Wednesday, December 21, 2005

Celebrations of Light & Hope

This is a repeat of an entry that I made last year on this day. It still says what I want to remember about this time of year, so I'm doing a 'reprint' <g> The only change is that G. is off for Christmas this year, but we are still celebrating our family get together at my brother's on Christmas Eve as this year his wife has to work Christmas day.


                    
PreviewToday is the shortest day of the year... and the longest night. It is the first day of Winter. It is the celebration of Yule. It is an acknowledgement of Hope. That Light and Warmth and other good things will always return after the darkness. It is the day that G. and I celebrate as our personal Winter Holiday. In ancient times, this was the festival of the rebirth of the new god and a promise that after today the days would get longer, the nights would get shorter, and warmth and Spring WOULD come.

Yes, secularly we, like so many others, celebrate Christmas. In the United States, Christmas is no longer just a religious holiday. With the gift giving, and Santa, and the decorations... Christmas has become more, and less, than what was originally intended. Everyone takes the pieces and parts of the holiday that works for them. Some embrace the religious parts, and try to ignore how secular it has become... others embrace the secular with it's parties, lights, Santa, and presents and ignore any religious beginnings of the holiday. But, at it's heart, it is still a Winter Holiday.. A celebration of Hope. And every religion/belief system seems to have a celebration of some type that embraces this.

I grew up in the States, and therefore my memories of a Winter Holiday include all of the above. And Christmas itself is as much a melting pot as the United States itself. The Christmas tree is German, and Santa is the culmination of a blend of traditions from many countries. Mistletoe? Druid. Christmas Cards? England. You see what I mean. G. and I will be celebrating with my brother and his family on Christmas Eve at his house. That's the day we all have off together. Christmas Day G. is working so a co-worker can be home with his small children for the Santa Claus ritual <g>.

I think what I'm trying to say is that it doesn't Previewmatter who you are, or what your core beliefs are... There is a place in the Winter Holidays for all. But, please, take a moment this season, whether you celebrate Kwanzaa, Chanukah, Yule, or Christmas, to remember that the REAL reason for all of these celebrations is to celebrate HOPE in all of its forms
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graphics by useless graphics

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great entry!.. so true too.. I still can't believe that stores were told not to say "merry christmas" to the customers!  

so i get to say it:  Merry Christmas (to those who celebrate it) and happy Holidays to all those that celebrate Winter Holidays!!.. cool JJ.. i like it.

http://journals.aol.com/deslily/HereThereandEverywhere/

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Anonymous said...

Nice entry JJ!  Thanks for sharing your thoughts which so mirror mine.  Merry Christmas!

Anonymous said...

"....still can't believe that stores were told not to say "merry christmas" to the customers..."

They weren't.  I think you just bought into another Urban Myth.

That aside, this entry is very nice indeed.

Anonymous said...

beautiful entry and I'm glad you repeated it this year. Merry Christmas!

betty

Anonymous said...

A great big holiday hug to you and your pets from me and mine.

Russ

Anonymous said...

It is calming just reading that.    I want to see your Christmas Wish List. I think yours would be a whole lot less whiney than mine this year.

Anonymous said...

Very nice-I'm glad I caught it this year.~Diane~

Anonymous said...

Amen... That's all I can say... Amen...

Beautifully written!

Jackie