belief

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Ho, ho, ho (who you callin’ ho?)

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Christmas.  It’s not my forte.  And by that I mean, I’m not very good at enjoying any aspect in, of, or around it.

I can’t wait for it to be over. The sooner it’s done, the sooner we get through Boxing Day (officially the most boring day of the year) and the next big annual disappointment – New Year’s.

(FYI, welcome to ‘Morose Hour’ With Keira Daley)

It wasn’t always this way. I used to love Christmas. Balmy nights lit only by the soft blue glow of TV Christmas specials (how awesome were those old stop-start animations?) and the coloured bulbs on our plastic tree. All the really good fruits you could only get in summer – stone fruit, cherries, and mangoes! And, of course, Santa.

Santa and I had an understanding. He was magic and he was nothing like what the world presented him as. All of those dudes in red fatsuits in shopping centres were fakes and I knew it. And all the kids who thought these sweaty mall employees were real simply didn’t have a grasp on logic.

The real Santa, well, nobody knew what he looked like. The real Santa didn’t come down the chimney and he probably didn’t even have reindeer. After all, he was magic.  He can arrive and leave with a click of his fingers, planting gifts that’d appear on command. He didn’t need freakin’ reindeer (though he probably had some up at the North Pole to keep him company).

I loved Santa and Christmas until that fateful day (at an age where, by all accusations, I should’ve known better) I was told Santa wasn’t real – after some pretty persistent interrogation on my part, of course.

However, deep down, I think I always knew.  I just wanted so badly to believe in something magical and fun, that I was in the most potent kind of denial.  I refused to believe that it was just my mum taking a bite out of the biscuit I left on the table, writing hello (or leaving a ‘paw print’ for the Easter Bunny – now that’s dedication!), or getting me exactly what I’d asked for.

Because, as I told you, Santa and I had an understanding – I believed in him and his magic, and in return I was rewarded. And sucks to be the little jerk kids who believed otherwise and missed out.

Can you imagine my devastation the day where I found out the Truth (with a capital ‘T’)?!

It was the day I realised that magic really had no place in the world. Oh, and that adults lie (seriously, my poor mum must’ve felt mortified by my tearful rant – sharper than a serpent’s tooth, eh?).

Fast forward to this morning when I was greeted with the following message on my work voicemail:

“My child read in your magazine that [a certain celebrity] enjoys playing Santa at Christmas – from this she discovered that Santa isn’t real!  She was devastated…”

This p!$$ed me off for reasons you might not expect, given my background story.

Setting aside the bizarre notion of young kids reading grown-up magazines (seriously, WTF are they reading it for – recipes?), and the fact that this guy has inadvertently taught his child the lesson that you should believe everything you read… has nobody any imagination anymore?

Why couldn’t this guy have told his child that lots of people dress up as Santa, but they’re not the real one – just like how lots of people dress up as Tweety Bird (okay, maybe not lots) but everyone knows the real one is a cartoon (no, wait…).

My point is, why couldn’t this guy have told his kid that the real Santa is magic?  That nobody really knows what he looks like, that he can arrive and leave with a click of his fingers, planting gifts that appear on command…

Seriously.  You want answers?  Go back in time two decades and ask me.  I knew everything then – even how to enjoy the holiday season.

Saturn’s all up in yo’ $#!T

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008

It’s not back yet, but I’m told it’s well on the way. Thankfully, I’m not talking about Christmas. I’m talking about every kid’s favourite planet to draw, Saturn.

Every 29.5 years, Saturn returns to the same point in space as it was when you were born. But what has a bigarse planet in the middle of nowhere have to do with us? Well, the astrologers say that the years either side of when “Saturn returns” are kind of a crisis zone.

Not necessarily in a bad way, however. Around this time, people often meet the love of their lives or find the jobs of their dreams, or they uproot and travel the world to see what else there is. In the years either side of 30, people supposedly cast off their ballast in favour of a more condensed version of their lives.

Sound vague? You betcha. These people explain it better than I do, though it’s still all very flowery, as you’d expect.

Of course, my publication’s astrologer tells me that I’m in a new lunar cycle and I’m also dealing with “a strong Uranian influence” at the moment. This is making me “crave emotional and intellectual stimulation”, giving me an “overwhelming urge to travel”, and making me “quite psychic”.

It’s true, I have been bored, my feet have been itchy (though that’s partly remedied with my impending trek to the Greek islands later this year – booyah!), and my gut feelings have been pretty damn sharp (sounds like appendicitis). I should play some poker before Uranus leaves my chart…

I’m on a bit of a learning spree, too. In the last six weeks I’ve started Greek language classes and Bikram yoga (that’s a story in itself). I’m still taking singing lessons too and with that the learning curve has suddenly become mighty steep (at the moment, the middle voice = brain explosion, but we’ll get there). The challenge really, really rocks.

Unusually enough, though, I’m not particularly stressed about any of this. Maybe the meditative effects of yoga are finally starting to kick in – my reason for getting into it in the first place. Inner peace. After all, you can’t be a belligerent psycho your whole life…

Itchy feet, casting off the ballast, seeking a new Everest… The collaboration of Uranus and impending Saturn, or just a pattern of being perpetually bored and indulgent and going from crisis to crisis just to amuse myself?

Whatever it is, there’s something in the air. I said it at the start of this year, and I’m still saying it – there’s something about 2008 that feels completely different. And if the last couple of months – especially the last couple of weeks – are anything to go by, it’s safe to say I’m right.