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

  • Bill Grieve says:

    While you were all making gluttons of yourselves , did you all spare a thought for all the homeless and starving children of the world this Christmas ? …

    • Kathy says:

      More to the point did you honey?

    • BASSMAN says:

      I dnt have to wait until Christmas I constantly think of the trillions spent on war toys which just a fraction of would feed the world an wipe out many diseases.Then I think of Morrison Bible Bashing his Christian values song and Turnbull Christmas messaging whilst genuine refugees are caged indefinitely in 42 degree heat.What hypocrites.When they do their preying they shld remember where they are going…to hell.

      • Bill Grieve says:

        So very sad …

        • Razor says:

          So Bill what did you do about it?

        • wraith says:

          Sitting around spoiling your own life over shyte you cant do anything about is pointless. However, I spent the day with family and my dying father. I am shattered by how he looks now. He cried because he was napping and I had to leave before he woke. (stupid sister told me on the phone) Guilt much? Go Guilt someone else Bill, life’s too bloody short, and too damn nasty hard to take on stuff Im not responsible for.
          You worried about starving kiddies? You put in an effort.
          merry bloody christmas!

          • BASSMAN says:

            Geez…so sorry to hear this…yes, of course you are right.

          • Razor says:

            Wraith,
            I noted some five or so years ago when my dear old dad was getting ready to meet his maker that death, or impending death, brings out the best and worst in families. Some become somewhat narcissistic, others play games to prove points or rectify supposed slights from the past and most just gather around and hope the final times are as dignified and painless as possible. Don’t feel guilt mate. All that occurred is a set of everyday circumstances where you were trying to do the right thing turned out in a way that wasn’t ideal. Put it behind you old mate, love the time you have left with him and don’t let that time be blighted by things for which you have no control.

            By the sounds of it a tough year ahead for you Wraith but you’re a tough old bird and always seem to bounce back. So keep on fighting girl!

            Cheers,

            Razor

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Top comment Bill.
      You’re a champion. Give ’em heaps.

    • Dismayed says:

      Hear hear Bill

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    It’s a “balls to the wind” field contesting the 2017 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Classic that starts today Tuesday, Mr Insider. The Worlds 4 fastest Super Maxi’s are amazingly in the race making it a “Group One” event for sure. I am going for the Maxi outsider “InfoTrack” which is last year’s winner renamed from “Perpetual Loyal”. “LDV Comanche” most likely will start as favourite. 100 Yachts are contesting this year’s race.
    http://rolexsydneyhobart.com/tracker/

    • Boadicea says:

      Seen up close and personal , Comanche is an impressive yacht, HB. Could almost have a game of tennis on the stern. They don’t call her the ”aircraft carrier” for nothing.
      Back in Hobart today – gorgeous weather – looking forward to watching them come up the Derwent – hopefully in daylight hours.!
      Hope everyone survived their Christmas festivities in one piece…….

      • Henry Blofeld says:

        Wonderful Boadicea, I am going to be on Constellation Dock in the next couple of years to see the winner come in no matter what time it is. Cheers

        • Boadicea says:

          Constitution Dock is the place to be HB!

        • Boadicea says:

          She’s just off Maria Island as I write HB. Could be here by 9pm unless something untoward happens. They’ve had the best run in the history of the race this year. Strong NEasterly behind them all the way –
          and flat seas.

      • wraith says:

        Uuugh!!! I should introduce you to my brother, you’re as bad as he is. He lives on a yacht. Currently floats around oz with his wife. The race started, the cricket had to go, then he got all antsy and said they were all cheats because they were using winch engines(?) . All Greek to me. How dull is watching boats float? OMG, Christmas torture.
        I think you would have loved it though.

        • Boadicea says:

          Your brother is a lucky chap Wraith! Nice lifestyle.
          I think hydraulic winches are cheating! Those maxi yachts aren’t “yachts” imo. More like battleships and big expensive, very expensive, toys for wealthy boys!
          To their credit, Comanche, the winner, still wind the winches manually! Hard yakka!

    • Henry Blofeld says:

      “Hello Sailor” my Yacht “InfoTrack’ (“Perpetual Loyal 2016” has shot to an early lead. I do like Fronrunners.

    • Trivalve says:

      It all ends too quickly these days for me. they should send the maxis around New Zealand to make it more interesting.

      • Boadicea says:

        Agree Triv. They are not “yachts”. Hydraulic gear is cheating if you ask me. But hats off to Comanche – no hydraulic winches – they still grind.
        I am always more interested in the handicap winner – the true winner of a great race.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      WAFWOM.

  • Dismayed says:

    Happy Saturnalia, Sol Invictus and or Yule it seems people not being around at “Christmas” is quite common perhaps the old folks were leaving a chair for whenever the heir should arrive some time later in the year? https://theconversation.com/what-history-really-tells-us-about-the-birth-of-jesus-89444

  • jack says:

    my christmas wishes seem to have vanished,

    time to blow the froth off one, merry christmas to all you.

    cheers

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    He’s done it again, Mr Insider and of course I refer to the Genius Elon Musk, the Man who will keep South Australia from being thrown into Power Blackouts this hot Summer with his big Battery Pack. His firm SpaceX has just launched 10 new Satellites atop the Falcon 9 Rocket, a Used one at that. Elon has his eyes firmly set on going to the Moon and Mars and is setting NASA a merry pace to catch. Wont be long now before we here those words or similar “This Is Tranquillity Base, the Eagle has Landed”, thank you Neil for that live Moon Landing memory, a highlight of 1969. 2018 looks like being a big year in Space Exploration coming up.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLod79AjA0A

  • jack says:

    Haven’t sat down with the wider family for Christmas for some years, I do miss it, maybe next year.

    but then I also enjoy a Hong Kong Christmas, a bit of a hike later this morning and then a late lunch or early dinner with an Irish mate and his Japanese wife and their kids.

    merry Christmas to you all on here, i always enjoy Jack’s ideas and this does keep me in touch with home.

  • Milton says:

    Roses are reddish
    Violets are bluish
    If it wasn’t for Christmas
    We’d all be Jewish.

    Heard an old anecdote about Imelda Marcos having to go to hospital to get a colostomy bag but was severely pissed off because she didn’t have shoes to match! (perhaps that was in bad taste?)

    • Tracy says:

      Imelda was the queen of bad taste Milt, funny thing about dictators and their shopaholic wives.
      Speaking of shopping, checked out the Good Guys for a new dishwasher this morning, mine started playing up earlier in the week and I fully expected it to throw up its rotating arms in surrender yesterday (sods law and all that) but it didn’t. May have time to get more pennies in the piggy bank before it dies on me

  • Bella says:

    Merry Christmas to all the folks who lurk around here all year. 🕊🎄
    I may not ‘know’ any of you but I’m often grateful for you & especially our humble host JTI. Thank- you.
    May 2018 bring good health, happiness & maybe even world peace.
    (too much??) 💚💚🌏🐋

  • Tracy says:

    Happy Christmas everybody, hope Santa has been good to you🎉

  • BASSMAN says:

    HEY:-Lao Tzu, The Toaster, The Whiz, C of HD, Blow, Milt, Bivalve, Avon, Annie, Jean The Baptist, Trace, BODHISATTVA, IsaBella, Tuppence, Dismal, Bow, Smoke, Razor, Rhys at Uni, Plumber, JSprat, Jack, all the pollies who read me and used my stuff……all my old and young sparring partners and those who I have missed. Eat, swill be merry and thanks for the things that I have learnt from you all.

    Loved the Christmas sign “Morrison and Dutton. Please tell us more about Christian values”

    BRADMAN:- tomorrow…the dead rubber.

    Tom Terrific”-get well soon

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