It is now January 4, 2014 and I am still being blessed with New Year's greetings prayers and best wishes for all kinds of things. Hurray, already. Actually, I have been fighting a crazy sore throat for over one week now and I am wondering if I will survive this whole thing. So, I am glad that the year is beginning on a negative note because hopefully that will change quickly and I won't have anything more to worry about for the next 355 days. That would be cool.
I go through this greeting quandary every single year. For how long do I have to be polite and greet people with a "Happy New Year" blessing? It could get rather long and quite convoluted in the neighborhood where we live where about 35 or 40% of the people are on the Chinese calendar. So just about the time when I start to decide that I have exhausted the politeness quotient of the Gregorian calendar, I'm back in the environment of the Chinese calendar. Now, it really doesn't mean much to me on the off years when it is not my turn to wonder what my personality is, or should be, according to the animal of the Zodiac under which I was born. What really gets to me is the nagging reminder that one more year has passed and I am still fighting the battle of the bulge. Shouldn't once be enough?
So, tomorrow is January 5. No more Mr. Nice Guy. "Hello!" it is and the devil take the hindmost. The blessings have all of about two more hours of shelf life for the year.
Arghh! You're not going to believe this. It is still Christmas season and worse yet, our Orthodox friends are just warming up for the "real" thing in their Church. I was just in one of their business establishments today and it was all Happy, Happy with Baby Jesus who is going to be born on January 7 this year. I am so glad that I have age on my side. I got invited to Midnight Celebration of the Divine Eucharist, and I used my advancing chronological debility as a dodge. Hey, wouldn't you?
Now, tomorrow, the day before the feast of the Magi, the Three Kings, is going to be another one of those great massive Mexican foodie days...Tamales of all sizes and all shades of the same basic taste and consistency plus the "Rosco de Los Reyes", a circular cake with tiny figurines of baby Jesus embedded. If you get a piece with the baby Jesus in it, you HAVE to treat the whole village to celebrate your blessing. I'm thinking that I had better find a church full of Irish immigrants who have already taken down their Christmas lights and have begun drinking quarts of coffee in order to be ready for work on Monday.
The wonderful part about all this cultural diversity living is that you never stop celebrating. You never know when one year ends and when the other begins. In the Christian world alone we never know when Jesus was really born nor when He did a bunch of other stuff, like Die and Resurrect. There are too many intersecting calendars.
It's not just the religious stuff that gets fuzzy. Just look at what we've done here in the good ol' US of A. The children of a certain age can't tell you when Flag Day is; they can't tell you when Washington's birthday is; nor Lincoln's; nor when Memorial Day is. (Do we still have Memorial Day?) If it's not on a Monday or a Friday, we don't know when it happened. Except for Independence Day. For those of you below the age of 50, Independence Day is the Old Fashioned Name for The Fourth of July.
I hope you all have that straight now. Next year on January 1 I am going to write a resolution that starting January 2 there are to be no Happy New Year's Greetings except in the year when the Chinese Zodiac says that it is the year of the OX. Yay!
By the time that rolls around I will have pushed up enough daisies to really exuberantly decorate the margins of this great blog.
Paul, Sorry to to hear you have a bad sore throat, the best remedy for that is gargle, wirh your favorite libation ( wild turkey ) and accidentaly let some slip down the old windpipe. If it doesn't help the throat, it at least make you feel better.
ReplyDeleteHope you and yours have a healthy, peaceful,happy and prosperous. New Year.& Lang may your lumb reek ( if you can't figure this oot let me know and I'll send you the Scottish translation )
St. Andrew.
Libation? Isn't something you bathe in? Andrew, my man, thank you for the advice. I can always count on you to bring the wisdom of life down from the Mountain. Thank you for the wonderful wishes and trust that they are reciprocated whole heartedly.
DeleteI will not disclose in public what I think the Scottish language means. I will let you decide what to do with it...
Paul