Thursday, December 1, 2011

Historically accurate fruit.

There is a certain divisive matter that separates the masses more than religion, politics, culture, or age. And it isn't a soft drink preference or a sports franchise.


It's how you choose to decorate your house for the holidays.


On one end of the spectrum, you have your giant displays that encompass the entire lawn and feature moving objects - usually elves with hammers - and lots of inflatables. Forget the incredible computer generated special effects our society is capable of producing (and our children are entirely accustomed to), a sleigh that rocks back and forth, all halting and wobbly-like, on a neighbor's front yard is pure magic! 


Then you have the houses with an excessive amount of glow. Just lights, but oh so many crazy lights. They may even flicker in time with music. If you knock on the door, the man of the house could quote a wattage figure.


Moving along the scale we find the reasonable houses. These perfectly practical people hang a perfectly practical number of lights, typically white, and a wreath on the door with a velvet red ribbon. Maybe a pair of grapevine reindeer. Maybe a three foot wooden toy soldier and a seasonal flag. Nothing crazy.


Then on the opposite end of the spectrum is the house in which I grew up... and several pounds of historically accurate fruit.


A little background: My mother liked old things. Traditional and all-American. Think folk art, hanging baskets and fife and drum figurines. If you're about to Google "fife and drum," you will never truly understand. 


Our house was packed with antiques and always smelled like cloves. There was lots of brass and impractically small chairs with cane seats. We had wallpaper in our hallway that featured blue and white toile sketches of Philadelphia landmarks while the hip of the world, circa 1988, decorated with pleather sectionals and neon accents.


We spent a couple of Thanksgivings in Sturbridge, Massachusetts, an 18th century reenactment town. While I would surely love it today, it was terrible as a kid. I remember lots of driving, and sulking, and reenacting, and a waitress at the Ye Old Something serving us extra cornbread because she thought my dad was Walter Matthau.


So not surprisingly, every Christmas we did it up Colonial style. There were candles in the windows and fruit, fruit, fruit. My dad took a giant board with nails and impaled apples, oranges, lemons and a pineapple, then hung it above our front door, which we never used. To be honest, I thought all that pretty produce was a yawn-fest, totally.


Until a decade later when I had poor Jon on a ladder trying to secure our very own board of fruit above the door of our very first house. The door we used every day. The only door we ever used. For the entire month of December, pineapple juice rained on our heads and made for icky, sticky shoes. But it was classy. And pretty. And completely worth it when we won the coveted neighborhood garden club award. That congratulatory stake in the ground filled me with an embarrassing amount of pride.


And then we bought our second house and had a few kids and the dripping pineapple seemed less charming. 


Now we are rapidly heading backwards on the spectrum. We passed simple white lights and have moved on to colorful, blinking bulbs and lit up plastic candy canes. 


In another few years, you can expect those elves with hammers.


How was your childhood home decorated for the holidays? Describe your current holiday decorating style? 







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