Tag Archive for celebration

Celebrating Independence

Happy Independence Day!  I’ll celebrate by noticing how truly independent I am.  I have so many choices: sleep inside my home or camp outside; eat too many BBQ ribs or not eat at all; go to the doctor with my nagging cold or just ride it out; go to work or take a day off; spend full price on that coat, just because I love it, or forego it for now, hoping to find it on sale or even free from someone who no longer wants hers. 

I can choose to spend my day dreaming of fun activities with the family or worrying about what might happen to me next.  Oddly, I’m given this independence of choice through an accident of life.  Because I’m not mentally ill or addicted to a destructive substance, am not divorced, and I was lucky enough to situate myself comfortably before the economy tanked, I get to enjoy my independence while others struggle on the streets. 

Yes, I’ll spend this 4th of July weekend in deep appreciation.

OK, So What IS this Kwanzaa Thing?

It’s the day after Christmas. Now we’re hearing about another holiday–Kwanzaa. What exactly is it? It isn’t another Christmas, or even a religious holiday, even though it does promote faith, among other things.  Here’s a brief description, including the 7 Principles. (You’ll probably have to do a Ctrl -Alt while scrolling to enlarge it so you can read it easier.)

You can learn more about by going to the Kwanzaa official website. Whatever our own culture is, this celebration has a lot for all of us to embrace.

Celebrating My Own Independence

Happy Independence Day!  I’ll celebrate by noticing how truly independent I am.  I have so many choices: sleep inside my home or camp outside; eat too many BBQ ribs or not eat at all; go to the doctor with my nagging cold or just ride it out; go to work or take a day off; spend full price on that coat, just because I love it, or forego it for now, hoping to find it on sale or even free from someone who no longer wants hers.  I can choose to spend my day dreaming of fun activities with the family or worrying about what might happen to me next.  Oddly, I’m given this independence of choice through an accident of life.  Because I’m not mentally ill or addicted to a destructive substance, am not divorced, and I was lucky enough to situate myself comfortably before the economy tanked, I get to enjoy my independence while others struggle on the streets.  Yes, I’ll spend this 4th of July weekend in deep appreciation.

Celebration Warning

Weddings, graduations, bar mitzvahs, birthdays…let the celebrations begin! But do NOT include a balloon-release, which can harm wildlife. Birds starve to death after eating the  indigestible balloons or get tangled in their strings, and hatchlings are strangled in the strings that have been built into their nest.

[For more easy, money-saving, Earth-friendly tips, download a FREE copy of Green Riches: Help the Earth & Your Budget. Go to www.Smashwords.com/books/view/7000 or your favorite e-book seller and download to your computer or e-book device. Totally free, with no strings attached.]

Mother’s Day Spirit

Honor the early history and spirit of Mother’s Day in the U.S. (It actually goes as far back as the ancient Greeks.) On the first Mother’s Day celebration (1858) at a W. Virginia church, Ann Jarvis united mothers to fight infant mortality.  During the rest of the 1800s women’s peace groups perpetuated the idea of bringing together mothers for just causes.  After the Civil War Julia Ward Howe called on mothers to unite against war and promote social justice.  In 1872, Anna Jarvis suggested an official Mother’s Day.  She got the idea from her own activist social worker mom, who, noticing that adult Americans were neglecting their mothers, felt strongly that all mothers should be honored for their contributions.

Greeting card companies, florists, candy-makers, and others have commercialized the day, turning it into a sentimental occasion.  Of course, moms appreciate the attention from their kids.  Wouldn’t it be appropriate, too, to celebrate them as people who accomplished the difficult task of raising children while contributing time and effort to their community and world?

Although you’ve been gone many years, happy Mother’s  Day, Mom, and thank you for all you did for our family and the positive differences you made in so many lives.

 

THREE Reasons to Celebrate

For only the 4th time in 100 years, Hanukkah (which starts at sunset tomorrow night) and Christmas both land on the same day.  It has to do with the fact that the Jewish calendar is lunar and the Christian calendar Gregorian.  But who cares why?

Let’s just enjoy the double celebration.  After all, there are similarities.  It’s the focus and viewpoint: To Jews, Hanukkah is the Festival of Lights, celebrating the re-dedication of the new Holy Temple; to Christians  Christmas is when Light came into the world in the form of the embodied Holy Temple.

Sounds like a good time for our world to unite and celebrate peace and harmony.  And THAT would be a third, marvelous celebration!

 

          

 

 

A Truly American Celebration

Because Cinco de Mayo is a bigger celebration in the U.S. than in Mexico (no, it isn’t Mexican Independence Day), today’s Thursday Thought celebrates the meaning of this day:

“Cinco de Mayo has come to represent a celebration of the contributions that Mexican Americans and all Hispanics have made to America.”  —  Joe Baca

 

Hanukkah For Jews and Non-Jews

To all my readers and friends:  I wish you a very happy Hanukkah for the remainder of the 8 days!

To my non-Jewish readers and friends: Hanukkah is a wonderful celebration.  I like one of it’s names, “The Festival of Lights,” both for the history behind the name and for the joyous picture it calls to mind.  If you don’t know what this ages-old, 8-day holiday is about, you’re missing something.  Go to “Hanukkah 2015: When Does The Jewish Holiday Start And How Is It Celebrated?” and read about this significant, family (in every sense)-oriented celebration.  It’s a breath of fresh air in our troubled world.

 

 

Am I Un-American?

Some people have accused me of being un-American, and only partly in jest.  I don’t mean to be; I really do love my country.  But I think that celebrating its birthday with fireworks demeans it.  The fire display depicts “bombs bursting in air” and other warfare, yet I like to think of America as a peaceful nation.  The explosives create air pollution, and the casings, gunpowder, and other chemicals are not good for our American soil and water.  Also, the cost is obscene.  For example, North Carolina’s Marine Corps base Camp Lejeune cancelled theirs, in this era of tight budgets and sequestration, because it would cost around  $25,000 PLUS another $75,000 for other expenses, like security, food, and staff overtime to host a mere 20,000 people.

OK, so call me the Grinch Who Would Steal Independence Day.  I just feel that America is better than that.