New Year's Eve in the Irish Channel of New Orleans
Christmas has come and gone. All the preparations eagerly anticipated by young and old paid off, because it was a near perfect Christmas.
My mother drove in from New Mexico, and Pat spent three days preparing a traditional New Orleans' Christmas feast of turkey, oyster dressing, cornbread dressing, seafood gumbo, a baked ham completely decorated for the occasion with pineapples and cherries of red and green, his homemade pasta noodles, fresh green beans and new Irish potatoes, and more. Wesley, "our" son, contributed the pies which were sinfully left at our home when everyone left. My mama made Desiree's and my favorite, sweet potato casserole. In short, I put on a good 5 pounds in one sitting.
Desiree brought the boys over on Christmas Eve and they all spent the night with us, so we could enjoy watching the boys awake from their sleepy eyed dreams to find out if they's spent the majority of 2005 being naughty or nice. Santa left them tons. The wonder of it all seems to get better every year. The first few years, the boys were frankly more interested in the sounds of ripping paper and the fun of tearing brightly colored ribbons and bows off than they were in the actual contents. As they grew, the boys generally asked for the same things, maybe because they both watch the same cartoons that have the same commercials, or perhaps because they are so close in age (less than a year apart), but I like to think it is just because they are so close, period. This year, however, they had entirely different wish-lists, and Santa came through. He did for the adults as well.
My mother and I, not having seen each other for almost a year, spent the majority of time at home just catching up. I have always been very fortunate to have such a close and loving relationship with my mother, and had tried to talk her into moving to New Orleans after the loss of my dad, but after Hurricane Katrina came through here, I doubt I will ever get her near me now.
I had to go in to work on Christmas Eve and on Christmas, but my boss was terrific and allowed me to do 8 hour shifts instead of the usual 12, and I got to wait until after Colton and Bo woke up to find Santa's delivery on Christmas before I had to go in. I ended up sick, however, and am still not sure if it was allergies from climbing in the attic for Christmas decorations, or if I the "bug" Pat had been suffering with for almost 1 1/2 weeks. Either way, it was miserable and trying to ruin my Christmas, cutting into my time with my family. I took enough antihistamines and drugs to put a horse down, but I kept on going.
Pat and my mother managed to pull off the Christmas dinner for family and friends, while I worked. When I got in, I enjoyed the good company and food. We exchanged our gifts and then the youngest member of our family, our granddaughter, Virginia Ann, gave us all her own gift...she stood up and started walking. She is just over 9 mos. of age. All the first generation toasted her, to her strong little legs and willpower, and then with silent smirks, to one another, to the fact that Wesley and Ginia will never have a calm moment again.
After Christmas, my mother had wanted to see a little more of the damage Katrina had done to our beautiful city while she was here, so I took her on a driving tour through the flood ravaged 9th ward, over by Jackson's Barracks, to mid-city, Lakeview, and through old familiar haunts. I was struck by how many times I caught myself saying "It looks great now, compared to what it did. You should have seen it before it started getting cleaned up." There were still debride piles in front of many homes and businesses, but I didn't see (or smell) one , and most of the neutral grounds were cleaned off. We didn't have to drive around any trees or limbs in the road, either. The boats still present on roadsides, yards and sidewalks were a constant reminder of took place a mere 4 ago. We were so blessed. Our family, though separated by flood waters and locked doors at the Hyatt for a while, was able to be together, and even though Desiree lost her home in the east, she and the boys remained safe. And although damaged and dinged a bit, Pat and I still had a home to return to, albeit a smelly one for a while, but it was home and it was our space. Yes, we have been blessed.
She said she and my aunts and uncles had stayed riveted to their television sets during the days and weeks following the storm. Then as time passed, they were not able to pick up much information about it or how New Orleans was doing. Strange isn't it? Were we so quickly forgotten by the rest of the media? Did the other 49 states find it too terrible to watch anymore, or were they just becoming bored with seeing the same old scenes on t.v. That's the thing about the news...it has to be "new" or you are yesterday's wash...nothing special.
Mama asked me what I thought about the job that Mayor Nagin had done, and I told her I was very impressed with the way he had handled himself during that time, and with how he subjects himself to weekly town-hall meetings that you just know nobody is going to go to in order to praise...they only complain. He is hanging in there and making himself available. He fights for us before Congress. He is trying to keep New Orleans in the forefront of the public's eye...and by public, I mean the nation and the world, not just locally. And I told her that should he run again...I WILL VOTE FOR HIM!
She then asked me how I felt about the Govenor. I told her that I had not voted for her (nor had I originally voted for Nagin, by the way), but that I had hoped she had surrounded herself with capable people and would act quickly and decisively for our city, but that I was saddened by what I was seeing, or rather, by what I was not seeing. Action. She is so busy ducking and dodging and fearful to take the heat, that she isn't getting anything done, and not being a leader. It is frustrating.
Then Mama asked me about President Bush, who I did vote for, and who I had been supportive of. (Key words..."HAD BEEN") I had to hang my head in sorrow on this one. He's been here 8 times, I think, and stood right out there in Jackson Square, and promised us how we would be saved and rebuilt, but here we are over 4 months later, and he hasn't done it. I'm shamed. And I am shamed for him. It was one thing to have a man given misinformation and then make a bad decision, but in this case...he's BEEN here, and seen it for himself and still hasn't done anything. There is no grace for that. We need help now! It was a sad moment in our household for a while after this conversation, because I knew my mother had believed in him as well. We moved on to the next subject. It is Christmas time, remember? A time of joy and celebration.
My daughter, Desiree, turned 25 on the 29th of this month. Seems like just the other day my beautiful dark haired, grey-eyed baby girl was born. Sometimes I think she is disappointed her birthday is so close to Christmas, but I remind her that it was HER that was 3 1/2 weeks overdue, and she should have come on and got here sooner! (I looked like a poster child for Greenpeace.) Still, I'm reminded of how time is slipping past us all so quickly. I used to make her birthday cakes, decorated in whatever theme she happened to be into for that year, and used to, her birthdays were a family get together for celebration. Now that she's grown into her own, she prefers the company of her friends to celebrate the anniversary of her birth instead, but she tries to placate her Mimi and me for a short period of time on that day anyway. We are grateful for the time she can give us.
This year, being her 25th, I wanted to get her something special, because the 25th birthday to me was like turning 1 or 10 or 13, 16, 21, and all...they all have their own rites of passage. There is a guide for anniversaries, but none that I know of for birthdays, so I borrowed, and went with something silver to her turning her first quarter of a century in age.
Mama and I were off to Mignon Faget. I fell instantly in love with a pearl necklace and instead of a silver fluer de lis as I had expected to buy her, I found a dainty snail shell at the end of the pearls and knew with her love of shells...this was the one. I got her a silver snail ring to match. She made a haul because Mimi got the black pearl necklace to match. Mimi also got herself a little Christmas something...A peacock pearl and silver scarab necklace that "goes with all of her signature colors."
Finally, Mama said she really had to go, and that even though she wasn't ready or wanting to, she knew her sister, my Aunt Ree, would be heartbroken if she didn't stop by there and spend a night before her return to New Mexico, so it was off to Minden for her.
So, it was suddenly just Pat and me in the house, and our little corgi, Tegan. We began the clean up process, but then found ourselves simply enjoying spending time with one another, and trying to plan how we would bring in 2006 together.
Every year, for the past four to five years, we have planned to do something, go out and celebrate the birth of a new year, and the purging of the old, but something always seems to come up and prevent us from being able to do it. We have become somewhat skeptical at being able to pull it off at this point.
I requested to have New Year's Eve and New Year's Day off, and would be willing to work a couple of other days during the week to do so, but I felt (and still do) that it is really important for Pat and I to do this, this year. 2005 was a very tough year for both of us, but especially for him, and we want to bring in 2006 with the hopes and dreams of a brighter tomorrow, for us and for our loved ones, and for our city.
We hope that 2006 finds you and yours safe, happy and loved, and that you enjoy your blessings every nanosecond that you can.
Posted by irishchannelrn
at 2:09 PM EST
Updated: Wednesday, 4 January 2006 3:33 PM EST