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Come Christmas, there's no "So Michael, how've you been?"—because they know how I've been. Ditto with my two bros. Instead, there are sweet attempts to recapture the innocence of our youth, as my mother still fully expects us to sleep at her Martha Stewart-esque abode each Christmas Eve, despite the fact that my brothers live just four blocks away.
This typically works but with debauched results. Last year, my brothers, both of them rock stars sorta (they play in the Actual Tigers), agreed to stay over—contingent upon their having license to plow through every last drop of bourbon in the kitchen, which culminated in a 5 a.m. rendition of "With or Without You" as Santa Claus made his approach toward our chimney.
Fortunately, I myself had managed to slurp enough Jack Daniels to snooze right through this cacophony and arose that Christmas morning as I had the 26 prior: anxious to receive my standard issue Safeway gift certificates, stocking-stuffer tangerines, and the hallmark box of Cocoa Puffs that has become Seely family tradition.
Such gifts took on added significance once I stopped believing in Santa—which was later for me than most kids. For me, the Rudolph fantasy was alive until roughly third grade, when "Santa" failed to take note of my eleventh-hour mental wish shift from wanting a Kellen Winslow (San Diego Chargers tight end) jersey to needing a Wes Chandler (Chargers wide receiver) jersey.
The more valuable gifts become secondary to the five bed-headed adults in the room, each of us acting like little fucking kids. If, later that morning, there is a bit of a verbal dustup between my dad and one of my brothers over when to leave for Christmas dinner at my grandparents' home in Kirkland, it only serves as a reminder that, yes, this is a day different and more special than the less formal occasions I spend with my family and, yes, this is the same feisty Irish Catholic, Seatown-to-the-core household I grew up in.