Reflections on the Second Week
of Winter – Curse the Candle and Light an LED
George and the LED Luminaria
After
years
of freezing
my tush in
the dark to light candles in
paper bag luminarias,
I
dug
through three Christmas storage containers to unearth our
LED
luminaria
kit.
A
week before Christmas, I
set
the plastic bags and LED candles on the kitchen table where I
couldn’t forget them Christmas Eve. No
frozen tush for me this
year.
Only I forgot.
A
fortunate mistake? Piercing
the country dark, the
luminarias
could
welcome
my
daughter Ellen and her husband Chris. They’d
arrive
between
8:00 and
9:00 p.m.
Tuesday.
Tuesday
afternoon, in
preparation for their visit, I baked a batch of pumpkin oatmeal cookies and two batches of peanut butter cookies. Then,
after a late dinner, I washed baking sheets and mixing bowls.
George,
one of my cats, hovered around my feet, the wood stove clicked with
changing heat, and
aroma of peanut butter drifted through the kitchen.
The
clock chimed 7:45. When
it
chimed 8:00,
I’d
set out the luminaria.
But
at
7:50,
the
gate scraped
against
the cement. Feet
stomped across the porch. The front
door
burst open, frigid
air swirled in, and
Ellen flung
her arms wide
to engulf me in a hug.
“I
wanted to put the luminarias
out
to welcome you.” I said,
let
Ellen go, and hugged Chris. “But
you arrived before I got
to them.”
Chris
slipped out of his snowy shoes. He
picked
up a
plastic luminaria
bag
and flipped over a
plastic candle exposing
two
metal contacts.
“You fill the bag with water and float the candle?”
I
nodded and put
cookies on
a plate. “I
thought the
lights would
guide
you
down the driveway.”
“That
would’ve helped.” Ellen shrugged
out of her coat.
“I missed
the driveway and parked
off
to
the side.”
Chris
put
the candle down and reached for a peanut
butter
cookie. “But
the
water would have frozen and messed with the LED
lights.
They’ll work better inside.”
So
Thursday, before my brother-in-law’s family arrived,
Chris
set
out
the
luminarias–two
on the coffee table, one on the table by the wood stove, and one on
the kitchen table next to the yule log.
George
jumped onto the sofa, swished
his tail, and
leapt
between
the bags on
the coffee table.
His
tail whacked one bag.
The
floating candle jiggled.
He
stuck his head in the other
bag.
Its
candle
floated
to
the side, and
George’s
pink
tongue
lapped water. When
the
water lowered, George stuck his head in
further.
The bag slid
to the edge of the table.
I
grabbed
the bag before
it fell.
Due
to his
kidney failure, George needs lots of water.
I
put
more water in the bag, set
it
in front of George, and ran
for my camera. He lapped, and I focused the
camera lens
between giggles.
An
hour later,
my
great-niece Addy, two
and three-quarters
years old, pushed
her tummy against
the coffee table and
reached into
the nearly empty corn
chips
bowl. She dipped a small piece of a blue chip into the salsa and
munched. Addy
stuffed one salsa loaded piece
after another into her mouth.
Halfway
through the pieces, she paused. Her gaze traveled from the flickering
LED luminaria beside her to
the burning
yule log candles on the kitchen table.
She
wiped her fingers
on
a napkin and
walked to the kitchen table. On
tiptoes, she pointed to the yule log. “Is
it my birthday?”
“No,
Addy.
The candles are for Jesus’s birthday,” her
mom said.
Addy
blew
at the middle candle. The
flame disappeared into
rising smoke. Laughing,
she
walked back to the chips bowl.
Addy
munched then
blew on
the luminaria. The
white
light glowed.
She
blew again,
but the LED
candle
stayed
lit.
With
a scrunched
forehead and pouting lips, she dipped another piece of chip into the
salsa.
Two
days later, with
Ellen,
Chris, and my brother-in-law’s family back snug in their own homes,
I prepared a left over pizza dinner. Since
I didn’t have cut flowers from the garden to decorate my tray and
the potted
poinsettia wouldn’t
leave room for
food,
I
filled a luminaria bag with an inch of water. The LED light didn’t
need
much water, and I didn’t want
to bump the
bag
and flood my pizza.
I
sat in the Adirondack chair by
the wood
stove
fire.
The
candle flickered, and I ate.
After
dinner, I set the tray on the floor to
check my email.
George
hustled to
the tray and pushed
his
head into the luminaria bag. Before
his tongue reached
the water, his head stuck to
the sides.
He lifted his head.
The
bag plopped back to the tray. He pushed
his head in
again.
Push, lift, plop.
Push, lift, plop.
Push, lift plop.
On
George’s fifth try, he shook like
a dog stepping out of a lake.
The bag flew, hit the tiles in
front of
the wood stove, and emptied itself. With a soaking wet head, George
licked the puddle on the tiles. Inside
the wet bag, the
candle glowed.
I
grabbed a handful of rags, knelt beside George, and mopped the water
he didn’t drink.
Curse the candle and use an LED. Despite
mop-ups, LED luminaria work well inside–water
for George, a conundrum for Addy, and decorations for me.
Best
of all, I didn’t freeze
my tush in the dark.
Addy at the Chips Bowl with Ellen in the Background | (Photo by Bruce) |