“Music affects many neural networks in our brains, many of which are a part of our emotional centres, so there's no question that music will affect people very quickly and very effectively, either for the good or the bad,” therapist Jennifer Buchanan told CBC. “When people hear Christmas music, it may emphasise their grief, their loss that they've experienced throughout this last year, or perhaps over years in the past.”
Christmas is an emotionally complicated time. It’s a (hopefully) happy occasion slap in the middle of the most depressing part of the year. Nostalgia for magical childhood Christmases can feel stark against the stresses and complexities of adulthood, feelings of missing people can be accentuated, and the end of the calendar year can draw attention to elements of your life that you may feel are lacking.
“In the downtime over the Christmas period, people often have more time on their hands to reflect,” says Dr. Sheri Jacobson, founder of online counselling website Harley Therapy. “Often, we tend to look at what hasn't gone well, more than what has gone well. It’s an evolutionary strategy, to keep us on the watch for any problems, but the difficulty with that is that we have this sort of negativity bias, which clouds the way that we look at things in the past and the future.”
So anything Christmassy potentially has us primed for all the feelings in the world. But the rest of the playlist didn’t leave me a gibbering wreck, there’s more to that one bloody song. It basically describes emotionally stirring moment after emotionally stirring moment, all painted in such broad strokes that a listener can place oneself into them. The first thing that happens in the song, this guy working up the courage to ask this woman to dance, is basically the big emotional ending to a thousand movies. The dude has an arc in those few lines, overcomes an obstacle and becomes the version of himself he wishes to be. Freeze-frame, roll credits, shiny eyes all round.
But then he spends the next few verses lonely, replaying the night endlessly in his head. Everyone, surely, has a few what-if moments in their past – not necessarily romantic ones, but lost opportunities, untaken chances, near-misses. Later, the salesman lies dying and lonely, and in the final moments of his life, is vindicated. He was right to think about that evening for all this time, because it was special enough that she was thinking about him too. All that sadness, all that loneliness, was justified. He almost wins.
It basically sends the listener on their own personal version of A Christmas Carol, conjuring up Christmas Past (young and free, falling in love), Christmas Present (ultra aware of everything missing from your life) and Christmas Yet To Come (the scenario nobody wants to end up in, dying alone and forgotten). Except then the salesman dies. It’s like if, rather than realising the error of his ways and becoming a kind man and second father to Tiny Tim, Scrooge opened the curtains and went “You, boy what day is it?” and got taken out by a sniper. Fucking hell. It’s monstrous.