Humble servant of the Nation

The empty seat at the Christmas table

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Every Christmas Day I used to mock my mother mercilessly.

From my teenage years, mum developed a habit of setting the table for Christmas lunch, plus one.

It seemed like such an odd custom. An empty seat and an empty place at the table on Christmas Day, replete with dinner plate, knives, forks, spoons and a Christmas cracker. It was odder still because space was at a premium around the dining table with everyone shuffled up, elbows clashing over the cutlery, while this vast space went unused.

My mother’s explanation never wavered, The empty place at the table was left for lost loved ones. Dead or merely unable to navigate a path to our door by compass and map, I couldn’t say.

She came from grim Scottish Presbyterian stock who had settled in New Zealand in the mid 19th Century. Granite tough, they scratched out a living and grew wealthy on the riches our neighbour across the ditch had to offer. One became an early aviator who flew from Christchurch to Wellington at a time when such things were remarkable. The others owned large sheep farms on the South Island.

Catholic to his bootstraps, my father used to suggest his long dead in-laws were the sorts of people who would lock up the swings and slides on Sundays for fear children might have the temerity to have some fun on the sabbath.

Mum would often tell the story of her great uncle’s wake, an open casket job at one of the family homes. His brothers stood around the grey cadaver in the deepest repose. They opened an old whiskey bottle and each had a belt by way of tribute. Their sister, my mother’s grandmother, entered the room and ordered them from the house.

As they scuttled out the front door, she said, “If you ever consume strong drink at my funeral, I will come back and haunt you.”

My mother delighted in telling the stories of this flint-like matronly prohibitionist wowser. I once clocked the old bird in a photo and she looked even more fierce than my mother’s anecdotes indicated. Back in the day of daguerreotype photography, it was not the custom to smile for the camera as we do for the endless selfies of today. Back then being photographed was a rare experience and subjects would stand in stony pose as they might for a portrait artist working with oils and paint brushes.

Even then, my great grandmother’s visage seemed fixed somewhere between a permanent scowl and a snarl. She was utterly terrifying.

Naturally it did not take long for the boys in our family to insinuate the empty chair was for this vicious old crone who we guessed had entered our home through a wormhole in the cosmos reserved for the undead.

As Christmas dinner progressed we’d raise a glass to her and take long draughts in snide derision of her teetotal ways. At first my mother was amused but as my brother and I worked the joke to the point of an early grave, becoming increasingly inebriated with every toast, her demeanour shifted to irritation.

“Leave her alone,” she would shout protectively as if old Nanna Glen really was sitting there in translucent other-worldly form, glowering but unable to offer her stern judgment on our excesses.

Of course the seat was not reserved for the old harridan. Not specifically anyway. The empty place at the table really wasn’t for the long deceased figures one finds in the higher branches of the family tree.

When my father died the empty space at the Christmas table gathered real poignancy, so sharp and awful I couldn’t bear it and retired to the living room and ate my dinner on my lap. In the wake of his demise, my brother’s detachment from what remained of our family, provided greater clarity on what the empty space at the table actually meant.

The empty space at the table was for those who were lost to us, not geographically but physically and emotionally. The space conferred a sign that no matter what, they were always welcome at the table.

Now I have my own brood to sit down and break bread with at Christmas. My mother’s custom of the empty space at the table was quickly consigned to the ether. We will celebrate Christmas with gusto and no doubt to the point of wretched excess in terms of food and grog consumed. But, with just a nod to that tradition I had once thought so strange, we will raise a glass to those who are absent and extend a welcome to them all.

Wishing you all a very happy Christmas and a safe and prosperous New Year.

This article first appeared in The Australian on 22 December, 2017

199 Comments

  • Milton says:

    Good interview with Doug Walters just finished on the big bash. He looks in good health.

    • Trivalve says:

      He came to a function for our cricket association about two years back Milton. I was lucky enough to have dinner with him. Yes in good health but with a very well nourished tummy!

      • Milton says:

        Did you get his autograph on your superscoop, sans cherries? hehe..
        and well nourished hey? i’m with ya.
        anywho I’ve only the chook and prawns to purchase; beyond that a chap named Peter Hoysted (Yellow Pages) will be delivering (one way or t’other) his famous brussel sprouts. I hear they’re to die for so i’m guaranteed a few empty seats (and more grog for moi).

        Tracy – whilst i’m still on this line, thanks for looking after the football comps, and ensuring i’m not last. STOP reminding JACK to put his tips in, he needs to be STOPPED..
        Have a great one strawberry blonde and to your old man and kids. (and the MiL) !!hehe……..God i hope she hasn’t died?

        111

        • Tracy says:

          Jack is doing rather well isn’t he?
          I seem to remember TV suggesting we nobble Johnno last year and he disappeared off the tipping for a couple of weeks, think he was offshore but lucky nothing untoward had happened😳

        • Trivalve says:

          Milton – perceptive on the bat. No autographs but I do have a Superscoop and it’s still going around. It’s a Hookesy signature . Interestingly (to me at least) it performs better than it did in the seventies – never had a great sweet spot but now it’s pretty good. Safe to say that today’s stars will never have a bat like that since the new ones shatter regularly.

          One thing that I was able to tell Dougie – he used to drink at our local in Sydney quite often. We knew an old chook who lived up the road on his way home and she just loved him. She was confined to her bed. Someone else who knew her asked him one evening if he’d mind dropping in to see her on his way home one night and it was no problem at all. I think it helped her to die happy. I was able to pass that on to him so that he knew how much she appreciated it. Gold.

          A shout out to Tracy too, although I forget too often despite the reminders.

  • Boadicea says:

    Laughter is infectious. The world needs more of it
    https://youtu.be/PHuLy0DT_84

    Merry Christmas everyone
    Thanks for putting up with us Jack 🙂

  • Wissendorf says:

    You mention your dad in glowing terms Jack. I recall another earlier thread where your sentiments were obvious, where you mentioned he had found work for many men in harder times and you had often encountered these men and they still praised your dad for what he had done for them. Could I ask what he did for a living? Union organiser perhaps? He sounds like a man with a huge social conscience.

    I like the idea of raising a glass to the absent. I’m preparing a list of absentees so I don’t miss any. It could run to a couple of days worth.

  • Trivalve says:

    I think my maternal grandparents and your maternal grandparents would have got along famously Jack. The weather in Invercargill must have suited them admirably.

    Merry Christmas to all from the heart of the overpopulated Hume Highway.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Funny how bleak environments create bleak people, TV. Merry Christmas to you, too. I hope it’s a ripper and an even better 2018 for you and your brood.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    JTI – thanks Jack, for your many insightful articles throughout the year. I salute your resolve and perseverance. Merry Christmas to you and your family and best wishes for your continued recovery during 2018.

  • Uncle Quentin says:

    My biggest Christmas regret was that the first two Christmasses I spent in OZ I got myself invited to BBQs with expats via former naval reservist colleagues and had a pretty average time, all because I was obsessed with the concept of not spending it alone. This seems to be a common Christmas theme that you must not spend it alone, but from a lot of accounts it seems that more that anything it proves John Paul Satre’s dictum that Hell is other people.
    My best Christmas memories were those of the years before my mother was diagnosed with motor neurone disease.
    Now its just me, my wife and the cats and it could not be better, indeed we have begged off the family get together over the last two years to avoid having to spend time minding our Ps & Qs.
    Hope you have the same

  • Huger Unson says:

    Back in your parents day, Jack, what was their Xmas gift for the dunny-man? I recall it was a bottle of brown beverage for the rubbish man and I’m pretty sure the milkman got something. When I was on paper rounds I’d be a bit more careful this time of year, in hope.
    Now the only one left doing rounds is the postie. I give him a little gift, not so much to insure he doesn’t chuck my mail into the bushes, but in sorrow for the lost bonds that used to give neighbourhoods some cohesion. Though, some of those constraints, thumped out over the pulpits & reinforced by corrupt coppers & converted into licentious abuse, are being consigned to Hell, and the kiddies will be better for that.
    Don’t mention dogs on the loose in the street.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      We didn’t have a dunny man in upper middle class Reservoir but we did aspire to having one, HU. The garbos always got a six pack. Now there’s no point. They don’t get out of the truck. The postie gets a bottle of plonk. He’s the only one who calls in besides the religious nutters. They get to the dismissive hand and a polite request to leave the premises.

      • Trivalve says:

        I tell ’em we’re already saved. Works a treat.

      • BASSMAN says:

        When I lived in the far west the best tomatoes to be found was where all of the pans were dumped. As you know tomato seeds often pass straight through….and they thrived in the best possible fertilizer!!

        • Lou oTOD says:

          Go carefully there BAssman. Didn’t you read about the last soldier who escaped from North Korea? Apart from the five bullets he took, they found he was riddled with worms, one was 24 cms long.

          What transpired was the systematic starvation of the NK army, the only food available being home grown veggies fertilised by human excretia, hence they are filled with worms. It puts a new spin on the maxim of armies marching on their stomachs.

  • Tracy says:

    All the best Jack
    Thankyou for another year of the blog, bless your tolerance and thank goodness for your sense of humour.
    Health, wealth…..er, well the ability to pay the bills😀 and Nadolig llawen a blwyddyn newydd dda.

  • Milton says:

    Great yarn, Jack. It’s a wonder, a miracle even, that those old stern types managed to reproduce.
    Anywho, mucho thanks Jack for another year of wonderful work. I hope you and your loved ones have a bonza Christmas and a healthy and happy 2018. I wish the same for all the naughty and nice folk who contribute here.
    xxxx

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Great memories there for you from times gone by, Mr Insider. Wishing you a Merry Christmas and most importantly a happy and health restoring New Year. Cheers from we here in QLD to you and your wonderful Bloggers.

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