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
For those seeking the “truth” here may be your Christmas answer and its called “Festivus for the Restivus”, Mr Insider. Only requires an Aluminium Pole and no Decorations, with however a few “quaint” Customs. Enjoy Festivus!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LbfMmCf5-ds
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fCNvZqpa-7Q
Lovely JB.
IMO Tim Minchin is quite weird, but in a good way…..🎶
Happy Xmas mate. 🎄⛇
Good selection JB!
Stylish Mr Baptiste, Merry Christmas to you buddy.
The ethnics I married into have a wonderful tradition of ‘St Stephens Day’. You clean loved ones graves, (do church if you want to, light the candles) go visit, go home make a cake and have a nice tea. All very civil. Lovely and appropriate. Its in memory of all those ‘lost to us’ as you say.
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I’m glad you are not carrying on the empty plate tradition, what it did to you just that once was exactly why. Christmas cheer should be exactly that. Leave the dead alone, they cant drink or get merry. Grumpy Lot.
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It brings to mind the “Memorial Wall” at the main gate of the local school. There are names of a dozen or so students that died in the last 15years or so, in tragic ways. Tastefully engraved in chrome flower sconces, fresh flowers come and go. Lovely some would say. But, then I had the conversation with the young lad that was at one of those deaths, he watched his best mate choke to death in front of him. A happy day at the beach, pizza, then ambulance and shock and … he trails of and has this look in his eyes. He tells me he can never go into school through the main gates anymore without seeing his friend choke. This is no way to start your day. He asks is it okay, for him to feel like this, and to go in through the side gate. Yes, my dear, hop the fence if you have to.
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So now, the “Memorial Wall” has taken on a different aspect to me. I honestly wish I could bring up moving it to the town grave yard, its only 200m down the road, and would fit right in with the mind set already there. But I am chicken. “They” would be offended.
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No empty plates at Chrissy tables here either good friend, it takes up prawn space.
Merry Christmas believers and pagans all.
Stay Safe.
Get home.
Cheers.
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ps Pete, you are a living legend for putting up with us all for another year. Good luck to you and your family sounds cheesy, but so really felt.
You see that would be right, the one time I ask the bloke to fact check, he says “yeah, St Stephens day it is”. No its not, its All Saints Day. Empty plate day. Its on November the first, that would make more sense.
Date: November 1 (Western Christianity); Sunday after Pentecost (Eastern Christianity)
Observances: Church services, praying for the dead, visiting cemeteries, eating soul cakes.
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Im not silly its just the way they dress me.
ttfn
Thank you, Wraith. A very Merry Christmas to you.
A Merry Christmas and Joyous Boxing Day Test and Kwanzaa to all those who lurk and rant on here and theirs’ and to you, Jack, and your brood.
I suppose the only ‘good’ thing about having families split over disputed wills and the like is that it can save travel time on some very busy roads.
Might go and finalise our Christmas shopping this afternoon.
Right back at yer, Rhys. Have a great Christmas and bumper 2018.
Glad I did most of the preparation yesterday, the dessert involved some swearing but I’m calm now.
Got the husband to beat the crap out of the pomegranate to get the seeds out, Cranberry sauce done just husbands favourit beetroot salad (yuk) to be done and the Louisiana remoulade for the seafood.
Roll on southerly buster this afternoon, air con and skiing on Eurosport doesn’t quite get to the spot.
Well, JTI, what can I say but have a wonderful Christmas. We are an Anglo Australian family that has shared our Christmas day with a Chinese Australian family for the best part of 20 years. And will do so again in a couple of days. Our children have grown up as best friends across those years. Sometimes multiculturalism really can work.
Anyway, all the best to your family and all the regulars here, regardless of whether or not I always agree with your politics or your opinions. I believe we do form a community of sorts.
Good stuff, NFY. Merry Christmas to you.
JTI,
As a heathen, at our ski lodge we raise our glasses first night ” To absent friends”, most notably a regular who died 10 years ago now – of mtorneurone….
Thanks for the entertainment of the writing, the indulgence of the blog and the good humour with which you treat most longhops (whether or not they are despatched to the boundary).
As for the remainder, may luck favour you – and enjoy the journey….
Best wishes till February,
cheers from my Leoville-las-cases 1978 (slurping with abandon)
Enjoy every minute of that, Voltaire. Have a wonderful time.
I was a member of the Benevolent and Protective Order of the Elks for a dozen years. At 11:00 each evening we paused and toasted “To our absent members.” It was interesting. Almost a tontine.
Were you the Grand Poobah or have I got the wrong lot?
Exalted Ruler. *lol*
Lovely story Jack.
All the best to you and yours for the festive season and next year.
After reading your article, I might just surprise a few people with a toast to those who went before.
Thanks, JS. Have a great time of it yourself, mate.
Cheers to your family. Your story geez…Sad Cafe
A brave family that could enjoy Christmas with an empty chair.
Mt tear ducts could not handle dat. My mum went a while back.
We never got on. You miss them most when it is like that,
Another Christmas will go by with my 2 eldest in lucrative jobs
dismissing their dad. Divorces can be cruel when your kids abandon you.
10yrs now.
Anyway…thanks for putting up with me on the blog. You are patience personified.
No problems, Bassman. Have a very good Christmas.
You’ve got yourself a de facto family here, B’MAN.
We may argue, we might blue
And though we’ll never be your kids or wife
We won’t ignore you
(But the cut & paste stuff can be a trial to get through :))
A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to all! Especially to our host who seems sometimes to possess the patience of a saint, the wisdom of Solomon, the strength of Samson and a great big pair of brass balls!
Seriously. What normal man would have had his blog shut down at The Oz and, instead of thinking to himself, “Thank Christ! Now I can be free of all those lunatics!”, would then go ahead and open his OWN page to let us nutters run amok with all our bullsh*t? There must be some sort of gong in it!
You make apretty solid ooint there, TBLS. Merry Christmas.
For sure, mate!
Have a great Christmas Bassy and never say never. They usually come back mate.
Hey Bassy. All the best
BODHISATTVA 🎄
I’ve not spoken to my father, except once fractiously 18 yrs back, for about 25 odd years Bassman. No doubt different stories and I had to cull myself so as not to bore everyone here who also have their own stories ! Despite the estrangement Bassman, from my experience your kids will often think of you, and with love and pride. Sure they’ll have some old hates, or whatever it’s called, but they soften.
I won’t contact my Father, and I hear he is not well Bassman, but I have always wished him happiness and health in his 2nd marriage.
Be sure they think of you old mate.
Sad for both of you. Hope you both sort it before it’s too late.
Meanwhile, I’m embarrassing mine on Twitter. Lucky he doesn’t read it.
Milton, my husband didn’t speak to his parents for the last 30 years, their choice not his. It’s taken him a long time to come to terms with it, but he has. I can’t imagine what that must be like.
Bassy, I agree with the others, your sons will be thinking of you, but who knows how to make the first move, it might be up to you. Thoughts are with you though….
Yes very sad….I am sure my kids will come to see me…when it is too late.
It’s not such an odd tradition after all Jack. Like many here my grandparents were stoic and tough, they had to be as immigrants to end up on virgin farms in WA in the early 20th Century. Carved a living with the callouses they wore with pride. And so the generations that followed.
Greater family gatherings were still the custom when I was growing up. The hardest was at my Uncle’s farm, when all gathered were silenced mid Xmas lunch. It was a phone call from the local cop to advise my cousin, a navy boy then based in New South Wales, had been killed in a motor vehicle accident. We still honour his memory some fifty years later.
This has been a tough year for you, and several of us here. I will raise a glass this year to all still with us, who mal life worth living. Cheers mate!
Thanks, Lou. Have a good one.
Keep punching away Lou and have a great Christmas.
Lou oTOD:
‘who mal life worth living.’? Sounds a bit like my man Tones, Lou. after that I’ve got nothing. have a good year ahead. Lou. Good health and hijinks to you and yours.