Emily was right.

As usual.  Dang those Godfreys.

I’ve been counting down backwards from the twelfth day of Christmas when I should have been counting forward.  Oopsie.  So I went back and changed my titles.

Thanks, Emily–you are definitely of newspaper editor stock! (And a part of one of my favorite families ever.)

On the fourth day of Christmas…

…I began to smell something in the air.  It wasn’t spiced pumpkin bread, or cinnamon waissell, or hot apple pie.  No, no.  On the fourth day of Christmas, I began to smell something a little more pungent, but all too familiar.  On the fourth day of Christmas, I began to smell…a Phase.

You see, last weekend my dearly beloved drove through three hours of ice and snow–out to the rural reaches of Northern Idaho, mind you–to obtain this little beauty for our family:

 

What–you don’t know what that is?

It’s a tablesaw, silly! Only the coolest machine for a boy to acquire since Danny’s best friend Kenickie bought Grease Lightnin’!”  (And  the saw’s in about as good of shape as the car was.)

What does a man, you are asking, need a tablesaw for?   To build stuff, silly!  What kind of stuff, you are asking, that can’t be built with a chopsaw or circular saw like most men have?  BIG stuff, silly!  Extra Extra Big Man Stuff.  At least, that is the answer Derrick gives me when I ask him this very question.

But don’t worry, girlfriends.  He got a “great deal!” on this tablesaw  and is “going to fix it up!”  Did you know that tablesaws come in varying degrees of “horsepower,” kind of like big pickup trucks?  This one, I’m told, is the MacDaddy, horsiest-horsepower of them all.  Apparently that’s why it’s in such bad shape; because they quit making tablesaws this powerful back in the ’80s, which is when this one was built.  And though it’s “hugely powerful!,” the saw’s advanced age is why it cost only a few hundred–not a few thousand–dollars.  Which is why my testosterone-driven-but-still-kind-of-cheap husband wanted it.  Which is why he braved driving out to the wildnerness to meet the seller who sounded like a gruff neanderthal on the phone and said he would need to “go into town” to use the Internet.  Which is why I told Derrick to be oh-so-careful and not end up like Jack Nicholson on The Shining.

Much to my relief, the purchase went smoothly.  So smoothly, in fact, that the Gruff Neanderthal threw in this bandsaw for an extra fifty bucks:

 

 What, you are asking, is a bandsaw?

Oh silly girl–it “can quarter a frozen elk!”  At least, that is the answer Derrick gives me when I ask him this very question.  (Never mind that my husband hasn’t hunted a day in his life and the gamiest thing he’s ever brought home is a sausage pizza.)  I’ve begged Derrick, repeatedly, to be serious and tell me what he’s really going to do with a bandsaw.  I have yet to receive an answer.  He just avoids making eye contact with me and keeps repeating the part about quartering a frozen elk.  (To be honest, I’ve never actually had frozen elk, but I do hear it’s good quartered.)

One thing I must concede:  since the Big Purchase, Derrick’s had a light in his eye and a skip in his step that I haven’t seen since his Food Dehydrating Phase.  He’s announced to anyone who will listen that “I’m reclaiming my garage!” and has given half our stuff away to make room for his new toys.

The upside?  When I asked him what he wanted for Christmas, he smiled and said “Nothing!  This is all I wanted.”  He looked so happy when he answered me, I couldn’t refuse him by purchasing what would surely be a grossly inferior gift.  I should probably just take the money I would have spent on him and, well, spend it on myself.  (It’s only right.)

The downside?  Until he gets his new “woodshop” in order, I have to park in the driveway, and it’s cold.  But the sight of my giddy husband leaning over his new tablesaw when I walk through the garage is enough to keep me warm inside.  In my heart.  In my soul.  In the pit of my stomach, which churns every time I think about him quartering that frozen elk.

It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas in the Smith home.  And it also looks like frozen elk is on the menu for Christmas dinner.

Are you coming?  Don’t worry.  We’ll thaw it out first.

On the third day of Christmas…

…a friend came to see me.  Tonight, actually, as I was labeling my Christmas cards.  She had a little time between a meeting and picking up her kids, so she just stopped by to chat for a few.  She only stayed half an hour, but it was so much fun, sitting and laughing about nothing while we both took a break from the grind of the day.

Why don’t we women “stop by” and see each other anymore?  Our grandmothers did it.  Our mothers did it.  (Mine still does.)  I never do.  Never.  Really, as much as I claim to be a good and loyal faithful, if I want to see friends, it has to be on the calendar.  That’s pathetic.  How about you?  Are you a stopper-byer?

Tonight after my friend left, I realized something a little funny and a little embarrassing:  having her stop by actually made me feel younger.  Seriously!  Before you laugh, I want you to think back to high school, when you had zero responsibilities and friends came and went from your house like the removable bands on your Swatch watch.  When a girlfriend stopped by back then, you didn’t think, “Shoot, I really like her but it is after seven…”  No!  You wanted to hear the scoop and show off your cute new socks.  Wasn’t it fun back then, having girlfriends–and not just Enrichment Activities?  Don’t you miss it?

Every December, I try to dream up some massive service project that will teach my children the true meaning of Christmas.  Every December, I fail.  Sure, we give where we can, but I have yet to launch anything that is Ensign-worthy.  And then I feel bad.  (Especially when I read the Ensign.)  (And did you know there are parents, somewhere out there in the world, who wake their children up at 5 am every day to read the scriptures for an hour?  An hour.  Five to six o’clock.  a.m.  Have mercy, Ensign.)

This year, I’m ditching the self-righteous dream of The Perfect Christmas Service Project.  This year, I’m just gonna “stop by” and let the people I love know that I love them.  Warm Christmas fuzzies aren’t just about helping the anonymous needy, they’re about appreciating the people we see every day.  Sometimes I forget that my friends and family need some cheering up, too, and that we all need a little attention now and then.  And often I forget that the best Christmas fuzzies are usually simple, and spontaneous, and surprisingly close to home.

Which is where I’ll be, should you choose (oh pretty pretty please) to stop by.