Jan. 6, 2007
COMMENTARY: Surviving Togetherness Without Ho-Ho-Homicides
By Steve Brewer
Scripps Howard News Service
The extended holiday period, or "winter break," provides family units
with
such a prolonged period of intense togetherness that it's a wonder we
don't
all kill one another.
The kids are home from school for what seems like 17 weeks. Adults who
normally would be busy with work get some free days for relaxing and
reveling and gaining weight together. Because it's cold outside, the
whole
family's under the same roof much of the time.
Everything feels a bit off. Routines are disrupted. Social calendars
are
full. Thoughts are scattered. The kids are antsy. People keep tripping
over
the dog. The TV is too loud. What's that smell?
Different energy levels bouncing around in the same space create
friction.
Some of us are slobs; some want to decorate the Kleenex boxes. Some see
a
vacation and want to go, go, go, while others see it as time for lying
perfectly still. We're like cars on a busy street, all going different
speeds. Bound to be a few fender benders.
All the togetherness reminds us that even the nicest people have
annoying
little habits that could wear on anyone, given enough exposure.
Repeated
sniffing, say. Clearing one's throat 2,309 times per day. If you're
stuck in
a house all day with a knuckle-cracker or a gum-snapper or a cell phone
user
your thoughts might turn to ho-ho-homicide.
Take something as harmless as a Christmas carol. The song gets stuck in
a
person's brain, like a jumbo thorn, so he goes around singing it all
the
time. Except he doesn't really know the words, so it sounds like this:
"Joy
to the WORLD, la-da, la-DAH." Over and over. For two weeks. Until --
snap!
-- someone makes a headline.
Minor vices, such as leaving the cap off the toothpaste or the
newspaper in
disarray, can be ignored for days. But eventually someone will speak
up, and
a new year is welcomed with fireworks.
(The Murphy's Law winter break guarantee: Whether you prefer the toilet
seat
up or down, it will always be the wrong way. Mention this to the others
at
your peril.)
As the winter days of togetherness wear on, we start to see loved ones'
quirks as being intentionally annoying. We start perceiving motives.
"She knows she's doing that," he mutters. "She could stop any time.
But, no,
she keeps doing it, because she knows it drives me crazy. She's just
getting
even because I ..."
From the next room: "What's that, dear?"
"Nothing!"
But it's not nothing. It's the beginning. Pretty soon the couple is
locked
in an escalating passive-aggressive loop: If she's going to crack her
gum,
he thinks, then I can pop my knuckles and sniffle as much as I want.
She
counters with an impressive symphony of tuneless whistling, trying to
drown
out his honking nose. Which, naturally, forces him to play Neil Young
on the
stereo because she hates that reedy voice. So she runs the vacuum
cleaner.
He gets a wrench and removes the toilet seat altogether and ...
Whoa, whoa. Take a deep breath there, partner. It's always like this at
winter break. It'll be fine once we get out of the house and we're all
exposed to smaller doses of our mutual foibles.
The adults go back to work, where our nervous habits can annoy our
colleagues instead of our relatives. The kids go back to school and
annoy
their teachers. The dog gets some rest.
Soon, we're back in our well-worn ruts. Ready for another year.
Together.
Redding, Calif., author Steve Brewer's latest book is called "Boost."
Contact him a ABQBrewer@aol.com