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[21 December 2007|05:29 pm]
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[Current Music |'Souvenirs D'un Autre Monde' by Alcest]

So I am apparently the voice of pessimism at Christmas. It's been a long time since I ever really got into the season. Probably when I was 12 or 13. It no longer feels like a special time of year, and it doesn't help that I lack anybody to play cricket with. It's just not Christmas if you don't go outside in the afternoon, have a barbecue, and play some backyard cricket. Here, I don't even have a tree; I supposedly have a miniature tree for my coffee table somewhere, but I sure can't find it and I've looked high and low. Perhaps I should've made some crepe paper chains. Yesterday, I posted - a bit late - five Christmas cards. I've never sent so many in my life. It felt excessive. I'm sure that for some of you, though, sending out five cards would be a monumentally low figure. But my close friends and I have a standing rule that we don't give each other anything, going back to when Sam and I were 14; his birthday is three days before mine, so I gave him $20 and got the very same note back three days later. I am completely incompetent at buying presents anyway, and this lack of present-giving seems to extend to cards. I'm also completely incompetent at writing worthwhile messages in cards, so this is a great thing from my perspective. Unfortunately, certain family members feel a bit unloved if I don't send them anything. That said, two of the cards I sent to my Mum and Nan on the Gold Coast as a bit of a joke, to see if they beat me there. I'm flying up on Christmas Eve.

I must admit to being considerably amused by the predictable furore that eminates mainly from the US every year over "Merry Christmas" vs "Happy Holidays" and some supposed "War on Christmas" that Christians with a persecution complex have invented in their minds. You know, when you have an overwhelming statistical majority, over 80% of the population, then your cries of "persecution" just sound like you have no idea what genuine persecution is. I want some of these irritating fundie extremists to spend a month in Saudi Arabia just so they can experience a bit of real persecution firsthand. For the time being, I think this animated diagram is fitting:



I suppose some people enjoy storms in teacups. I, for the record, say "Merry Christmas" because that's the name of the bloody holiday. It has the religious significance of "Happy Australia Day". That said, I have grown up with Christmas being essentially devoid of religious significance or meaning. I remember when I first realised that "Christmas" referred to Jesus Christ; after all, it's pronounced more like "Chrissmas", so the connection was not immediately obvious even though I knew the spelling. In my childhood naivety, I thought the carols mentioning Jesus were sung just because it was one of the things that happened at that time of year, just like how Northern Hemisphere carols mention snow, and the day itself was simply a time of peacefulness, generosity, and family. I don't think I really realised it had any inherent religious significance until I was six and I learnt a couple of my cousins were going to church. I thought that was kind of odd because it wasn't a Sunday! Certainly in the social context within which I grew up, Christmas had evolved prior to my birth from a religious holiday into a secular and inclusive one. I just wish I still felt the magic that I remember it had when I was younger. Now I just grumble about having to find people presents when I don't know what the recipient would like and I haven't much money to buy anything good, or having to figure out what to write in a card, or having to hang out with family I don't like while eating food that doesn't appeal to me and listening to music that's stuck in a mundane timewarp.

Oh well. That's my Christmas whine and I'll say no more (except in response to any direct replies on the topic, of course). I am looking forward to going to the Gold Coast and seeing family I haven't seen for 6+ months. I'm really looking forward to my mother's delicious fruit mince pies. Alan also makes fantastic turkey; I normally don't like turkey as it's too frequently dry like cardboard, but his isn't. Perhaps I can convince him to do duck next year, though. I'm also kinda proud of how I found my mother a present she probably wouldn't expect at all; it's just a book but the fact I managed to find something without any prompting or assistance is truly remarkable. I'm the worst present-buyer you'll ever meet, I assure you of that. I walk into a bookshop (because books win as presents), gravitate towards the history, politics, and theology sections, and then stand there thinking "but nobody else in my family would like any of this! And I don't know where to find books they would like. Oh, I give up. But before I go, let's see if they have any Søren Kierkegaard or G. K. Chesterton here!" Ah well, at least this time around I had a good discount voucher, so I bought Mum's present and some books for myself, including Les Miserables by Victor Hugo and War And Peace by Leo Tolstoy, both of which I have been meaning to acquire for bloody forever. At the moment, I am currently reading Fyodor Dostoevsky's Crime And Punishment, and it is truly nothing short of brilliant. Dostoevsky thoroughly deserves the reputation he has. I cannot decide whether to proceed onto either one of my recent purchases or Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov once I am done. Perhaps I shall read something completely different instead, as a kind of interlude.

Well, this became much longer than I intended. I shall continue tomorrow, for the sake of brevity. Have a good longest/shortest day of the year, depending on where you live!
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The meaning of Easter. [8 April 2007|02:26 pm]
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[Current Mood | full]
[Current Music |'Fear Of A Blank Planet' by Porcupine Tree]

Ah, Easter. Every year it prompts the question "why did Jesus have to die?" And yet it has such a simple answer:

So that we could have two days off from work and eat a lot of chocolate and hot cross buns, duh.

And with the wonders of modern society, we now have chocolate hot cross buns! It's the best thing since, uh, sliced bread.
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Holidays. [29 April 2006|08:42 pm]
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[Current Music |'A Passage To Bangkok' by Rush]

If my entry on the day didn't make it obvious, it was ANZAC Day a few days ago. I was thinking about how it's really the only holiday anyone takes seriously here. On ANZAC Day, people will actually go to the Dawn Services and there's a whole bucketload of respect for our heritage and those who have fallen in war. In comparison? Australia Day's a good excuse for a barbecue. People are in Christmas for the presents and Easter for the chocolate. New Year's Day simply exists so that everyone can get over the hangover from the night before. And let's be honest, who cares about the Queen's Birthday? No-one gives a damn that it's the Queen's birthday (or at least is the day designated as the day to celebrate a birthday that I think is earlier in the year). Everyone's just in it because they get a day off work, and who doesn't like that? Australia could become a republic and we'd probably still celebrate the Queen's birthday. Or we'd suddenly decide we really love Edmund Barton and should've been celebrating his birthday all along instead.

My point is that no-one typically cares about the reasons behind a holiday, we're just pleased to have a day off work. So what if you aren't a Christian? Hooray for Easter! Chocolate and a couple of days off work. Who doesn't like that? If you don't want to hear about Jesus, just don't go to church, it's that simple. And the Queen's Birthday? Cheers, Queenie, thanks for existing so we can have a day off! I can't hate the Queen, purely for the reason that it's because of her that we all get a holiday on the second Monday in June (or the first Monday if you live in New Zealand, and I think Western Australia celebrates it in late September).

So, by this logic, I've determined we should have John Howard Day and George W. Bush Day. It would actually make their existence useful. Cheers, Bush and Howard! I can't bloody stand either of you, but thanks for giving us an excuse to not do work!

With that said, I better return to writing and trying to complete my essay on the political impact of the Protestant Reformation generally and John Calvin's teachings specifically on the Genevan Republic in the sixteenth century. Thrilling, I can assure you.
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Political correctness can be thoroughly annoying. [9 December 2005|10:13 pm]
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[Current Mood | frustrated]
[Current Music |'I Hope I Never' by Spilt Enz]

I am becoming extremely tired of this PC "let's not risk offending anyone" nonsense with regards to the whole debate of replacing "Merry Christmas" with "Happy Holidays". I honestly haven't noticed this to be much of an issue in Australia or New Zealand, but I've sure seen the argument enough online for it to be irking me. Now, of course, multiple cultures are celebrating important occasions around this time of year, but if you live in a Western country like I do, take a look at your calendar and notice the fact that the public holiday is Christmas. I place "Merry Christmas" on the same level as "Happy New Year" or "I hope you have a fun Australia Day". It's just a damn greeting related to the public holiday; it isn't some endorsement of one religion or culture over another. If you're offended because someone, in wishing you a merry time on 25 December, used the name of the official public holiday they hope you will enjoy, you have some issues.

Really, this is completely ridiculous. I don't see anyone complaining about positive Australia Day wishes and considering them exclusionary and offensive, even though they blatantly ignore the fact that Waitangi Day falls during the same fortnight and a sizeable minority of New Zealanders live in Australia. I'm sure every single day contains some significance in one culture if you look hard enough, but let's not take things to extremes, people. There's nothing wrong with acknowledging official public holidays without mentioning other important occasions that aren't official holidays.
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