Christmas Day was two days ago. I wrote this before Christmas
Day. But because I am a man and technically slightly old, I
knew days before Christmas what I was getting, so I can
discuss that now, without fear of telling a single fib.
Men are very hard to buy for after the age of 14. Apparently.
For a while we get socks and deodorants. Then by the time we
hit 30, we throw out huge clues so we don't get this tombola
stand crap . But these clues are rarely understood. In recent
years, I have been buying all my own presents and wrapping
them up with messages of love, devotion, awe and respect from
every member of the internal and extended family. The
presents have been uniformly well-chosen and I have responded
upon their opening with surprisingly believable astonishment.
After rubbishing Kindles all year, saying nothing could ever
replace a real book, I lashed out in November and bought one.
It was either that or make by body useless from the elbow
down for what remains of my life. I have been reading
incessantly in hardback form, huge tumbling tomes that go on
for hundreds and hundreds of pages. As I have to eat and
drink while I read, this means books that weigh nearly as
much as Gerry Brownlee have had to be supported by one tiny
left hand while I gobble and slosh with the right.
Changing hands merely doubles the problem. After I finished
Kitty Kelley's The Royals, and by hokey, what a magnificent
slag-heap of sleaze and witless foppery THAT was, I lost all
the strength from both wrists and my fingers were bent,
gnarled and sore. Doctors at the hospital assumed Dupuytren's
disease. Amputation was muttered behind cupped hands.
So I bought a Kindle, which can hold The Royals and another
1199 books as well, weighing in no heavier than half a packet
of honey puffs. What a fantastic thing! Such is my respect
for my wife, I chose her to give it to me. And being a
reasonable and reciprocal man, I told her she had $109 to
spend on all the clothes she could muster. It is important we
are equal on Christmas Day.
And on Christmas Day, when I would have excitedly, almost
hungrily, ripped the coloured paper off the Kindle, even
though I used it all December, and put my hand to my mouth
exclaiming - "I don't beLIEVE this!" - and lassoed my wife
with love-swarming arms, every human in the room would have
wept alligator tears at the beauty that is giving.
I also got/would have got a pavlova, because I always get a
pavlova, and goddammit, I love pavlovas. This one probably
came without cream, because it's hard to keep cream fresh
under cellophane for 10 days, but it's the meringue that
counts. I am sure I got Peter Busskind's Star : The Life and
Wild Times of Warren Beatty, and Sex, Drugs &
Rock'n'Roll, edited by Jim Driver, because I bought them in
Melbourne the week before. Five dollars each! These will have
been given to me by people who said they would pay up to $30
for a present for Roy. Just call it 20 for each one, it's
Christmas, I would have told them.
Finally, there would have been lollies, because I am
diabetic. Again Melbourne cut the mustard with a
beautifully-named store in the Greek sector, The Jerky Shop.
Unending bins of unwrapped lollies, a recidivist dribbling
stoner's delight.
There were certainly plenty of recidivist dribbling stoners
there when we popped in late one night to see Munchies
Syndrome in all its goggle-eyed pant. The strength of this
shop is they hybrid lollies you already know into strange,
new, fantastic better things, like combining the candy
banana, not always respected, with the historically-adored
jube.
A candy banana outside with a jube inner! Bwahahahah!
Eyeball-humming ecstasis. On Christmas Day, I bet I surveyed
these and shouted - "It's a MIRACLE!!" Even when you're
technically slightly old, Christmas can be fun.
• Roy Colbert is a Dunedin writer.
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