step in our evolution takes place within.”
Christmas is, more than anything, a time of embracing
paradox. It is an opportunity to still oneself amid the bustle; to find joy in duty; to give of one’s
precious time when others have none, to embrace selflessness when surrounded by
promoted selfishness, and to be genuine in a commercial and dishonest world.
If
one were to look beyond the rhetoric and imposed tradition, the Christmas
season represents a time of focus, a time to reflect on one’s genuine nature
and altruistic destiny. A time to reconnect with the harmony and balance in our
lives.
A time to sit with our cat, pinned with love, and write our next novel.
Nina Munteanu is an
ecologist and internationally published author of novels, short stories and
essays. She coaches writers and teaches writing at George Brown College and the
University of Toronto. For more about Nina’s coaching & workshops visit www.ninamunteanu.me. Visit www.ninamunteanu.ca for more about her writing.