Random Bits of Noise
Dec. 22nd, 2008 04:11 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Keep meaning to mention this: The hummingbird feeders are exactly at the levels they were when I left on vacation November 7. I miss them little critters.
Bah Humbuggery:
I am happy so many people find joy in holiday parties and events. I am sad about the same thing because:
- One can find a reason to party and give gifts any day of the year, there is no reason to horde it all during one short week.
- The alleged holiday is based on such a flimsy mythconception that anyone with an IQ larger than his shoe size ought to see right through.
- The trappings of the holiday (snowmen, reindeer, etc.) have absolutely nothing to do with the holiday's source. Bethlehem has no snow, no fir trees.
- It's up to us, not someone who died 2,000 years ago, to bring about peace on earth. And we should be working towards this goal every day of our lives, not just this week.
My big sister used to look up birthdays of her favorite authors, and throw parties on them. Robert Louis Stevenson's was the most popular.
Mom is snowbound - she lives in Seattle. Last week she was transferred to a temporary care facility, and was due to go home Saturday, but it keeps snowing, and Mom & Dad's apartment is toward the top of one of the steeper hills, the care place is toward the bottom of another steep hill a few miles south.
Bah Humbuggery:
I am happy so many people find joy in holiday parties and events. I am sad about the same thing because:
- One can find a reason to party and give gifts any day of the year, there is no reason to horde it all during one short week.
- The alleged holiday is based on such a flimsy mythconception that anyone with an IQ larger than his shoe size ought to see right through.
- The trappings of the holiday (snowmen, reindeer, etc.) have absolutely nothing to do with the holiday's source. Bethlehem has no snow, no fir trees.
- It's up to us, not someone who died 2,000 years ago, to bring about peace on earth. And we should be working towards this goal every day of our lives, not just this week.
My big sister used to look up birthdays of her favorite authors, and throw parties on them. Robert Louis Stevenson's was the most popular.
Mom is snowbound - she lives in Seattle. Last week she was transferred to a temporary care facility, and was due to go home Saturday, but it keeps snowing, and Mom & Dad's apartment is toward the top of one of the steeper hills, the care place is toward the bottom of another steep hill a few miles south.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-23 05:34 pm (UTC)Good point. I guess my gripe is with the overpowering emphasis on Christmas over all the others, and the total disconnect between the holiday and the event it purports to celebrate.
Dressing up as a ghost on a day devoted to ghosts and daemons makes sense, and I see the comic book costumes as a short skip from that.
Eggs are a symbol of life and resurrection, a direct representation of Easter. Also, Easter is meticulously celebrated on the Biblically correct day, even though it means using the Hebrew calendar.
Ireland's color is green, the Irish love beer, St. Patrick is Ireland's saint, so green beer on St. Patrick's day works for me. And they celebrate it on the right day.
BBQs on the 4th of July is an artifact of it being a summertime holiday. If the 4th of July was celebrated with snowmen, I'd be upset. And again, it's celebrated on the right day.
Fireworks at New Years? Never heard of that being a given. At 4th of July, yes, and that makes sense because rockets played a significant part in our fight for independence. Star Spangled Banner and all that.
But Christmas does it ALL wrong. Wrong time of the year, wrong weather-related symbols, even the wrong gift giving tradition - after all the wise men gave gifts only to the holy baby. Following the example, Christians should be giving gifts only to the church this holiday.