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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

  • BASSMAN says:

    Vince’s ‘dismissal’ was a disgrace. When the technology clearly shows a decision is incorrect the guy upstairs should reverse it.
    What is the point of having millions of dollars worth of technology if it is ignored? I guess I will be howled at but I am right.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Pah! Batsmen! Prima donnas and sooks. He just got an edge on it and it would have gone on to hit the stumps. His pads stopped that happening so he deserved to be out. It’s the rule that’s wrong.

    • smoke says:

      sign me up..use the tech always

    • Razor says:

      You’re right…..

    • BASSMAN says:

      Malan goes the same way. Snicked it…should not have been given out. Should have been called out. I
      am gonna watch a movie. This is unfair.

      • BASSMAN says:

        Bloody hell…Broad cheated out of his innings. I always thought doubt went to the batsman….and there is HEAPS of doubt here! The movie is good…”It” Nearly as many frights as the bad decisions!

        • Trivalve says:

          It seems that you see what you want to in that vision. based on which side you support, going by the Twitter opinions. It seems all Australians are cheats too, by proxy of the third umpire who’s neutral. Khawaja did not drop it. There is an image of the bobble and he pulls it in into his chest. Out. Tell yer story walkin’.

          Glenn McGrath this morning: “Where was the yorker? (to Broad). I was saying the same thing. His first twenty went over Paine’s head then he got his eye in. In was a classic tail ender’s knock. Shouldn’t have got the chance.

          • BASSMAN says:

            Doubt, doubt my son always goes to the batsman and there were truckloads of it.By the way I am Ozzie all the way.

          • Trivalve says:

            I know about the benefit of the doubt Bassy. DRS is removing it however and I don’t agree with that. It saved Bancroft this morning – just. In a pre-DRS world, they would have taken Khawaja’s word for that catch and unless square leg had a better and contradictory view, or the captain called him back, he’d be given out. I was at the ground with my son and we watched the endless replays (no doubt same or more on TV) and we were convinced he had it until we saw the bobble angle. But replays of the showed that he pulled it onto his chest. There is not a single frame showing it on the ground, as some disgruntled one-eyed Poms have claimed. he was OUT. And it couldn’t happen to a nicer chap.

    • Trivalve says:

      He walked.

  • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

    Eccles, Trivalve and I had a jolly interesting Boxing Day get-together lunch! It was not a little amazing to finally meet blokes I’d “known” on-line for ten years and it was a weird mix of knowing each other very well in some respects and not at all in others.

    But a very worthwhile exercise and I hope to catch up with them again – and possibly some others here – in future.

    • Trivalve says:

      I still don’t know what a Swantoon is!

      • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

        OK, I’ll confess – I stole and modified it from a very obscure Family Guy cut-away; so obscure there isn’t even a reference to it on the internet, so far as I can tell. That’s about as obscure as it gets.

        In Family Guy season 1 or 2 there’s an episode where Peter Griffin does this very brief soliloquy that goes along the lines of being press-ganged by “the evil peg-legged Swantoon”. It is some kind of pirate figure. I didn’t want to be a total plagiarist so I turned peg-legged into bow-legged. And I wanted to retain the nautical nature of my previous screen-name for continuity.

    • Penny says:

      Good on you TBLS, TV and Eccles, I’m sure you all had a good time. We met up with TV late September….very erudite fellow 🙂 Nearly had coffee with Eccles a couple of years ago…. and unfortunately missed Dwight in Cairns. JTI has certainly got an interesting bunch of people contributing to the blog over the last 10 years, not sure I know of any other commentator who has the same kind of following on an online blog

    • BASSMAN says:

      Had a dream once where we all met. I was trying to work out who was who by looking at them
      and imagining matching them to blogs they may own.

  • Boadicea says:

    Am exciting finish to the race, HB.
    Comanche and Wild Oats were screaming along at 20knots neck and neck when they got to the bottom of the Derwent

    Had a hasty dinner and went down to the finish line at 7.30pm expecting them somewhere btw. 8 and 9pm.
    And then – quel disastre – the wind died completely. When a gentle puff of wind came along the more slender Wild Oats was able to pick up speed faster than Comanche – and crossed the line at 9.50pm.
    We always used to say in yacht racing – plenty of wind is easy, but no wind sorts out the men from the boys

    • Henry Blofeld says:

      Well done Boadicea, next year will be on Constellation Dock myself to see the finish spectacle. That Derwent River of yours can be tricky. I think the Skipper of “LDV Comanche” lost the race off NSW when he tacked out to sea with “Wild Oats X1” matching its speed closer in. Cheers

      • Henry Blofeld says:

        Make that “Constitution Dock ” Boadicea LOL

        • Trivalve says:

          I was on Constitution Dock in 1976 when Ballyhoo came in. Nearly got pushed into the water. Those were the days when it took some time to get to Hobart and some interest would build. Now it’s like a T20 vs a test match. They turned it into a Toohey’s New ad of the ‘feel like a Toohey’s’ vintage. I could never see me but I knew I was there.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      I’ve always said the crew should be able jump into a dinghy and tow the boat with oar power, or do a bit of kedging, that’s what real sailors used to do, instead of sitting round on their dates waiting for the wind so close to home.

    • Razor says:

      Please try and be gender neutral Boa 🤓

      • Boadicea says:

        Hey Razor
        Hmmmm, I think that phrase would be used even if it was a boat full of women! “Sort out the adults from the kids” somehow loses the plot.
        PC may not be necessary?
        I was the only woman on a racing crew here on the Derwent once and when things got a bit fraught I can tell you I learnt a few new words. Didn’t worry me at all.!

        • Razor says:

          Just stirring the pot Boa. Hope you have a great New Year. Bloody hot here in Brissy at the moment but we are back in our house after our 2 year NQ sojourn and straddie looks beautiful.

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    A cracking pace, and likely Race Record, being set in the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race, Mr Insider with predictions the winner may cross the line at Constellation Dock in Hobart at 7pm tonight! “LDV Comanche” leads from “Wild Oats X1”,closing, by 9 nautical miles as they approach the turn into the Derwent River. Anything could happen though as wind on the Derwent may decide the winner. My selection the “roughie” “InfoTrack” running a good 4th and needs to come with a “wet sail” to win. Boadicea dash out in front of the TV cameras and give us all a wave on Constellation Dock!
    https://tinyurl.com/y7rsg6e5

    • Lou oTOD says:

      It’s Constitution Dock Henry. I’ll give you a constellation of boats in the flotilla arriving in Hobart. I don’t know where they fit all the boats, but the crews seem to fit into the pubs pretty well.

      My son in law went down to crew a boat back to Sydney a few years ago. I don’t think the race crew were in any condition for the task.

      • Boadicea says:

        They party hard when they get in Lou. Good fun down there – live band and lots of sailing tales. Happy celebrations. I’ve never seen it get out of hand.
        BTW I think the race committee made the correct decision. Mark Richards is a top professional skipper and knows the rules. He broke them – and could have done a 720 turn right there to absolve himself – he didn’t.

  • Boadicea says:

    Prince Harry doesn’t strike me as the type of guy who would take the slightest notice of those telling him he can’t invite his friends Michele and Barack to his wedding – for fear of upsetting Trump – who hasn’t been invited.

  • BASSMAN says:

    Gawd….what did we lose…7 wickets for 60 something…….poor effort dat Bald.

  • Razor says:

    Well the numbers expanded as usual. We tell our sons and their ladies nobody they know is to spend Christmas Day alone. Only two ringins this year which isn’t too bad. 24 for lunch and about half that to murder the leftovers for dinner. It’s bloody hectic but gives Mrs Razor and myself immense pleasure seeing family and friends together enjoying themselves.

    To all the crew here I hope you have a fantastic 2018. For those in dock such as our host, Lou and a couple of the others I sincerely wish 2018 to be a year that finds you all on the mend and ready to greet Santa next year with a spring in your step and a glass of your favourite in hand!

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    POTUS and FLOTUS Trumps Christmas message to the US and World, Mr Insider, they even touched on the Baby Jesus.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XWl2mcYIVKI

  • Milton says:

    Warner’s 100 was very much enjoyed chez Milton. The quick reversals of fortune was sheer delight, and at the expense of the hapless poms. Despite it being Boxing day it was worth the full amount.
    And despite a lack of runs, Bancroft stay at the innings was instrumental in his ton.

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