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Merrily Unhinged Christmas Rant

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I saw this after smoking a huge bowl:

a tweet from JRR Ho HO Hokien, @joshcarlosjosh: "you okay babe? you've barely touched the 184 birds I gave you over the course of the 12 days of christmas"

I should note that I’m not back to using Twitter. It was posted as a screenshot in the Dumb Bitch Juice meme group. That’s not important. What is important is that after forty-two years of relentless exposure to the song, my misunderstanding of the events of “The Twelve Days of Christmas” was corrected.

The items described are not given to the recipient one time. Each gift is received every day after its first appearance in the song.

As I did the math in silent horror, I showed the tweet to my husband. He’d had the song all wrong, too. We’d both believed that on the first day of Christmas, the true love gave the singer a partridge in a pear tree. On day two, the true love gave the singer two turtle doves.

But, as seen in the above tweet, those aren’t what the lyrics imply at all.

On the first day of Christmas
My true love gave to me
A partridge in a pear tree.

On the second day of Christmas
My true love gave to me
Two turtle doves and a partridge in a pear tree.

I cannot overstate how much I dislike this song. If you don’t have kids, you don’t know the fear of opening that folded copy paper program and learning that you’ll be subjected to Mrs. Sussman’s second-grade class singing all twelve, increasingly lengthy, verses. At the elementary school my kids attended, the teachers dressed up in costumes and performed an interpretive dance version at the Christmas assembly every year. The overweight male principal wore a tutu to represent the “nine ladies dancing” to the kind of laughter that should be solely reserved for Eddie Murphy’s return to stand-up.

If you aren’t a parent, you’ve been on the other side of those nightmares. Anyone living in the dominant christonormative cultural narrative of our times has been in Mrs. Sussman’s second-grade class. Their teacher has danced to the Muppets’ version, with Miss Piggy wailing “Five GoooOOOOOOoooold Rings!” and the ensuing “ba dum dum dum.” Some of you have performed it in American Sign Language with your church youth group. You never learned to count to thirteen.

The Western world is hostage to this song. Is it any wonder that some of us haven’t thought deeply about it? Who among us hasn’t dissociated around day seven? I had to google what twelve even was because, although I’ve heard the song roughly nineteen times per year since before the fall of the Soviet Union, I couldn’t remember a time when I’d heard it all the way to the end.

“Is it really a hundred and eighty-four?” I asked my husband, whose astonished expression mirrored my own. “A partridge in a pear tree.”

“Stop,” said Mr. Jen. “Do you get the tree, too, or is he putting the partridge in a tree you already own?”

“It says ‘my true love gave to me a partridge in a pear tree. I think there are also multiple trees.”

I’d already known that the song was a bird-heavy list. The birds get a lot of social media attraction every year, but the trees go largely uncommented upon. By the end of the song, you not only have twelve partridges but twelve trees for them, as well. An orchard.

We started adding up the birds to make sure. Twelve partridges. Twenty-two turtle doves. Thirty french hens. The weird thing is the higher the number of birds, the larger and more aggressive the species. You start with the teensy little partridge and end with the giant swan. Which you get thirty-five of, by the way.

Of course, if you paid attention to the song, you already knew that. For those of us who did not pay attention, who zone out and mentally listen to Earth, Wind, and Fire’s “Boogie Wonderland” until it’s time to politely clap, it comes as a real shock.

I became somewhat obsessed with the lyrics at this point. There are eight maids a’milking, but no mention of the cows or goats.

“You don’t get to keep the cows,” I explained to Mr. Jen, whose interest in the subject had significantly waned. “You just get the maids a’milking. When they’re done a’milking, the cows go somewhere else.”

“Who are these people?” Mr. Jen asked. “How did they get involved?”

Mystified, I totaled them up, too. You only get twelve drummers once. When it comes to drummers, twelve is enough. But you end up with thirty lords a’leaping.

“Do people outnumber the birds in this song?” I asked, trying to do the math in my head despite being a writer. “I think the people outnumber the birds.”

Forty maids a’milking. Thirty-six ladies dancing. Thirty lords a’leaping. Twelve drummers drumming. 118 people in total.

“The people are outnumbered 184 to 118,” I said, frantically tapping on my phone’s calculator app.

“Please leave,” Mr. Jen begged. “I am trying to sleep.”

Humanity isn’t unique. I’m certain I’m not the only person who ever misunderstood the gifts correlating to their specifically numbered day only. Judging by the tweet that sent me down this spiral, I’m not the only person who’s taken the time to math out the lyrics. But I’m afraid to Google for other people’s experiences. This feels like a journey that, once embarked upon, must be completed alone. It is yet another sliver of childhood revealed by life to be a lie.

My theater’s holiday cabaret is this evening.

They will be performing “The Twelve Days of Christmas.”

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15 Comments

  1. Emerald
    Emerald

    This isn’t something I ever thought would become a subject of discussion but I hope you’ll be happy to know that I sent my husband down the same spiral of googling what the last 5 days are (cuz we can’t remember them properly) and doing math

    December 9, 2022
    |Reply
  2. Mimi
    Mimi

    It’s also A LOT of golden rings. After 10 what are you supposed to do with them all?

    December 9, 2022
    |Reply
    • Rebecca
      Rebecca

      Portable wealth!

      December 11, 2022
      |Reply
    • Dove
      Dove

      I guess you’re meant to wear multiple rings per finger! Bling yaself out!

      December 13, 2022
      |Reply
  3. Tez Miller
    Tez Miller

    I know you love your theatre people very much.

    But whomever decided to put that song in the programme must be subjected to your rant about maths.

    And really – your “true love” wouldn’t give you all that shit because they’d know you’d have nowhere to put it all 😉

    December 9, 2022
    |Reply
  4. MB
    MB

    No it’s definitely a person who simply has recounted everything they gave their true love on previous days every day in addition to the aforementioned gift of the day as if they have to make sure their true love gets the enormity of their generosity and now their true love is exasperatedly and sarcastically repeating this “generosity” to their best friend.

    December 9, 2022
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  5. :chef’s kiss:

    Yes indeed, I thought of this every year from the time I was 5, cause I really like the song, and we did it in church every year and it was delightful.

    The church had giant poster-board signs labeled with each of the days and the entire congregation was sorted based on where you were sitting at the start of the evening service. Golden rings was, of course, the best spot in the whole place. And then the shouting ensued. The Calling Birds were really gunning for the Golden Rings, cause they called, but not as loudly as the golden rings. Some of the Ladies Dancing definitely defected to the Golden Rings.

    The Swans got lose at one point and I’m sure attacked the lords a leaping.

    :reminiscent sigh:

    Good times.

    These might very well be some serious rose-tinted shades though, cause if I had to go back to said church, even just to sing this song I would NOT BE HAPPY and I would definitely have a melt down and a panic attack and. I’ll stop.

    December 9, 2022
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  6. Eclairmaiden
    Eclairmaiden

    Worry not, each gift is given only once. The singer is just recounting everything given so far in each verse. I’ve seen the same motif in folklore stories where each previous point of the story is recounted to each person the main character encounters – and let me tell you, it gets old fast.

    If you want to escape the song, move to Finland, it never became a thing here. I only know it from this one Donald Duck strip where they gather all the birds and maids a’milking and whatnot as a present for a rich lady’s angry dog. Oh, and I know the funny version from Scrubs as well. 😉

    December 10, 2022
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    • Yeah, I’ve been reading Emily Wilson’s translation of The Odyssey, and one of the things she notes about reworking a text from an oral tradition to a reading tradition is the role of repetition. In an oral tradition, repeated phrases are a mnemonic for the storyteller and an anchor for the audience, but for a reader they just get tiresome. So it seems likely that previous generations would have had a lot more tolerance for repetition.

      Speaking of mnemonics, I read that “The Twelve Days of Christmas” began as a sort of memory game.

      December 11, 2022
      |Reply
  7. If it helps, I have a lovely memory of family friends arranging a dinner singsong of this song at their Christmas party. We each had a slip of paper by our plate with the lines we had to join in with, and it turned out what they’d done was allocated the lines according to some vaguely relevant point, with everyone joining in on the ‘partridge’ line.

    2 – 5 were sung by families with that number of members (we were 4, the hosting family were 5). Six geese a-laying went to someone with a farm (and unfortunately not really enough singing voice to manage the line by himself, so we got this barely audible croak from his end of the table), seven swans a-swimming to the lady of the house because she swam regularly, drummers and pipers to players of the respective instruments (I assume the ‘pipers’ singer was a flute player). Maids were all the girls, ladies dancing were all the women, lords were all the men. It was great fun.

    December 10, 2022
    |Reply
  8. Flora
    Flora

    Very interesting. As the partner of a church organist for 14 years, I did realise the extent of the gifts given daily.

    But 140 people are gifted, not 118:
    – 8 maids a-milking x 5 = 40
    – 9 Ladies dancing x 4 = 36
    – 10 lords a-leaping x 3 = 30
    – 11 pipers piping x 2 = 22
    – 12 drummers drumming x 1 = 12

    In total there are 364 gifts, but 410 gifted items as there are 12 trees and 34 musical instruments bundled with the gifts.

    (yes, I broke it down in a spreadsheet….) 🙂

    December 10, 2022
    |Reply
  9. Lauren
    Lauren

    It gets worse– I once heard that the five golden rings were meant to represent ring-necked pheasants. That’s 35 more birds!

    December 10, 2022
    |Reply
  10. Morgan
    Morgan

    Although it takes the “each gift is only given one” position, I feel you may enjoy the song “Christmas Countdown” by Frank Kelly.

    December 10, 2022
    |Reply
  11. Alana Skye
    Alana Skye

    Twisted Sister has a version called Heavy Metal Christmas. The gifts are

    12 silver crosses
    11 black mascaras
    10 pairs of platforms
    9 tattered t-shirts
    8 pentagrams
    7 leather jackets
    6 cans of hairspray
    5 skull earrings
    4 quarts of Jack
    3 studded belts
    2 pairs of spandex pants
    And a tattoo of Ozzy

    December 12, 2022
    |Reply
  12. Ranting Fil
    Ranting Fil

    Ah, I remember this being the last problem in one of our Math test in high school, How many gifts in all at the end of the days. And yes, our teacher expected the items compounded by the day

    December 13, 2022
    |Reply

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