how merry is it?

Christmas is just fine, isn't it? After all the lists and check marks, we're here, almost past it, still a lot of eating to do. This is my 84th Christmas (84th birthday coming up in February, narking the end of my 84th year, beginning the 85th - do the math). All the Christmas dinners of my life have become an amalgam of memories. According to Dr. Wilder Penfield and his pinprick experiments (poking different parts of the brain to see what memories emerge), if an incident or event registered in the first place, judicious prodding will bring it up again. The key word is registered; it had to have recorded itself in your brain first, specifically, then cumulatively: a pile of similar experiences adding up to the Ghosts of Christmas Past. We conflate time and look down the wrong end of a memory telescope to view the past, distilled to a kind of single, continuous event. The playwright Thornton Wilder wrote a play "The Long Christmas Dinner " (1931 ) in which the members of a family gather, emerging and disappearing as they come to life or die over 90 years. Another playwright A.R. Gurney wrote a play, "The Dining Room" (1982), reminiscent of Wilder's play, in which the central character, if you will, is the dining room, over a period of years and a collection of people. Distillation is inevitable. 

Summers are long, hot and lazy; winters are frosty; fall gleams and spring...erupts, if we're lucky.  So - Christmas. Of course, a few of them stand out, and I won't go into detail. You have your own ghosts and memories to deal with. It's a time that invites memories of past people, still alive to us however long ago they lived. On the whole, we should be grateful, even as we miss them still. Long-term memory is so valuable. Have a good one.

here comes pollyanna

Well, the axe just dropped. Our ship, the Insignia, suffered so much damage that it will take about 9 weeks to repair it, thereby losing the first three segments of the 6-month cruise. If I like, I can start what's left of the cruise on March 22, leaving Singapore and heading east, stopping at the ports initially planned. I guess so.

It's right now I have to get my head together.  I've been living in two places at once the last few weeks as I prepared to leave.  The first thing I have to do is unpack. Yesterday I bought bug repellant and Band-Aids, Polysporin, anti-bacterial lotion and Easy Wipes (for the airline seat arms and table tray)  and I forget what else.  I will be well equipped here at home.  

SOW, I have to decide what to work on. I have some stuff I have to wrap up so I'll do that. And I'll increase my exercise routine because the excursions looked to be quite demanding. Well, more lists.

And here comes Pollyanna: I'm glad I've had the joy of anticipation. I'm glad to be flexible enough to change my plans. I'm glad because I might have a little more money. I've been quite strapped and trying to  cut corners -  hard to do at Christmas - and I might be a little more solvent later in the year. Oh, and I'm glad I'll be able to do my income tax, well, not do it because I pay an accountant to make dollars and sense of my income, but at least I'll be able to assemble all the pertinent figures for him.  I'm glad I'll be able to celebrate my birthday with my family - if any one cares - well, anyway, with people I care about. 

I am, indeed, blessed.