This Holiday Season, Do Exactly As I Tell You And Nobody Gets Hurt
MR. IRRESPONSIBLE'S FIVE-POINT PLAN FOR SURVIVING THE HOLIDAYS 2005
Let’s begin by clearing some etymological underbrush.
The Holidays: What Are
They? (And Aren’t They?)
1) DON’T Make Eye
Contact
This is a first principle, and not some sort of half-baked
metaphor. What I mean is, when the holidays bring you together with family
members, don’t look them in the eye. Eye contact triggers a physiological
phenomenon called “Prester’s Invitation,” in which a neurochemical is released
that temporarily anaesthetizes the shame centers of the brain, and also serves
to induce short-term amnesia with regard to past arguments and recriminations.
Eye contact, no matter how fleeting or accidental, is like waving the Green
Flag at a Formula One racer. It says, in effect: “Come on in, the screaming’s
fine!” Do not, do not, do not offer this opening to family members at
the holidays. Avert your gaze at all times, even if it means stumbling into
furniture or other obstacles. (There’s a seasonal expectation that one has had
a drink or two, so no one will notice anything amiss.) Wear sunglasses or a
welder’s helmet if you have to. (I like this one.)
2) DO Bring a Book
3) DON’T Take The
Bait
With this in mind, let me suggest two items which will help enormously: a cheap
longhair wig and a pair of wireless in-the-ear stage monitors like those
employed by professional musicians. (Mr. Irresponsible likes the Shure P4TRE3 system,
which is flexible and reasonably affordable at just under $1200 MSRP.) Place
the ear buds in your ears and obscure the equipment with the wig. You may, if
you choose, employ a confederate to hide nearby and, Cyrano-like, whisper
encouraging thoughts into a connected microphone. I prefer to connect a sound
source such as an MP3 player, hide the rig in a closet, and go on about my
holiday business. Now what do I hear? Invitations to re-open ancient slights?
Cutting criticisms of my life choices? The puzzled words “Hey, what’s with the
hair? You look like that guy from
Twisted Sister”? No sir. All I hear is a pleasant wash of carefully-chosen
music. I’ve been listening to a lot of Bossa Nova lately, so any challenges
sent my way simply waft past on a cushion of calming acoustic guitars and the
comical sight of my relatives’ mouths twisting into hateful accusations I’ll
never have to listen to.
One of the unfortunate facts about the holidays is that they have, for the last couple of generations, morphed into an open-ended festival of pain that may last as long as six weeks. The modest amount of actual office work that gets done between Thanksgiving and, say, the second week in January only makes it easier for slackers and layabouts to impose a sort of general period of sleepy unreality on those around them. Anybody who’s ever been on the receiving end of one of those gut wrenching “Oh, you don’t have to head back just yet, do you?” invitations has witnessed the phenomenon for themselves. So it’s critically important to have an unalterable date and time at which to make one’s escape. Note that it’s not good enough to have ticketed reservations for a given flight or train -- the host or hostess in the grip of this feverish attempt to extend their hospitality is unlikely to be swayed by the possibility of added expense and trouble (i.e., your added expense and trouble). And then where will you be? Stuffed like a Chicken Roulade into some niece or nephew’s cruelly undersized, cartoon-branded bed, suffering through an extra God knows how many nights of fitful, miserable sleep, stumbling to the bathroom at 2 AM, tripping over toys the tots have already forgotten they ever wanted and wondering in icy torment why some people bother to have home heating at all if they’re going to turn it down to 62 overnight. No, the trick here is to have hard, firm plans for the immediate post-holiday period. These should be the kinds of things that can’t conceivably be postponed or rescheduled. Some suggestions:
Gall-bladder surgery (No one knows quite what this is, so you’re on safe ground if they ask)
Some “work I have to do for the Government” (Adopt an air of mystery when you say this, and smile enigmatically)
Plans to compete in the Grand Prix at LeMans (Negligible domestic interest and no stateside TV coverage, so you’re not likely to be caught out)
A long-scheduled reunion of your insurance-agent licensing exam prep class (Believe me, nobody’s going to ask you to elaborate on this)
5) AND IF ALL ELSE FAILS:
Narcotize, Narcotize, Narcotize
Let’s talk now about a last-resort, scorched-earth sort of solution. With proper attention to hydration and a strategically-placed infrastructure of chairs, cushions and crash pads (these may be rented from any theatrical supply house which ordinarily caters to stuntmen), it is possible to stay under the influence of a good central nervous system depressant from just before Thanksgiving until just after New Year’s. An RN or home health-care aide may be employed to monitor vital signs and do a little light cleaning, and also impart the appearance of medical necessity to the proceedings. Health insurance, it should be noted, will not generally cover this.
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