Every December brings its own little rituals, the scent of pine needles clinging to winter coats, the faint hum of carols floating through grocery store speakers, and the familiar tug of memories asking us to step back into stories we’ve lived a hundred times before. But it also brings a very particular holiday challenge, one that couples of all ages know all too well: whose family do we spend Christmas Day with?
It is a debate wrapped in love, sprinkled with tension, and basted in
gravy. And, for many of us, it has shaped years of holiday traditions.
In the early days of our marriage, my wife and I tried very hard to be
fair, or at least festive, about the whole thing. Christmas Day itself belonged
to her side of the family, and the day after Boxing day was reserved for mine.
It wasn’t so much a carefully negotiated agreement as it was a simple
recognition of geography and personalities. I knew my brothers would gather at
my parents’ house on the 25th, and I also knew that my wife’s family had
perfected the art of the grand holiday feast.
And what a feast it was.
Imagine a kitchen that smelled like roasted turkey, brown sugar ham, and
that distinctly comforting aroma of potatoes baking slowly under a crust of
cheese and butter. Imagine a parade of relatives, some I suspected had been
hiding in the basement awaiting their cue, bursting through the door with
desserts, gifts, and enough stories to fuel the evening. You could hear
laughter before you even opened the door, as if joy had its own volume knob
turned up to eleven.
By early afternoon, the house was full. By late evening, it was very
full, children chasing each other between legs, adults balancing plates on
knees, and the unmistakable murmur of contentment that comes from people who
have eaten far more than they should but intend to continue anyway.
Boxing Day became the day dedicated to visiting friends. We’d start at
10:00 a.m. sharp, well, “sharp” in a loose, holiday sense, and make our rounds
like social Santas delivering good cheer. There was hot cocoa in one home,
shortbread in another, and those slightly experimental holiday beverages
someone always insists “turned out better last year.” But the joy was in the
journey: the hugs, the updates, the shared laughter, and the quiet comfort of
knowing these friendships shaped the landscape of our lives.
Then came the ferry rides to Vancouver Island to visit my side of the
family. If you’ve ever carried a tin of cookies and two small children through
a crowded holiday ferry terminal, you know it’s an Olympic sport all on its
own. The reward, though, was always the same: stepping off the boat into the
bracing, salty air and falling back into the familiar rhythm of my own family’s
traditions, stories told loudly, the same jokes told even louder, and desserts
that seemed to multiply every time someone walked into the kitchen.
For a few years after our children were born, we kept this holiday
marathon going. We packed the car with toys, travel mugs, and the unwavering
optimism of young parents. But eventually, reality, and exhaustion, caught up
with us. One year, after buckling a very sleepy toddler into a car seat on
Christmas evening, my wife and I looked at each other and realized we needed a
new plan.
And so, we made one.
We decided it was time to create our own traditions in our own home.
That first Christmas felt different. Quieter. Less rushed. The house had
its own warmth, our warmth. The tree lights glowed softly against the windows,
the children padded around in new pajamas, and we hosted Christmas dinner for
whoever wished to join us. We invited friends on Boxing Day, turning it into a
relaxed open house where snacks appeared as if by magic and the coffee pot
never stopped working. It was simple, but it was ours. We belonged to ourselves
for the holiday, and somehow that felt like the best gift of all.
This memory bubbled up again recently when I was talking to my daughter
about her holiday plans. She lives in Australia now, far from snow, ferry
terminals, and the great Canadian turkey debate. She is blissfully exempt from
the gentle tug-of-war that many couples still find themselves in, including my
son and his partner: your family’s turkey or mine?
It’s a classic dilemma. One filled with love, loyalty, compromise, and
the occasional burnt gravy. And yet, for all the fuss it creates, it’s also a
sign of something wonderfully human: that we care deeply about where we belong,
and with whom we share our holidays.
Whether you spend Christmas Day with your side, their side, a mix of
both, or wrapped in the cozy quiet of your own home, the heart of the season
remains the same. Love stretches. Traditions bend. New stories are created in
the most unexpected ways.
And in the end, as I like to say, love finds a way, even through the
mashed potatoes.