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"Blue
Christmas" by Tricia Shore
(Originally
published in The Independent Weekly, Durham,
December 22nd, 1993, under the pseudonym "Caitlin
Kelly")
"Trust
your feelings," my therapist said. And so I did.
I left my husband. That was in July, when the trees
had leaves and I was wearing shorts and tank tops. It
is almost winter solstice now. I am wearing sweatpants
and a fleece-lined sweatshirt. I am cold. Last
year at this time we were putting greenery around the
fireplace. The red bows I had made from velvet ribbon
bought at the Piece Goods store hung on the mantle.
We argued even then about the lights and the tree, where
it would go in the living room. Part of me knew then
that I would be alone this Christmas. Last
year we spent so much money on Christmas presents and
decorations that we didn't bother to keep track of it.
This year I bought $10 worth of lights at a drug store
and I'll spend no more than $50 on my family and a couple
of friends. I could afford to buy a tree, but I need
groceries much worse. It's
difficult not to look back, not to go back. And sometimes
it seems like going back would be prudent. I have wonderful
friends, but I am often lonely. Tonight I spent $2.10
on some French fries and a Pepsi. I wasn't even hungry,
but I wanted badly to talk to someone, though all I
said was "yes" when they asked if I wanted
ketchup for the fries. Since
that summer day when my friend helped me move out of
my comfortable house with the big yard, interesting
things have transpired. A couple of times I've gone
swimming alone, nude, at 1 in the morning. Once I knocked
on a neighbor's door at midnight and asked if he wanted
to go for a drink. I was harrassed and fired from a
job. I drank too much a few times and drove home anyway.
I met a woman at a bar and out in my car we kissed passionately.
Some things are painful;
some are wonderful. I come home to a lonely apartment
but it is my apartment. There is no one
telling me to take off my shoes or accusing me of having
an affair. Nobody tells me that I am too fat or that
my hair is too short or that I'm flushing the toilet
too much. I drove
by my old house last night and saw the white candles
he has neatly placed precisely in the center of the
front windows. He never would have gone for the blue
lights I have strung across my bedroom window in no
particular pattern or order. As I drove into my parking
lot and looked up to see them shining like stars in
the heavens, I felt my possibilites to be infinite.

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