Well, as predicted, I did not get anywhere near my prayer journal yesterday, but as you know I did send my verbal prayer of thanks to you as I stumbled into bed last night, grateful for the Christmas gift of you, but mostly grateful that the day was over. Now I’m up early and ready to have a bit of a mind-dump even though I know you already know exactly what happened.
I suppose if I had to choose just one word to sum up Christmas it would be ‘chaotic’, but my second word would definitely be ‘shocking’! In the end Mum and Dad and Ma and Pa Copeland came first, at about eleven o’clock and we had a reasonably sedate morning tea and present opening session, at the end of which Andrew informed them that the Christmas meal would be a little bit delayed and a little bit more casual than they were used to on account of the fact that we were expecting another ten people to arrive at about half past twelve, and that lunch would be some time after that once everyone was settled. Claire’s eyebrows disappeared into her hairline at this announcement while William stammered like an asthmatic bull and demanded to know who was coming and what on earth would be served. Mum made tutting noises, and the only one to look pleased was Dad who suggested something along the lines of “the more the merrier”. All the while Linley hung around on the sidelines smirking at every little nuance and enjoying it all more than a royal variety performance.
Jess and Madison were the first to arrive, Jess coming as predicted in Goth black while Madison came wearing a distinctly hand-me-down dress that would have looked lovely on its first wearing in 1927, but that had clearly had a hard life ever since. Jess produced some dubious looking organic wine that made William (a self-confessed wine buff) look ill with fear. When Jess sat down beside him and starting making conversation I thought he was going to have an apoplexy.
Caroline turned up next with her three children, Faith looking cross, Trinity dreamy, and with Christian screaming at the top of his lungs. Caroline looked done in and promptly burst into tears at which point I had to abandon all hope of getting stuck in to lunch preparations to take her off to my room and comfort her, while Andrew tried his best to placate Christian and organise the girls who all stood around looking awkward and not best pleased to be together. Thankfully Dad intervened with Christian and took him off to the office, found him a Thomas the Tank Engine dvd, and some sense of peace was restored.
Andrew made Linley take over from me so that at least lunch preparations were back on track but next thing the girls had a huge fight over something (I really could not get to the bottom of what it was because none of them were saying so it had to be very bad) so they all had to be sorted out. Meanwhile William was muttering about where his lunch was, Mum’s offering to help in the kitchen (over my dead body) and Claire seemed to have taken an omnious vow of silence for which I could only be extremely grateful.
Then the doorbell went again, right when I figured we already had more than everyone on board and it turned out to be Cameron and Ashley, both without their partners. I felt quite irrationally cross about this – rather than glad we were two members shy of the full party – since those old thoughts about not being good enough to meet came back to haunt me. When I asked (rather rudely) where his girlfriend was and where her boyfriend was and they said, “Right here,” it took me a full twenty seconds to solve that equation: that they are each other’s girlfriend and boyfriend; Cameron and Ashley; dating one another; behind our backs; not having said a word. In fact maybe shock is too mild a word!
However my shock was nothing compared to the reaction from Claire and William, which most people missed on account of the fact that they were in public and were tied by the tresses of convention to not Make a Scene in Front of Others, although I could tell Claire was sorely tempted and William was already warming the car up in his head, planning a quick getaway. I could tell Andrew wasn’t sure whether to be angry or pleased either.
Ashley’s arrival actually proved to be a blessing in disguise as she was a wonderful help in the kitchen and it also gave us a chance to talk, and from all that I saw yesterday I do think she and Cameron make a nice couple and that, in their own way, both will be good for one another. Time will tell, I suppose.
Then, at two-thirty, much later than planned, we all sat down to enjoy our Christmas meal together, all of us in various states of disrepair but together nonetheless. Of course just at the crucial time, James and Jasmine also turned up and room had to be found for them since James was more than happy to eat yet another Christmas dinner, but even their arrival was a welcomed distraction. On top of this Trinity gave us all a lovely piano recital (once she’d found ours under its five tons of dust) that was truly impressive but which made Caroline cry. I hope, wherever he was, that Logan was served dry bread and water and was made to feel like a jerk. Fat chance I suppose, and perhaps not the most Christian thought I’ve ever had.
So that was our Christmas, Lord. A buffet of chaos, with a dessert of shock, a lot of hard work, and some dashed expectations, but also some good things too. For better or for worse these are our people, Lord, and I thank you for each and every one of them, and pray that you would work in each of their lives for your good and bless them. I can only hand the whole lot over to you Lord…Amen