Skip to main content

I'm Dreaming of A Kind Santa

I've been wading through my brain trying to dream up a Santa Claus, treading water when necessary to define my ideal grandfather type with endless generosity and no apparent faults. I have images of a cross between Wilford Brimley, Lionel Barrymore, and Mr. Elliker (an elderly man from my church who always has a kind word and is witty, loyal, smart all in one. He used to be a high ranking official of the NSA, which could be creepy, but it hasn't effected his image as a grandpa).

Mr. Elliker aside, my own grandfathers and my fading memories of them keep getting in the way. My paternal grandfather, Robert Wells, was a crotchety old man who worked in the shipping yards along the Tennessee River in Alabama. My father often talked about his mother, but I don't recall ever hearing him talk about his father except to say where he worked and that he liked to clog a bit when his boys played their fiddles and banjos. Since the man died when I was only one or so, I never knew him, but my mother has described him as a curmudgeon, a wrinkly old black-hearted man who kept a KKK hood in his shed for "special occasions." There was no proof he was ever a klan member, but he liked to talk big (or small).

I did know my maternal grandfather, Guiles Onie Maner. I have some good memories of visiting him in his house on Mountain Home Road in Trinity, Alabama. He was tall and broad, and he smoked compulsively, never taking more than a few drags from any one Pall Mall so that by the end of the afternoon, the back yard was littered with butts, thin streams of smoke trailing up above the grass.


My maternal grandparents.


Granddaddy was a whiz at checkers, a top hand at Rook, and a hunter. He kept a few hounds that he didn't want me to pet because too much kind attention would ruin them, he said. They were working dogs. In his mildewy tobacco stained house he kept an old trunk like something from the HMS Bounty that he bought in 1914. He had managed to hang on to it through countless moves and struggles and kept it full of old pictures and books and odds and ends, barnacles of all of the up and down waves of his life.

When I was very young, my image of Granddaddy was like that of Wilford Brimley as his role in Cocoon, a benevolent fun-spirited man who would make a suitable Santa. But as I got older, I became more aware of his rough and unpleasant edges, and he seemed more like Wilford Brimley as his role in The Firm. During one of our yearly visits, he caught a squirrel, skinned it in front of me, put it in a bowl and said, "Go take care of this."

What? "Go take care of this?" A skinned animal in a bowl? What does that mean? I had not defined myself as an Inside Girl at that point in my development, but I was edging toward the door, and to be handed a skinless thing with no clear instructions pushed me all the way into the vestibule. I put the bowl on the back porch and walked away. The dog ate it, bones and all, and Granddaddy was very angry.

One of his favorite tricks was to say, "Hey, ya know how a horse eats corn?" "No, Granddaddy, show me," says the innocent Yankee school girl. Then the big man would stretch his arm out of his sleeve, grab my leg just above the knee, and with a grip not unlike a bear trap, squeeze until the screaming would cause one of the aunts in the kitchen to shout, "Leave that poor child alone!"

So, for Guiles Onie Maner to be Santa would be more like a nightmare than a dream. I would expect to wake up on Christmas morning to a pile of possum innards in my stocking or an ashtray full of smokey butts wrapped in old newspaper under the tree.

The kind of Santa figure I'm dreaming of would bring me little gifts all year round just to be thoughtful. Nothing extravagant. Nothing expensive. Nothing that would warrant too much awe but would inspire gratitude. Maybe he'd give me his pocket knife one day with a quick whittling lesson, and then on the next visit he'd bring a deck of cards so we could play on the porch. My grandmother gave me a little racing turtle once just because she thought I would enjoy it. My cousin threw it in the grass to run wildly threw the maze of smoking butts, and I never saw it again. So, a new little racing turtle would be nice to make up for what that stupid Zania girl did. Just to be thoughtful.

And I could keep all of these little treasures in a closet that smelled like cedar, a closet that would be my own North Pole so I could open the door anytime I needed a little Christmas cheer. Well, if it's Christmas cheer I'm looking for I suppose my private cedar closet/North Pole would also have to have a minibar with the makings of a frosty cosmopolitan, and a little elf to mix it up for me. Just to be thoughtful.

Comments

dive said…
Robyn, I'm shocked!
You'd imprison an elf in a windowless closet, just to supply you with booze?

… Actually, that's not such a bad idea. Where do I get me an elf?
Sassy Sundry said…
This confirms it: Santa is just too pure and good for grownups. Robyn, I just can't come up with a good Santa for you. Our town had the perfect one. Mr. Dearborn was the nicest man I've ever met, and he had distinctive cologne (my sister to Mr. Dearborn one day in the summer: You smell like Santa!). When he died, the whole town mourned. I pictured Bubba the Biker Dude (you know, like Hell's Angels) as a replacement, and I can't have that.

I hated the movie the Firm, mostly because the Quaker Oat Man said the eff-word. It traumatized me.

Nice writing, by the way.
Scout said…
Dive, you know, I didn't even think about the well-being of the poor elf. Very selfish of me. Perhaps he can at least have a window.

Sassy, once a year in our town hundreds of bikers gather to collect motorcyles for kids in a hospital in Akron, and then they all take off with the bears strapped to their bikes to deliver them. It's a lovely sight.

Thanks about the writing!!!
Sassy Sundry said…
In my hometown, the bikers gather "like flies on a turd" (as my mother puts it) and trash the lovely beach. They demand to see body parts, and at least a few of them die. It's not a lovely sight, I'm afraid.

Popular posts from this blog

Classic Green Bean Bake

In anticipation of Thanksgiving, I feel I must post a recipe with plenty of good old American tradition. The classic Green Bean Bake was invented in 1955 by Dorcas Reilly, a home economist who worked for the Campbell's Soup Company. A study was done determining that 50% of all Americans have eaten the classic Green Bean Bake, and 38% of those believe it is best served during the holidays, mainly Thanksgiving. So, for the other 50% and for those in other countries where this dish may be unfamiliar--my treat: The Classic Green Bean Bake serves 6 to 8 1 can Campbell's Cream of Mushroom Soup 1/2 cup milk 1 teaspoon soy sauce Dash of fresh pepper 1 20-oz. bag frozen cut green beans, thawed* 1 2.8 oz can French-fried onions -Preheat the oven to 350 F -In a casserole dish, combine the soup, milk, soy sauce and pepper. Stir in the green beans and half of the onions. -Bake until bubbling, about 25 minutes. Top with the remaining onions and bake for 5 more minutes. Serve hot. *Or cook 1 ...

Bring On the Bombs

In today's edition : I generally try to keep on top of cultural trends even if I don’t adopt them, but there is a growing movement that I have only just discovered. Not long ago, I was walking along in Berkeley, California while visiting my daughter, and I saw a signpost that had been covered with yarn, like someone had sewn a knitted scarf to it. It was colorful and randomly striped, and I pointed it out as if it were the most unusual thing in the world. That’s when my daughter explained the nature of what is known as yarn bombing. It’s when knitters attach something they’ve created to a public object, most often doing their deed stealthily and anonymously. They leave a “bomb,” so to speak, for no other purpose than to brighten up the place and to bring a little cheer to those passing by. Their work has been equated with graffiti, except that the woven yarn is not permanently installed and does no damage to the object it covers. And instead of signifying the territory of a street ...

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 ...