Skip to main content

Sensory Stimuli

Pretending that it's Christmas in September and that I live in pre-Revolutionary Williamsburg is as ludicrous* as a white girl in central Ohio feeling African. Yet here I am, snuggled in my office and listening to the Chieftains' Bells of Dublin on ITunes. I have switched project gears and am moving from a marriage book for Nigerians to a collection of romance books for Christmas. It's important to work ahead. And it's important to immerse myself in things to stimulate the senses--sensory stimuli--a phrase I picked up from Keeping Your Brain Alive, a book I read after my father's brain died but forgot to tell his heart and lungs.

I suppose every brain has its triggers--what makes one person react may not mean a thing to the next. When summer starts to blend into fall, I look for leaves in my yard, I dig out my favorite sweaters, and I suggest that #1 make a pumpkin pie. But I also think of parades, a specific parade--I have a vivid memory I have held onto since high school. My band was marching in the homecoming parade, and I stood in my spot feeling as though I might be the only kid completely absorbed and transported by the setting--my gold cape lifted by the wind, leaves every where, drums beating, the smells and sights and sounds. It was one of the notable moments in my life when I knew that I was standing in exactly the right place at the exactly the right time doing exactly what I was meant to be doing. I can count those moments on one hand. That experience has been branded into my memory bank because all the senses were effected, and I suspect if I had made myself aware of only one thing--a single sight or a single taste--I would have missed it.

So, here I am trying to conjure up Christmas. It's a challenge because I can't taste my mother's cornbread dressing. I can't hunt for the ornaments on my mother's tree--the ones I hunted for and spun with my fingers when I was a little girl. I can't sing in the kitchen with my sisters who are scattered around in three different states. All I've got is the Chieftains. And some Vince Guaraldi. And some Michael McDonald.

It's like trying to dance a jig to The Boar's Head with only one leg.

*I tried out the word "ludicrous" here because Husband used it to describe one of my ideas the other day. It carried such punch, I thought I'd give it a spin. I'm not sure I like it.

Comments

Anonymous said…
how about romance for Nigerians who are thinking of getting Married at Christmas time?

you've got to add Mitch Miller to your collection. I happen to have a special edition of Drum corps Christmas music called Ornaments in Brass. You might be able to find a copy somewhere if not I can mail you one.(If you like horns)

"Ludicrous" hmmmmm... did that punch knock you out by the way?

Rich
Scout said…
What do you mean "IF" I like horns? I'll look for that recording. I don't have Mitch Miller, but I do have a huge collection because I'm a sentimental fool when it comes to Christmas--or most things, I guess.

That "punch" did not knock me out, but it stung enough that I'm saving that word for an opportune come back. Very catty.
Anonymous said…
While I have been nearly been wiped out by the tsunami of work on my desk, and do not have time to post my own blog (shouldn't I get credit for having half a dozen partial drafts?!)... I cannot refrain from reading, and replying to, yours.

www.live365.com An internet radio website that is free if you would like, or charges a small fee if you want VIP access (and no commercials). I have a series of christmas stations stashed in my favorites... and they all play Mitch, Vince, and both Michaels (McDonald and Buble).

Do you have a small office where I could come a conjure Christmas too? Nothing ruins the illusion than a shrill "What?! It's only September for pity's sake." Oh to have some privacy... and some cocoa... and snow.

Popular posts from this blog

Happy Birthday To...

Pope Leo IX (the Pope) JCF Bach (German composer) Jane Russell (of Gentlemen Prefer Blonds fame) Daniel Carter Beard (founder of the Boy Scouts of America) Jean-Paul Sartre (French philosopher) Maureen Stapleton (Academy Award winning actress) Mariette Hartley (who?) Prince William of Wales (the prince) but most importantly, HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 45 years ago today, I was born in Alabama in a small town on the banks of the Tennessee River. Yesterday, someone asked me if my family has any birthday traditions. The answer is no. My family never cared very much, but I do remember a few birthday highlights. I was given a birthday party in the back yard when I was ten years old. Two years later, my sister got married on my birthday, so I was just a bit overlooked, although I did get a stuffed animal--it was a white Yorkshire terrier with an AM radio in its stomach. When I turned 20, a different sister took me to an outdoor performance of Dvorak's New World Sympho...

Cindy Loo Who In October

What is it with people and Cindy Loo Who? Of my last one hundred blog hits, forty have been direct visits from regular readers, and fifteen have been as a result of people searching for "Cindy Loo Who," the little pixie from Seuss's How The Grinch Stole Christmas . A couple of years ago, I posted an image of the original Seuss illustration as compared to the TV cartoon image, and for some reason, that post is bringing in the crowds, relatively. Maybe it's the weather. It isn't even November yet, and already we've had frost and have had to dust off our winter coats. When it gets cold like this, I start to think about Christmasy things like listening to Nat King Cole and decorating the tree. It's ironic because I am offended when retailers start pushing holiday stuff early, but I don't mind my own private celebrations. When my sister and I were much younger and still living with our parents, we would pick a day in July, close the curtains to darken the ...

You Just Never Know

This newspaper gig has brought some interesting things. Because of it, I have met all kinds of people and learned all kinds of things. I have interviewed a potter, a stained glass artist, a horse barn owner, Guatemalan immigrants, winery operators and a woman with two uteruses. That last one may seem odd, but she's one of the few women in the world who has given birth to surviving twins, each developing in its own womb (you can see the adorable kids and read the article here ). I have learned about antique steamer trunks, dandelion wine, the history of steel drums and that people in Papua New Guinea are being evacuated from their island because of rising sea levels. I've read books on the repercussions of factory farming, and I've researched childhood obesity—did you know that Ohio ranks 17th on a list of US states in order of weight? Yet, someone in my own town would comment online suggesting we leave our poor kids alone. The other day I was in a court room to cover a case...