2026/48
Because of how the holidays fell this year, we had an extraordinarily long break from school, and decided to spend a lot of it with my family and friends in Maryland and the D.C. area, staying at my mom’s, where we took the art of charcuterie-board making and nightly presentations of the too-many-treats that were in the house to an extreme degree. I think a lot of you can relate coming out of the post-holiday daze, and perhaps agree there is a sort-of unconscious method to this madness. At first it’s all about enjoyment. But by the 8th plate of snacks, you don’t really see a way out. “So, let’s ride this all the way to oblivion!” you think, “Let’s see how much we can take.” Finally, making the dreary return to reality possible - even slightly welcome - you regain sense, and are ready to go home.
Home, where it is, oh dear, January. Where the living room is full of all the things we left there upon our escape south. Yesterday was a pleasantly sunny, if cool, day, and Aidy and Gabe played basketball outside without coats, Aidy getting all the way down to her short sleeves at one point, the whole scene tricking me into saying, “It feels like spring!” Because with the cleaning up and out we were doing, the readying for the week ahead, it really did. Then this morning came and it was 29 degrees and the beginning of a real, uninterrupted work and school week, the kind we nearly forgot existed; the sign of a good vacation.
I wasn’t in a particularly good mood coming back to it all, to be honest, and I immediately, aggressively really, leaned into a behavior pattern that I always tell my children and friends is not a good idea. And that is trying to convince yourself you are not feeling the way you are feeling. I tried particularly hard to convince myself of this because I made a casual goal - a deal with myself following my recent 48th birthday and ringing in 2026 - that I would try to have as much fun as possible this year.
I find that I’m sort of allergic to the modern idea of “having fun,” not because I don’t believe in it, god no, but because I tend assign that phrase this juvenile air. Like that when people launch campaigns to have more fun, what they mean is that they will, as a full grown adult, start going to the trampoline park or something. And I think about how I tried, not too long ago, to do a cartwheel, which seemed to dislodge my entire sense of inner ear balance and I almost needed medical attention. I can’t be expected to have fun like that.
But that’s not what fun has to mean, right? It can mean - and what I mean - approaching life, when it is appropriate, with a sense of curiosity and light-heartedness. A spirit of facing the world with a sense of openness, like no matter what mood you are in…what might happen?! Getting on with it, instead of getting mired in it.
That’s what I did with my bad mood this week: I got stuck in fighting those totally understandable feelings following our extended holiday adventures, when the truth is about these moods (and this is another thing I always remind my children) is that, most of the time? They pass on their own. If you can remember that you aren’t the feeling, and the feeling is just a feeling, they usually do. And pretty quickly! Like the eventual understanding that the charcuterie plates have served their purpose and it is time to move on, rest assured that the proverbial gray clouds, if not the gray January days (not yet), will pass. And when I remembered to get myself out of my head and the house, to write it all down here and let this be a communal experience instead of a solitary one, I felt it all lighten right up. No cartwheels required! Here’s to a new year.
