Gifts Of Christmas
1.
A gift,
For me?
Oh you shouldn’t have!
Is it really a selfless expression of your affection?
A gesture of love?
Or an obligation?
Is it genuine?
Does your gift reflect who you think I am?
Who you think I should be?
Perhaps it’s more about who you are,
Who you want me to think you are.
Is it an object of serious intention?
Designed to awaken?
To arouse?
To cause a reaction?
Or is it just for fun,
A playful reminder of the inner child?
Am I taking this too seriously?
Giving too much thought
To what is impersonal?
Is it merely generic?
A gift that says:
We are not close.
Did you wrap it yourself?
With your best paper?
Or was it the tail end of your least favorite roll,
Reserved for those who do not matter?
Have you actually touched this present,
Or did someone else purchase and wrap it for you?
Did it come by mail from a warehouse?
2.
Will those I love most
Disappoint me with thoughtlessness,
Or will I bask in the warmth of their intentions,
However artfully or clumsily conveyed?
Will my more slow-witted relatives
Prove true to my expectations?
Will the superior intelligence of others
Be clearly demonstrated
And make me feel stupid
For the lack of imagination my gifts reveal?
Will the ego of the gift-giver
Overshadow the generosity of the gift?
Or will the giver’s inferiority complex be manifest,
So sadly displayed by the soullessness of what is given?
Will the gift be of use, of value,
Or merely a cheap trifle soon discarded,
Donated to the local thrift shop?
Perhaps the most important gift of all will be absent,
The gift from the one I love most.
Or perhaps after all the wrapping is cleared away,
When the communal ceremony has ceased
And the gift-givers dispersed,
I will steal away to some private place
And press my lips to the gift I treasure above all,
Its meaning so fervently constructed,
Without form.
~ Russ Allison Loar
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