Vital Juice asked me some great questions about how to survive the season a little jollier… Consider it your Holiday First Aid Kit.
Between the parties, the presents and the nosy relatives, ’tis the most stressful season of the year. So we asked lifestyle guru Bruce Littlefield (pictured), co-author of the new book The Truth Advantage, how to handle every sticky holiday situation. His answers:
The guilt trip: You ate too much.
Undo the damage: Try this.
The guilt trip: You drank too much–and have the raging hangover to prove it.
Undo the damage: Try this.
The guilt trip: You don’t have time for regular workouts.
Undo the damage: Try this.
The guilt trip: A relative asks when you’re getting married or having a baby.
Undo the damage: Try this.
The guilt trip: Someone hands you a gift, but you don’t have a present for her.
Undo the damage: Try this.
You’ve got this one wrapped up.
Got a stressed pal? Send this news!
Holiday 101 – My Survival Guide
Bruce’s latest book!
My new book with the wonderful Lis Wiehl, The Truth Advantage: 7 Keys to a Happy & Fulfilling Life hits shelves today. (For an excerpt and more info, click the cover.) The book shows how to get more out of life by living truthfully AND how to know if others are telling you the truth. So, when you’re making your New Year’s Resolutions, keep “being more truthful” high on your list. The book is available at Barnes & Noble, on Amazon, and at your local bookseller.
Merry Christmas America!
I don’t know about you, but boy are these busy times. I’m on deadline finishing a book. In the meantime, enjoy this tale from my book, Merry Christmas America:
My first memory of Christmas is of electric lights—electric being the key word. I was three years old, tinkering with lights beneath the bottom branches of a scrawny fir in my grandmother’s living room. In rural South Carolina, trees were plucked from wherever they could be found, and my grandmother typically found hers somewhere along the railroad tracks behind her mill village house. Every year, around Thanksgiving, she’d head down past her pecan trees, saw in one hand, my hand in the other, to find a scrawny specimen. In later years, after she’d snatched every sapling, from the depot a quarter mile to the north to the bridge a quarter mile to the south, she resorted to roadside nabbing, which she’d perform during one of her infamous saw-in-the-trunk shortcuts. My grandfather always drove the getaway car.
Each year after the hack job, she’d drag the thirsty thing back up to the house, stick it in a wrought iron stand, and pour it a cocktail of gingerale and water. We were teetotalers and it should be too. First came the lights. They were big and colorful. And, as I’d discover in a later Christmas memory, searingly hot.
But my real first Christmas memory is sticking the prongs of the plug into the outlet, along with my forefinger. The memory is shocking: stunningly, staggeringly electric. Think Phyllis Diller hair, and tears that burst forth like rain from an angry cloud.
Several years later, I had forgiven the lights, and my mother had become fast friends with a “crafty” sort named Judy McChesney. It was not uncommon to see McCall’s pantsuit patterns spread out on the shag rug of the McChesney’s living room and elaborate cross-stitch scenes framed on their walls. I remember arriving at Judy’s ornament decorating festivities and being instantly struck by the divergence of red, gold, and green splashed against 1970’s orange and avocado. Christmas in swank Technicolor. But nothing could have been as exciting to my six-year-old eyes than a stack of ribbon and a box filled with enough sequins and sparkly things to cover a Bob Mackie gown.
We made ornaments for hours, singing “Jingle Bells” at least a thousand times. It was the first song I could sing, and still runs neck-in-neck with the pa-rum-pum-pum-pumming “Little Drummer Boy” as a personal favorite. To this day, the bejeweled Styrofoam ornaments my mother and I made at Judy McChesney’s remain our personal favorites in our vast and ever-expanding collections.
As I grew older, my vision of the Christmas experience expanded—to outside our house, where it could be seen beneath the glare of the yardlights and the watchful eyes of judging neighbors. Bigger definitely became better. One year, the first year of the neighborhood Christmas decorating contest, I wrapped our house like a present. With a tall ladder and bolts and bolts of flawed red nylon from the textile plant where my dad worked, I made our house the biggest “present” in the neighborhood, rendering our front door, across which I tied the giant bow, completely unusable during the holiday season. Though I didn’t win the decorating contest, I did get my picture in the paper as the kid who “tried to wrap his house.”
A couple years later, in another failed attempt to win the “Best House” award and its congratulatory red-lettered sign, I made a tableau in which it appeared that Santa had fallen off our house into the giant molding leaf pile in our front yard. How the Nickels with their understated Charlestonian pineapple-candle-in-each-window routine beat my Santa-legs-and-black-boots-sticking-out-of-a-leaf-pile-and-flailing-about-in-the-breeze, beats me. But it did. Perhaps if we had snow in South Carolina, my concept would have been a little more compelling.
I never won the “Best House” award. But that didn’t or hasn’t stopped my Christmas decorating. I’m happy to live in the shadow of others who feel that anything worth doing is worth doing over-the-top. These are the true believers. Those who heard that God said, “Let there be light,” and bought in big. These are the ones who electrify our holiday and go all-out to make this Christmas the brightest, merriest, happiest Christmas ever.
Tradition! Do something fun with your family or sweetheart like driving around and looking at the Christmas lights. People go to a lot of effort to wrap you that twinkling gift! Looking is free!
Okay, okay. One joke! The recession has gotten us all rethinking gifts, scaling back on “the list.” Santa recently asked Dawn, a 21-year-old girl, what she wanted for Christmas. “Just something for my mother,” she replied sweetly. “That’s so thoughtful of you,” smiled Santa. “What would you like me to bring her?” Dawn quickly said, “A son-in-law.”
Now, light the lights and eat your dinner.
Dinner Party Talk – For your weekend
Shopping. I’ve got my pepper spray and I’m going shopping! I really need me a $2 waffle iron (even though I’m gluten free) and a $3 Barbie, which I’ll leave in the box because one day it will be worth $4! I’m going to spend the next 22 days muscling my way through the aisles, laughing as I go.
Bad daddy. A father at a Kentucky Kroger loaded his holiday groceries into his car and forgot to put away one thing: his 6-month-old. The dad drove 3 blocks before realizing his mistake. Distraught, he returned to find his baby being offered as a door buster special. Just kidding. Actually, he returned to find his baby in the store manager’s office. No charges were filed. Though the dad did decide to pick up a turkey, so he’d have a mate.
Shopping bug is contagious! A couple at a Georgia Walmart loaded their newfound treasures from China into their car and drove off, forgetting to load their 2-year-old grandson. He was left sitting in the shopping cart in the parking lot. Fortunately, another customer, perhaps desperate to find a cart, found the boy and took him into the store. The grandparents came back 30 minutes later and were charged with reckless conduct and for spending a dollar too much on a $2 waffle iron.
No more war. The U.S. Department of Defense has asked scientists at the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia to create an odor so universally repulsive it would be unbearable by people of all cultures. According to psychologist Pamela Dalton, who studies the development of odor preferences (new career anyone?), they’re focusing on odors with biological origins—vomit, poop, body odors, rotting garbage, and burnt hair. How? Well, to create the smell of decaying flesh, they collected a dead mouse from a trap and placed the animal in a plastic bag to “age.” Then, they sniff it and analyze the chemical components. Yuck!
Congrats! A little belated, but cheers to Shemika Charles, the Guinness World record holder in limbo. She shimmied under a bar that was only 8.5 inches from the ground. Seriously. Get out your ruler and see how low that is. Girl can get down!
Quotables. Here are a few juicy tidbits I’ve heard at dinner over the last few weeks: “That’s not a mid-life crisis. He is going through a delayed adolescence.” “I don’t want to brag. But I’ve been wearing designer all my life.” “It’s not easy raising parents.” And a personal favorite: “Well, let’s just call a turd a turd.”
Question of the week: In winter why do we try to keep the house as warm as it was all summer when we were complaining about the heat?
Paraprosdokian of the week: Women will never be equal to men until they can walk down the street with a baldhead and a beer gut, and still think they are sexy.
Joke of the week: A merry judge asked the defendant before him, “What are you charged with?” The defendant replied. “Doing my Christmas shopping early.” The judge shook his head. “That’s no offense. My wife would be proud. How early were you doing this shopping, son?” “Um,” said the guy, “Before the store opened.”
Now, buy it, wrap it up and eat your dinner!
Dinner Party Talk – “Oops” for your weekend
Oops. Let’s just call it the word of the week.
Fall cleanup. No, I’m not talking leaves. I’m talking political signs. They aren’t pretty. We don’t want to see you anymore. So, if your name is out there, get off the couch and go clean them up. Then, winners get to work. Losers get to a bar.
Black midnight… The economy is so tough retailers are trying something new. Many stores will open on Thanksgiving at midnight. This new “Black Midnight” has cranked “Black Friday” up a notch. Great. Now salespeople, full on turkey tryptophan, will be even more unhelpful.
Attention Aliens: We don’t know you. The White House this week issued a statement saying there is no evidence that aliens have attempted to contact earth – or that they even exist. But “we’re looking!” The answer came after petitions were submitted through “We the People,” a White House initiative that promises a White House response to any petition that can garner 5,000 signatures in 30 days. That makes me want to start a petition, real bad!
20 kids. So, the fertile reality star Michelle Duggar proudly proclaimed this week “Jim Bob and I are excited to announce that we’re pregnant with baby number 20.” I have three questions. #1. How does she keep her insides from falling out? #2. How do Jim Bob and Michelle have time to do the naughty, when they have 19 kids running around? And #3, I’d like to ask Joshua, Jana, John-David, Jill, Jessa, Jinger, Joseph, Josiah, Joy-Anna, Jedidiah, Jeremiah, Jason, James, Justin, Jackson, Johannah, Jennifer, Jordyn-Grace and Josie: Do you feel like J-erks?
Speaking of games… Have you heard about “RandomActsofPizza.com?” Well, it’s an online pay-it-forward type charity that facilitates the sending of pizzas between strangers. The mission is to “restore faith in humanity, one slice at a time.” Basically, you can send a pizza to a person in need or give a pizza to the person who, say, drives a green hybrid. It seems a lot more fun than “Intact America.”
Oh, poop! Environmental activists are attempting to get Nepalese officials to install portable bathroom facilities at the summit of Mount Everest. Seems that climbers have left a mountain of, um, evidence up there and, instead of going away, it’s piling up. I now have a dream… to sit and read a magazine at the top of the world.
Blonde joke of the week: A blonde is walking down the street and her friend says, “Look, a dead bird! The blonde looks up and says, “Where?”
Paraprosdokian of the week (for Herman Cain): Behind every successful man is his woman. Behind the fall of every successful man is usually another woman.
Now, eat your dinner.
Life 101 – Bye big bank!
Today, I closed my accounts with the big bank (Citibank) and feel like a million bucks. For years, I’ve put up with bad service, hassles and fees. My small bank, Ulster Savings, in Ulster County knows me: they send me a Christmas card (handwritten including my dog’s name on it!), always greet me with a smile, and the one time I would have bounced a check, they covered it and called me! After withdrawing my money, I stopped by the fruit stand on the corner. I got fruit. I either had to give the guy a hundred dollar bill or put $1.50 worth of fruit back. He said, “You can owe me.” There’s nothing like doing business with someone who trusts you.