New Year’s Eve, 2013. What to do? As someone who has
endured 54 of these babies, I feel I speak for many when I say…enough already.
I am so over this most contrived, ridiculous holiday ever. First, a little
history.
1958-1964
I remember nothing. Since I was the youngest child
in a household of six which had very little discretionary income, I imagine
that Mom and Dad drugged us all with Benadryl hoping to knock us out by 7 so
they could get a decent night’s sleep.
1965-1968
The New Orleans/Nicholsville years were equally
blurry. With Dad in school and Mom working in the campus print shop, we never
saw much of them. However, we did have our first television. I have a vague
half-formed memory of watching some sort of ball drop in glorious black and
white.
1969-1975
In these years I was introduced to the “watch night
service”, a Baptist staple for people who wanted to be in the world but not OF the world. A bunch of families with young
children along with stout-hearted blue hairs would all gather at the church
around 8 in the evening. A ginormous spread of Baptist cuisine would be laid
upon long rows of wooden tables with paper table cloths. There would be hot
rolls, fried chicken, potato salad, chicken salad, macaroni salad, macaroni
and cheese, green bean casseroles galore, pies and cakes of every description, enough cheese balls to feed an army
and enough sweet tea to float a battleship, with nary a drop of alcohol in
sight. Board games would be played, lots of family friendly group activities
would be planned. There would be a hotly contested bible trivia contest, which my
mother would always win. Then, around 15 minutes before midnight everyone would
gather in the sanctuary for a big prayer service. By the time the prayers were
all said it would be past midnight and the deal was done.
1976-1983
Then I entered my young, single college years when
my New Year’s Eve celebrations involved prodigious quantities of adult
beverages. This too remains a blur of half-formed memories, most of which I would
prefer stayed that way.
1984-1991
Once married, New Year’s Eve began to cost serious
money. Before the kids arrived it would involve dressing up nice and going to
some pretentiously expensive restaurant with limited menu choices and horrible
service.
1992
This magical year found us with a 5 year old and a 3
year old and not coincidently, very little discretionary income. Pam and I
plotted a scheme full of deception and trickery whereby we convinced the kids
that they would be allowed to stay up to welcome in the New Year. Lies, all
lies. We cleverly turned all the house clocks up to eleven o’clock, then allowed
them to parade around the house banging pots and pans with wooden spoons. Party
favors were handed out to add to the cascade of sounds. The kids had that
wide-eyed look that kids get when they think that they are getting away with
something. Then we had the fake count down, threw confetti, hugged and kissed
each other, then whisked them off to bed where they collapsed into a deep
exhausted sleep…all by 8:15.
Bruhahahahahaha!!!
1994-2000
Thus began the era of the Dunnevant New Year’s Eve extravaganza.
We would invite 6 or 7 couples who also had young children to our house for a
night of games, crafts, food, movies, noise parades and watching the ball
actually drop with no clock fixing chicanery. Pam was at her teacher/organizer
best. I remember these years clearly as they were easily the most fun I’ve ever
had on New Years Eve. The guest list would include people like the Baldwins, the
Keslers, the Mcmaths, the Thomason’s and the Stroups. Great times.
2001-2007
These were the youth group years, the years consumed
by the locust. Our house would be filled with 30-40 teenagers complete with
gangly arms and legs, huge appetites, lots of zits and plenty of drama. Very
fun times, but costly both in terms of money and wear and tear on the
furniture. At the dropping of the ball, all 40 would be stuffed into our family
room armed with handfuls of handmade confetti. The out of control boys,(Tyler
Pegues and Matt Watson, I’m talking to YOU), would begin jumping up and down in
rhythm to the point where the entire house would shake. Then the confetti would
fly. Exhausting though it was, I always remember the fond memories that would
fill out house the first hot day of the summer when we would turn on the
ceiling fan for the first time, showering us with left over confetti. I still
miss those kids, every one.
2008-Present
No little ones, no teenagers, no watch night
services, but plenty of discretionary income. Now the goal is always avoiding
the crowds, dodging drunk drivers and finding a decent meal. Maybe we should
return to the days of clock manipulation, pretend that we’ve had a spectacular
evening of crazed celebration, then collapse into bed by 11 o’clock!
I’m open to suggestions.