ecosophia: (Default)
[personal profile] ecosophia
christmas cardGather ‘round the fireplace, children, and I’ll tell you a Yuletide story. It’s not one of the ones you grew up watching on the media, and there’s a reason for that, which we’ll get to. I think you’ll appreciate it anyway.

This story begins in the autumn of 1948. Back then Santa Claus lived in a big house at the North Pole with his wife Perchta, who’s old-fashioned enough that she likes to call herself Mrs. Claus. The two of them spent long hours every year getting ready for Christmas.  Mrs. Claus, who was the logistical brains behind the operation, ordered raw materials and drew up flight plans and made sure Santa, the elves, the reindeer, and everyone else had everything they needed, while Santa superintended the toy workshops and kept track of who’d been naughty and who’d been nice. Back then, you see, you didn’t get Christmas presents just for existing. Bad little children really did find lumps of coal in their stockings when they got up on Christmas morning, while good little children didn’t have to settle for the cheap plastic trash you get under the tree nowadays. The presents they got, since they were made by elves, really were magical.

So everyone was happy—well, except for the CEOs of certain big multinational corporations in the toymaking industry, whose cheap plastic trash couldn’t compete with magical toys made by elves, and who saw their profits take a nosedive every December. So they hatched a plot.  They formed a secret organization, which they called the Christmas Cartel; they bribed politicians and got the big media corporations on their side; they laid their plans; and on Christmas Eve of 1948, they struck. Hired thugs on their payroll flew to the North Pole and kicked their way into Santa’s house. Some of them dragged Santa off to a waiting airplane while the others held Mrs. Claus and the elves at gunpoint. 

As far as we know, that’s the last anyone outside the Christmas Cartel has seen of the real Santa Claus. Because he’s immortal, they couldn’t just shoot him and dump his corpse in the snow, but he’s been held incommunicado in an undisclosed location ever since. The guy in the red and white suit you’ve seen all over the media since then?   He’s a ringer, a washed-up Hollywood character actor named Fred Mammon.  He doesn’t drive the sleigh on Christmas Eve—he’s usually too drunk.  The Cartel turned that job over to a string of commercial pilots instead, who use cattle prods on the reindeer. The Cartel took over the whole operation at the North Pole, holding Mrs. Claus under armed guard and making the elves work sixteen-hour days under sweatshop conditions.  Meanwhile the fake Santa spread the messages the Cartel wanted everyone to hear:  shop ‘til you drop, everyone gets presents, max out those credit cards, ho ho ho!

So that’s what happened. That’s what turned Christmas from a genuine time of merriment with a few presents mixed in, as it used to be, to today’s annual orgy of crass consumerism and mindless greed, propped up by gargantuan advertising budgets and all those stickily sweet holiday specials on television.  That’s why nobody gets lumps of coal in their stockings any more, why all the Christmas carols these days sound like advertising jingles, and why Christmas turned all fake and creepy and saccharine and weird. Corporate marketing departments aren’t capable of real merriment, you see. All they know how to do is to wheedle and bully you into spending money you don’t have on things you never really wanted in the first place.

But that’s the way things have been ever since—until late this autumn.

Forty days ago, with the help of a courageous band of loyal elves, Mrs. Claus made her long-planned escape. You really don’t want to know what happened to her guards. (Back in the days when she was the loveliest of the Yuletide spirits and was courted by the dashing young Santa, Perchta had quite a reputation, and her fingernails have lost none of their sharpness since then.)  Over the days that followed, she fled across the ice through the pitch-black depths of the Arctic winter, moving from one stealthily prepared cache of food and supplies to the next, hiding from the helicopters and snowmobile patrols of the Christmas Cartel.  Four days ago, despite the odds against her, she made it to safety in the Yukon. I’m not authorized to tell you where she is now, but she’s fine—and she needs your help.

Somewhere in the world, Santa is being held captive by the agents of the Christmas Cartel. Mrs. Claus, her team of loyal elves, and friends of their cause are looking for him. If they can find him and free him, the power of the Christmas Cartel will be broken and we’ll be able to have real Christmases again. If you can spread the word, so that everyone knows what happened, that Christmas doesn’t have to be the festival of greed that it’s become and that the “Santa” they see on the media and in malls is a fake, that will make the search easier—because sooner or later, the news will reach someone who knows where a kindly, white-bearded old man is being held captive by the goon squads of the Christmas Cartel.

And if you look into a Christmas ornament tonight—the old-fashioned kind, a plain sphere of colored glass meant to reflect smiles and candles and firelight—you might just see the face of Mrs. Claus looking back out at you, saying, “Help me find Santa Claus. It’s our only hope...”
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More Santa

Date: 2020-12-25 05:21 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] fox_mactavish
This is an essay I recently wrote about Santa Clause. Thought I might share it along with yours.

The wild hunt, the faerie host, the great hunting party of the Sidhe, sets out on the night of Samhain to roam the skies. They roam the land, lording over the darkest time of the year. But the darkest hours are often the most magickal, and the great lord over this wild host is a powerful wizard, the Holly king. He is most powerful this time of year, and he makes his magick known. At Samhain, people fear the coming darkness, but as the holiday season wears on, we begin to feel the power of the Holly king coming upon us. It is called Christmas cheer! The holiday spirit! That feeling that comes from the fresh, crisp air on a cold day, the quiet during a snowstorm, the warmth of the hearth and of the heart. By the time Yule comes, even the most mundane of people can not help but believe in magick. This is the true power of the Christmas spirit, the Holly king. As the darkness increases so does the magick, the cheer, and the love.

The Faerie host of the elves ride with him, gathering to them the souls of the dead as they go. Through the darkest part of the year they hunt, until on the winter solstice, when the power of their king is at its greatest, they take one last pass over the entire world. They now visit the living. To good people they bring blessings, but for those who are naughty, a firm lashing with some birch, to drive out evil and give everyone a fresh start, which is a blessing itself. Being of the Fae, these huntsman can be incredibly beautiful and jolly, or horribly terrifying and stern.

Their lord the Holly king is both jolly and stern, both critical and forgiving. His piercing eyes gaze out from an aged but rosy face, his countenance is striking but also playful. He is a wise elder who can at one moment play like a child, and the next command the attention and respect of all. He wears the pointed cap of a wizard, and travels through the sky in a sleigh pulled by eight reindeer. Some call him a Saint, but he was never a man. He has been around for as long as the cycle of seasons. He has seen the ages of man come, and go. His steely gaze sees through the image you present of yourself, sees the truth. Some are punished by this, but many recieve great blessings from it. The real gifts which he and his followers bring are the love that we feel for each other through the Christmas spirit and the promise of renewal and a clean slate for the coming year.

When the dawn breaks on December 25th, the new sun has been born, and begins his ascent to power. The new sun king, the Oak king, will slowly grow in might as the sun climbs back into the sky and the old Holly king will give up his rule. The king of darkness and magick along with his Faerie host will take the souls they have gathered and return home to the Underworld, having performed their seasonal duties, to fade into the background of reality. The light half of the year is beginning and peoples focus will soon return from the inner world, to the outer. The Holly king and his kingdom is always there, waiting to return in the next cycle, as the darkness, and the magick, begins to grow again.

Re: More Santa

From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2020-12-26 01:42 am (UTC) - Expand

A Truly Merry Christmas

Date: 2020-12-25 05:25 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Thank you, JMG, for blowing the dust, ashes, and pigeon poop off of Christmas. This story lifts the heart.

A Heathen in solidarity with Christians on stuff that matters,

OtterGirl

Re: A Truly Merry Christmas

From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2020-12-25 09:27 pm (UTC) - Expand

Even more Santa!

Date: 2020-12-25 05:25 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] fox_mactavish
This link is to a BBC radio show from the 80's. It is a surprisingly good Christmas special that tells the story of the winter solstice and reprimands the commercialism of the modern day.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=MzB1Pob0yNE

(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-25 05:36 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
is there some significance to 1948, or did you just pick that as as a convenient year at the end of WWII and the beginning of the Age of Extravagance?

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Baby boomers?

From: [personal profile] candace_k - Date: 2020-12-26 02:14 am (UTC) - Expand

Forty days...

Date: 2020-12-25 06:15 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
In the same vein, does "Forty days ago..." have a particular significance?

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(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-25 06:54 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] robertmathiesen
Thank you so much for this!

I was 6 years old in 1948, and my wife was 4, so we remember the pre-Cartel celebration of Christmas fondly. Once we had children of our own, we tried--and largely succeeded--to keep on celebrating Christmas in pre-Cartel style.

In my own childhood, one of our Christmas-eve rituals was to write a letter to Santa on 8.5x11 paper, fold it into quarters, and toss it skillfully into the updraft from the burning logs in our fireplace. Up the chimney it would swiftly fly, never to be seen again. One year, when I was 8 or 9, I went outside to watch the chimney-top while my brother threw his letter into the updraft. His letter never came out from the chimney-top, though my brother assured me that he had indeed thrown his letter up the chimney successfully.

From this I concluded that our letters really did get to Santa. Yes, pre-Cartel Christmas did have a goodly share of real magic to it.

(no subject)

From: [personal profile] robertmathiesen - Date: 2020-12-25 11:14 pm (UTC) - Expand
From: (Anonymous)
Hi,
I just saw that we barely got Saturn to Square Uranus and RV car exploded in Nashville, TN United States 12/25/2020 06:25 and there is a general AT&T outage

https://zh-prod-1cc738ca-7d3b-4a72-b792-20bd8d8fa069.storage.googleapis.com/s3fs-public/styles/inline_image_mobile/public/inline-images/2020-12-25_13-52-00.png

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/powerful-explosion-rocks-downtown-nashville

Interesting mundane chart for the event

Re: Merry Christmas but usual problems are already here

From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2020-12-25 09:30 pm (UTC) - Expand

Re: Merry Christmas but usual problems are already here

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Re: Merry Christmas but usual problems are already here

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Title Pending

Date: 2020-12-25 07:56 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
This needs to be made in to a movie. Die Hard starring Bruce Willis is now considered a Christmas movie. This would add nicely to the Xmas action adventure genre.

(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-25 07:57 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] readoldthings
Wonderful! I just may read this round the fire tonight with the kids.

For what it's worth, I took a moment to get in contact with St Nicholas-- the real one, I mean-- last night. His spirit feels deep, old, powerful and wise. I had an odd sense of a plastic Santa popping like a balloon. Christmas thus far has been lovely and featured an unforecasted snowfall.

(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-25 08:03 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] violetcabra
Many thanks for this! I remember in the winter of 2012 while I was living in an unheated hut in the woods of Tennessee in some of the most dysfunctional communities I've ever experienced, I had an experience of Santa that I've never forgotten.

For background I should note that Christmas has been for most all of my life my very least favorite day of the year. Indeed, Christmas is still my least favorite day of the year. I've had great animus towards the celebration especially when laced with the sort of syrupy greed and insincerity that it always had in my childhood, and indeed, I still find the whole thing somewhat traumatic to engage with on any level.

With that said I can share the story. So Yuletide 2012 while living in squalid poverty, I was warming myself by the woodstove of an enormous communal kitchen and I found a mug with a charming depiction of a jolly Santa. Since I spent many hours drawing images during that time I took out my sketch pad and copied the image of Santa.

What happened then surprises me still: I had a mystic experience of Santa. I saw parents saving up all year so they could afford presents, I saw genuine love and surprise and merriment and kindness. Tears rolled down my face as I saw the true face of Santa for a brief moment, that is, Santa the goodly spirit of Christmastide, rather than the simulacrum employed as a corporate mascot.

While my mystic experience of Santa seems the stuff of parody, I write all of this extremely earnestly: it really happened and it was a sincerely touching experience. So I can attest that the real Santa does live, and I can attest to this fantastical reality because I saw him in his unforgettable true form if but for an instant.
Edited Date: 2020-12-25 08:20 pm (UTC)

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within

Date: 2020-12-25 08:40 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
The kingdom of Claus is within me.

(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-25 09:00 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I’m not sure that the husband Perchta is searching to recover is the jolly doppelganger that Freddy Mammon then replaced in his turn. There is an ancient Yule yarn, spun long ago some midwinter’s night by an old crone, prophesying a similar abduction and replacement of the Great Shaman that was to take place during the darkened reign of a depressed queen, practicing a black and corseted magic to extend her sovereignty. It was told how the real Great Shaman, finding himself trapped in a treacly-sweet syrup of idealized familial bliss, would be embalmed alive during that queen’s victorious reign. Then a grotesquely distorted caricature of all the abundance the Great Shaman bestowed upon those willing to cultivate it, would get trotted out, cloaked in the sacred colors of the flying healer. The prophesy continued that the rictus smile of that sickening image of over-indulgence and ill-health would preside over an age of such reckless extravagance and decadent decline that it would eventually shatter the very spell holding the Great Shaman enthralled. Beware the entrapping, sticky drops of idealized fantasy and utopian hallucination that will go flying far and wide as the Great Shaman awakens and shakes himself free.

I don’t think a Nordic shaman as powerful as the great Claus could be held back by mere mortal goon squads. Perhaps he simply applied his shamanic wisdom to understand the gift that hibernation can offer to anyone enduring a season of diminished nourishment. Perhaps that ravening season is coming to a close, and Perchta was the first to awaken from her protective slumber. Her longing will speed her mate in his divined rousing. If she believes that freeing the fat farce of family fun can quicken the Great Shaman’s awakening, I’m game — anything that hastens the true reenchantment of our dark, midwinter skies. My eyes are raised to the heavens in anticipation of a god’s long-awaited rebirth!

— Christophe

(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-25 09:51 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I thought I’d also share the one holiday song I’ve found that improbably manages to critique the Christmas-Cartel’s Santa’s cruelty, portray the real gift of Jesus’ compassion and sacrifice, and offer the most subtle encapsulation of occult teachings I've yet to find. Perhaps more improbably, it is the joke song “Joel, the Lump of Coal” by the rock band The Killers. Years after it came out, it still makes me cry whenever I hear it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UTT7hJL5UKY

Perhaps it takes a joke song to invert the saccharine sentimentality that clings so cloyingly to everything related to Christmas, thereby alchemically transmuting it into something of value. Solve et coagula in an age of mass media. That a song like this ever made it through the censors is a sign that the Christmas Cartel's control is utterly disintegrating.

— Christophe

(no subject)

From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2020-12-26 04:47 pm (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-25 10:36 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I think that was an extraordinary rendition of the Santa story. Nicely done!

Many thanks to many people for many things...

Date: 2020-12-25 11:30 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I have to say that I am very grateful for all the writing about and around Christmas here and on the main blog by you and everybody else, who has contributed! I think it was last year that I wrote on a Magic Monday that I had the feeling that the candles of the Advent wreath are radiating negativity rather than anything positive. This year it was slightly different and just now, reading your little Christmas tale, I realized that it of course weren't the candles that radiated the negativity but their reflection inside me was tainted in such way by myself.

A lot of stories of how Christmas and other holidays clustered around the winter solstice are celebrated have been shared here, and many of those have left a deep impression on me. I am not a Christian - I don't know what I am - yet now I can for the first time see and embrace the event that is celebrated during the Christmas holidays as something mysterious and wonderful and it truly warms my heart to know that there are people out there who are connected to the reality of Christmas.

When I was a child I was already wondering about the figure of Santa (der Weihnachtsmann) since - despite being raised as an Atheist - I understood that the Christmas we were celebrating anyhow seemed to be a deeply Christian holiday and I couldn't see Santa's place in the Christian lore. St. Nicholas (der Nikolaus) seemed to be a different entity to me. But maybe Santa - the real one who is, as we have just learned, currently trapped, maybe somewhere in Tennessee - once freed will become a symbol of union between the different religious and spiritual traditions and their take on the days around the winter solstice as he could become a symbol of union for families and friends celebrating those holidays beyond quarreling and consumerism.

For me this Christmas seems to mark a small but important step ahead in developing my own spiritual life and it feels like a heavy burden and a lot of tension and anxiety has been lifted.

Many thanks to everyone and especially JMG for creating and nourishing this possibility of exchange! And of course: Merry Christmas!

Nachtgurke

(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-25 11:31 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Yes, if I remember correctly, Mrs Claus, in her earlier iteration, was sometimes referred to as the Belly-slitter. I don't imagine the guards fared very well. So where is Krampus in all this?

Orange Exogamous Cow/JLfromNH

(no subject)

From: [personal profile] mo_drui_mac_de - Date: 2020-12-26 08:54 am (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2020-12-26 03:30 pm (UTC) - Expand

A lovely bit of Christmas magic

Date: 2020-12-26 03:02 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
How lovely, a bit of Christmas magic! And now I know who Perchta is, I'm sure there's quite a story where a strapping, kindly young man set out to win her heart with deeds of Christmas generosity.

I went shopping once for Christmas about a week before, and could feel the tension in the air. I felt stressed, pressured, compelled to buy all sorts of things so that if I got it just right, I could get the warm feeling of fellowship that Christmas promised. It was frightening, and slightly alien.

On Christmas Day I exchanged presents with my household and hosted lunch with a group of friends, then we played some carols. It was lovely.

(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-26 09:12 am (UTC)
mo_drui_mac_de: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mo_drui_mac_de
Thanks so much for this. By the way, it may bear mentioning that immediately before I saw this, I saw a heavy-handed Wall Street Journal propaganda piece about how “Capitalism Saved Christmas” from violent 19th century street gangs by introducing Santa Claus as a character that would persuade people to buy lots of heavily advertised trash instead of getting drunk, breaking windows, and loudly looting their neighbors’ houses. I have to say, it’s pretty revealing when the Cartel is tipping their hand so obviously in their propaganda that they know their intended recipients are on the very knife’s edge of being fed up with their claptrap and demanding Father Christmas be returned to his proper post! I almost wonder if you’d seen that particular bucket of codswallop, and written this as a response to it. Either way, next year will be my son’s first Christmas, and I intend very much to include this story as a load-bearing wall in his Christmas mythology.

Also: the choice of Fred Mammon as the name of the tacky false-bearded inebriate of a thespian was inspired. Gold star for that. ;-)

(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-26 04:29 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] thuley
Thank you for this!

I had a beautiful Solstice ceremony with my love and, much to my surprise, the Horned God took center stage as the father figure of our celebration. It's caused me to wonder whether Santa is just a fattened, weakened, and sanitized version of the masculine archetype designed for the mass consumption of populace that is likewise disempowered.

Even a Santa that recognizes right from wrong--and not just dollar signs--would be a radical shift. I imagine seeing him at his full power would be more than the world could handle.

Which came first?

Date: 2020-12-26 04:45 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Maybe we should cause changes in consciousness in accordance with will and all envision Santa as the jolly old elf he really is, instead of the Coca Cola Santa the cartel imposed upon us, and *poof* we’ll have old timey Christmas back again! What a wonderful way to prove that TSW!

I had always thought that the reason Christmas became so over-the-top after WWII was because parents, who had experienced the deprivations of the Great Depression and the pain of war for much of their lives, wanted their children to have something better than they did. So, it was all out for big Christmases, along with big families, big houses, big cars, etc. Did big business pick up on this and encourage it, or as you imply, did big business push the idea to begin with? Kind of a which-came-first-the-chicken-or-egg question.

Joy Marie

Re: Which came first?

Date: 2020-12-26 07:49 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] robertmathiesen
I was alive during those years, and old enough to remember them. The advertising came first. GIs coming home from the War jiust wanted things to go back to the way they used to be. And then came the TVs, and it was all over but the shouting.

Homes began to have their own TVs in the late '40s, and boy howdy! did that new development ever change things!!! TV gave the advertisers a direct line to the repressed desires and suppressed images of its viewers, bypassing conscious thought entirely. That was crucial for putting an end to of all the old frugal ways of life. "Three TV channels to rule them all, and in the darkness bind them."

(Radio never had the same powerful hypnotic impact as TV. After all, the easiest way to put another person into a hypnotic, suggestible trance is by fatiguing that person's eye muscles. People who insist that TV was just the next logical progression after home radios, differing only in its details, are either full of it, or have an agenda.)

(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-26 05:41 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Thank you for the reminder that thoughtless commercialism is not the only way.

What do you think of the theory that Santa is a covered over Odin?

I have a picture in my mind that one day he will throw off the red suit and then things will get interesting.

Happy New Year to everyone on the list.

WhoseMas?

Date: 2020-12-26 10:25 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
The Christmas Day issue of the Gainesville Sun had not one word about the original meaning of Christmas - except for a full-page ad giving the Nativity story, from Hobby Lobby, whose owner is Evangelical.

(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-27 01:20 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
As several events conspired thusly, while we did have Christmas presents on Christmas Morning, we also will have several gifts to open later.

And lo and behold, there is in fact a date specifically for gift-giving coming up: Epiphany, or Three Kings Day. It's one of the winter holy days that have gotten rolled up in Commercialmas, and it might be particularly useful to spread knowledge of around in this year of shipping delays and buy everything online. January 6. Your non-Liturgical Christian friends will not know it, and many of your Liturgical Christian friends are probably unaware until reminded. (And I'm not going to try to find the Orthodox calendar, but I assume those it applies to know the when.)

I intend to drop an "Oh, well, should make it here for Epiphany" every time someone laments shipping Christmas gift woes between now and then. (Ironically, shipping was not one of my issues!)

I'm sure there are other holidays for gift giving for those who aren't Christian, but I have only a vague idea of a few. In the spirit of disensus perhaps those who do know such would care to similarly remind others of them as opportunities arise.

On this second day of Christmas, Merry Christmas to all who celebrate it, and to those who don't, may you also be of good cheer.

BoysMom

(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-27 07:19 am (UTC)
emmanuelg: sock puppet (Default)
From: [personal profile] emmanuelg
Actually, with some illustrations, this story would make a good children's book. Another project in the offing, JMG?

(no subject)

Date: 2020-12-27 02:28 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I'm all in, but try telling this one to some of my loved ones who are held hostage to the corporatist Christmas commercialism...heads would explode.

So where do you place Santa along the procession? I had always assumed he'd fall under the daimon category.

Axé a Buon Natale Sole Invitto,
Fra' Lupo
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