Sunday, December 02, 2007
Tis The Season
I love Christmas.
Some people get quite upset about that. There's the religious people, who think that as I don't believe the son of God was born on December 25th, two-thousand-odd years ago, I should just butt out of their meaningful celebration. Then there's the anti-religious people, who think that if I am rejecting Christianity then I should reject the entirety of Christmas because blah perpetuating false ideas wibble consumerism et cetera.
I respect both viewpoints (although I realise the tone of the preceding paragraph my put that into some doubt), and as such, I don't mind whether any of the people I know - or any of the people I don't know - spend their December in church praising their Lord and feeling marvellously spiritual, or in their determinedly undecorated houses ignoring the whole caboodle as best they can and burning any Christmas cards that darken their doormat.
But for me, Christmas is largely about the things in the coca-cola advert. Colour and light at the dark time of year. A little bit of magic, even if you know how it was done. Family and friends. Uplifting mood. And, dare I say it, a bit of excess - plenty to eat, plenty to drink, and giving and recieving (with thoughtfulness and good intentions and time and effort and consideration) gifts, including things that perhaps the recipient wouldn't have bought for themselves on their own (ok that's not in the advert, but Father Christmas is, and that's what he represents. To me).
Occasionally I wonder if that kind of thing - the Coca-Cola Christmas - isn't just the next natural progression of the mid-winter celebration/event/ceremony/whatever that humans do have a tendency to do for the last couple of thousand years. Personally, I'm not a Christian or a Muslim or a Druid or a Wiccan or a Pagan or anything else, I think the closest you'd get to classifying me is Apathetic Agnostic. I'm not even a huge consumerismist. But I love the Christmas celebrations.
Warning: There may be more Christmas-based posts to follow.
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3 comments:
I love Christmas too, and agree consumerism isn't really the point. Good food and well chosen presents are nice, but it isn't how much money is spent that makes it good. I'm not sure how to explain it without sounding sentimental, but it's the warm feeling of it I love.
It's the Christmas spirit! Cheesey, but true!
Hi Mary, thanks for the warning about my email address. I don't know what's wrong with it, I get the red boxes etc for any comments and posts sent to mine, I assumed it was some glitch to do with blogger, but obviously not! Thank you anyway, I think I'll put a post up asking about it as it's beyond me. BG x
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