How to Be the Perfect Holiday House Guest
December 17th, 2007 by Simone

My mum once told me there are two ingredients to the perfect house guest: they don’t create work for you and they don’t cost you money.
At the time I was tending house for a menagerie of house guests - but as they were half-naked, plastic and mute, the lesson went straight over my head.
The tea party I was throwing for the inhabitants of my doll’s house ate off empty plates and were left, when I eventually grew bored, in a pile in the corner by the cardboard oven.
Rather than being overly needy, they took my immature hostess skills with good grace, given that more than one head had become separated from their body before the second course.
Ah, the carelessness of youth!
And yet in the real world of festive family holidays, the pressures, costs and commitments of Christmas can cause goodwill to dry up quicker than over-cooked turkey.
So as family, friends and vague acquaintances from far-flung places gather around the Christmas table, there are some rules than can be agreed upon to sustain the Bing Crosby atmosphere.
1. Don’t Try to Tell the Man with the Knife in His Hand How to Carve the Turkey
In most parts of the world the male head of the house no longer has the responsibility of going out and shooting the turkey. Forced to wear a festive paper hat and to sing along to carols sung by pre-pubescent boy choirs, his masculinity may be a little worn out by the time it comes to carving the bird. Ponder the hard trek made by the three wise men through the desert to the first official Christmas and let him retreat to the kitchen to spend an inordinate amount of time sharpening his good knives.
2. Don’t Put on a Santa Suit and Lose all your Inhibitions
Some of the Santas I have encountered strike me as close cousins to the clown characters from horror films. Certainly in my part of the world polyester red suits can induce heat-stroke before the second “ho” and perhaps this is the reason for the melting of inhibitions. Just remember if it is your turn to don the beard and boots that we all actually remember who you really are inside the fat suit - and pinching and lewd comments are best left in your sack.
3. Don’t Eat the Plastic Fruit (or Drink the Water from the Finger Bowls)
Not everything on the table is for eating. If you can’t tell the difference between the Christmas dinner and the centrepiece, stick to what is physically on your plate. And just because the hostess and her three sisters all fought over who was doing dessert, does not mean you need to sample each of their offerings.
4. Don’t Let the Cook Pull on the Rubber Gloves
This is a universal rule that should not be confined to Christmas. Remember that it is a shared holiday, which means everyone should have some down time. If the hostess is breathing like a whipped reindeer before the second course, roll up your sleeves and lend a hand.
5. Don’t Discuss New Years Resolutions - Especially While You Light Up a Cigarette and Lick the Egg Nog Bowl
Christmas Resolutions are about as meaningful as the jokes that come with the paper hats, particularly if you are in the process of indulging in a fair few of the Deadly Sins. And as you look back over the year, indulging in a bit of “coulda shoulda woulda” over the egg nog can also put a bit of a dampener on the festivities, so keep things light and positive. You’ve got all of January to wallow in your insecurities!
REMEMBER to take up the Christmas Scavenger Hunt Challenge and win yourself an iPod for Christmas!
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December 18th, 2007 at 2:04 am
As usual, a funny and perfect article.
I especially liked the knife part. My kids are always fighting over who is the best carver! I am sending it on to them for Christmas!
December 18th, 2007 at 7:43 am
Hi Corinne,
Thanks as always for your comments and support :) Hope you and your family have a great Christmas full of fun and positive house guests!
S.
December 18th, 2007 at 9:39 pm
Merry Christmas Simone,
Oh my goodness… I don’t even have my tree up yet. Shoot!
I think my favorite rule MUST be to put your pets — no matter how dear and wonderful when they’re at your feet — away from your guests. Mine and yours.
And, no matter what your motivation — bringing your mom’s sister, that she hasn’t spoken to in 17 years, to Christmas Eve dinner to mend the fence is ALWAYS a bad idea. We need to put the “resolve the family dysfunction” on hold until after we open all those really cool presents.
blessings,
julia
julia ward - a BLINDING heart - a writer’s blog - http://www.ablindingheart.com
December 19th, 2007 at 8:44 am
Simone, you’d make the perfect house guest indeed and if you were living nearby I’d have you over for the numerous Christmas get togethers I’ve had the *un*pleasure of hosting.
:)
Sorry, I didn’t get a chance to join your Scavenger Hunt, but things have been pretty hair over at the Diva because we ran out of server space and had to learn how to move to our own rack as fast as I can count 1 to 10.
December 19th, 2007 at 10:40 am
Hi Julia and Sharon,
You are two of my all-time favourite virtual guests. I hope all goes wonderfully for you at this busy time of the year and thank you for taking the time to drop by here :)
Julia - couldn’t agree more about fence mending - talk about added stress!
Sharon - let’s swap *un*pleasure hosting stories some time!
S.