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How I love the world in all its ripe green beauty and all the people on its skin who cheer me with their effortless kindness! The sun pours down like pancake syrup. The grass grows just like grass but in a dream. Today is my birthday, again; I may never get older. I’m marking the day with a boisterous parade as far as my legs will take me and no plan for stopping. March with me, neighbors, and lift your knees high as we wave to the crowds on the boulevard of my youth, just a street with pretentions, and whistle if you can or borrow a bassoon! I want to make music that sounds like a theme for the rest of my life. Whichever way we turn is the Parade Route: this was the driveway that scraped my knees. This was my yard, where I lay on my back in a shower of stars and wondered if I would be missed. Left is the school where they taught me that God made the day and the night; right is the school where I heard He was dead. Here is the boss who taught me that labor is labor and in no way its own reward. There is the house of the girl who said yes. And her sister. We’ve gathered a jubilant crowd: marching bands and dogs on stilts and a monkey at the piano. Shopkeepers rejoice when they see us approach. The bells on their registers ring as we usher our elephants in through their doors and everyone sings:

I hope to be remembered when I’m gone! 
The town we all grew up in has been gone so long! 
We never thought its undertow could be so strong.
Something is terribly, terribly wrong. 
Something’s gone horribly wrong.

Original Copyright © May 17, 2007
Revised Copyright © March 21, 2026

Michael’s face was red. “OK, then, gun to your head,” he demanded, “what’s the best Christmas movie?” Though his tone suggested he might actually have put something to my head, he hadn’t. Well, first, I told him, with a gun to my head I wouldn’t be able to concentrate on movies; second, the category’s too broad: Christmas comedy? Christmas love story? Is Die Hard a Christmas movie for taking place on Christmas? “Completely irrelevant,” he said. “Best is best. But anyway, it’s a trick question. They all suck because they all lie.” I knew better than to take the bait but I told him anyway that all movies lie. “Well, I know actors wear makeup and play make-believe,” he told me, “but they do that to tell a truth; Christmas movies lie to lie.” He put his mug down hard as if he wanted to tenderize the coaster. Glasses clinked down the bar. He’d been pounding me the same way since we sat down, which was common, but his red face was not. He cared about this. I watched his eyes and waited. A string of lights twinkled behind his head. “You think Santa Claus is universal,” he told me,“and that finding out he’s your parents is a primal disillusionment. That’s Hollywood bullshit. Kids have dads who bring out guns on Christmas Eve and put them to their children’s heads one by one,” he said. That can’t be right, I told him. “One by one and pulled the trigger,” he told me, “year in and year out, and made them wonder if one year there’d be bullets. Why have I never seen that in a movie?” I waited until he was finished. Why are you telling me this, Michael? I asked him. What the hell are you telling me?

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This work by davidbdale is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.
Based on a work at davidbdale.wordpress.com.

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The pen name davidbdale honors my mother Beatrice (Bea) and my father Dale

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