The tree is up, a big fir that fills the house with fragrance — and overflows the corner it's been assigned.
I sit down to write my post but first must move the rocking chair to the other side of the room, in front of the hutch. There now ... that's better.
To fit the tree we must reconfigure. The console moves into the hall and becomes a convenient flat surface to decorate — but also to pile the stuff that needs to be taken upstairs.
The rocking chair, parked where it is now, reminds me of a Christmas 22 years ago, when Claire was a toddler and had begun waking up at 5 in the morning for some strange reason (an excess of exuberance?). We would sit in another (long since dispatched to the basement) chair in front of that same hutch and read the holiday books — Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer, The Night Before Christmas.
If I close my eyes I can almost feel Claire's squirmy little body in my arms. I would have been drop-dead tired, of course. But even then I knew those moments were precious.
Reconfiguration: It's what we need. It's what holidays help us do.