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Holiday Family Survival Tips

“I could feel the Christmas Noose beginning to tighten.”

Those are the words of Ralphie Parker, the fictional character in a movie that you will likely see at least parts of this December, and probably for the rest of your life’s Decembers as it is played in a marathon on TNT and TBS. I probably don’t even need to tell you the name: A Christmas Story.

The film is based on the writings of Jean Shepherd, a writer and radio personality who has been lost to time for some. He was highly influential as a New York radio personality; with the pranks he used to play on-air as an inspiration for Howard Stern, the stories of his Midwest childhood an influence on Garrison Keillor, and his offbeat sense of humor an influence on David Letterman. Finally, “I’m Lester the Nightfly” that opens the title track on Donald Fagen’s wonderful solo album The Nightfly is a direct reference to his show.

But back to his most famous work, A Christmas Story. It’s all about family, and an odd one at that. At the holidays, when the family is often the weirdest. You might be able to relate. My theory is there are about 7,000 normal people on the planet, and the rest is family. Where you and I fall in this grouping, well, I imagine that is largely subjective.

It’s high paradise and glory time to be a nutjob, what with the likely Republican presidential nominee seemingly not just distanced from reality but openly contemptuous of it. On top of this, many of our DC media types dish out neverending demands that the sane people (such as Democrats) kowtow to the madness. The crazy has never been so encouraged and supported as it is now, and that can mean a real danger of your holiday gatherings devolving into a situation where grandma is crying out “C’mon, please, everyone, it’s Christmas!” in a desperate attempt to deflate an argument.

Our nation is no longer fighting over things like whether a war is justified or if corporations should receive even more tax cuts and have graduated onto things like, well, democracy. This is not great for family gatherings. Your nutty Great Uncle Fred may even support shooting you or throwing your libturd ass into a camp. So…how do you avoid an all-out screamfest over the Christmas roast?

Here’s a few tips:

And if all else fails, just make sure A Christmas Story is on the television, and lock eyes on it. Focus on it like it’s a Red Ryder BB Gun display in a Midwest Department Store window in 1940, submersing yourself in the silliness of Ralphie and his Old Man. It might be your only hope.

The last word goes to Donald Fagen.

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