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Rudolph the Camel
“So much depends on how one defines naughty.”
--Anonymous.
As an innocent kid,
the holidays always
confused me.
Some Christmas cards
depicted Jesus in Judea,
with herds of camels,
and palm and olive trees,
while others depict
Santa Claus up to his butt
in ice and snow
somewhere way up north,
surrounded by fir trees.
I mean if farm animals
were allowed to be present
during the birth of Christ,
why aren’t those same animals
allowed in churches
as part of the congregation?
Now Santa Claus
is nicknamed old Saint Nick, right?
His origins can be traced back
to a monk in Turkey in 280 AD.
I guess this monk became
a saint, known for his kindness.
He was known as the patron saint
of sailors. But Jesus was not a sailor,
that was Peter, right?
Jesus had no use for a boat;
he could walk on water.
He didn’t have to go fishing,
he would just snap his fingers
and a cartload of fish and loaves
would appear.
Later on, why did Saint Nick,
after he had become a bishop and shit,
give up the Mother Church,
take the vows of poverty,
and immigrated to Finland? Was it because
suddenly he had a jones for tannenbaums,
and there were no fir trees in Israel--or did
he ditch his vestments in order to give up
celibacy, which was reported to be much more
satisfying than masturbation, homosexuality,
or beastiality?
He must have set up his first headquarters
in Lapland, where reindeer are plentiful. I
always thought it would have been cool if
Santa had recruited camels to pull his sled.
Then Rudolph would have had a much bigger
nose.
Obviously, St. Nick had to get back in the good
graces of God in order to bring about the
miracles necessary to make Christmas work.
So why doesn’t the bible have any mention of
these Christmas miracles?
I think I was around ten, and during that holiday
season, after reading Steinbeck’s East of Eden,
I came to the conclusion that the mythos of
Christmas, part Madison Avenue, part
ecclesiastical, was mostly Hallmark bull shit,
and that I no longer had to search for a logical
thread within the miasma of holiday madness,
and this clarity, this epiphany, helped me elude
any sense of guilt, and that I could just be
naughty ad infinitum.
Glenn Buttkus
Posted over at d'Verse Poet's Pub
10 comments:
I could almost hear Bill Murray reading this, Glenn! The ten-year-old Glenn's rude awakening, I think, comes to us all. All the "holiday" contradictions and obfuscations and superficialities coming up against your encounter with the harsh realism of Steinbeck's and our own childish apprehensions of the adult world is disillusioning. You make us see that in technicolor history and humor and wit. And why not Rudolph the Camel?
pax,
dora
This is killer brother. You were an enlightened child indeed Glenn. Wonderful writing. 👍🏼
Delightful ad infinitum. I heard a guy say once he was in church and saw the Savior up on the cross and thought, geez, if God did that to his only son, imagine what he'll do to YOU. Somehow kids manage to figure it all out.
Stunning. Dosed just tight, wonderful turns of phrases, highly engrossing & entertaining — reminded me a touch of some of Milan Kundera's writing in his "The Unbearable Lightness of Being," where a chapter suddenly appears as a rant on similar (but not same of course) lines. Brilliant read.
The only thing you couldn't have known back then, Glenn, is that you would some day write a brilliant poem about your realization.
-David [ben Alexander]
There is so much I can relate to here -- I don't know where to begin.
"Was it because suddenly he had a jones for tannenbaums"
Glenn, this is quite priceless. Reminding me of all my own childhood epiphanies.
Hahaha Glenn! What a marvellous story and epiphany. Interesting historical details too :-)
So many funny things about the Hallmark (or Disney's version) in reality I think the myth of Santa Claus has merged from the nordic myths of a gnome taking care of the farm to make it prosperous and the Christan Saint...
I grew up closer to the Nordic version where you were supposed to give porridge to the gnome on Chrstmas.
I appreciate the notes Glenn. For me it was more about the Christmas story and family gathering, rather than the Christmas tree, gifts and St Nick.
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