Unwrapping/unwinding
A three-generation day of festivity and feasting, of warmth, laughter and companionship.
I think about other Christmas days I have known.
The one after my father died and my mother stayed in bed with flu and misery and we ate boiled eggs.
The one I spent serving turkey and all the trimmings in a pub and the staff sat down at 4pm to eat the same meal after the guests had gone.
The one I worked at a children's home, knee-deep in unsold sweets and cakes that had been 'generously' donated along with impersonal presents for 'boy' or 'girl'.
The one when I took the Christmas day psychiatric assessment shift evaluating the mental health of people who had self-harmed the day before and who might or might not remain suicidal.
And I think of the refugees, the unhoused, the lonely, the impoverished, and those suffering the effects or consequences of the pandemic.
And I feel incredibly fortunate.
I have backblipped the previous two days.
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