Showing posts with label #holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #holidays. Show all posts

Thursday, December 27, 2018

Savor the Season


Savor the Season

Christina Weigand



Hi all. Just popping in between the Christmas festivities to wish you all a Blessed Christmas season and a grace filled New Year.
As you read this I will be driving to Vermont for my third Christmas celebration. The season started a little early for us this year as we gathered on Saturday December 22 to celebrate with my brother, sisters and their families. They continued on December 24 when we attended 10:00 p.m. mass. On December 25 we woke up early exchanged gifts between the three of us and then waited for the madness to start. Most of my husband’s family along with our second oldest son arrived at our house between 3:00 and 4:00. There was a wonderful dinner, with everybody contributing something so no one would be overly burdened. After dinner we exchanged gifts, played a game and had some lively discussions.

Now after a day of cleaning, tying up loose ends and resting a little we are traveling to Vermont to visit our oldest son and his family.



For most people December 26 or at the latest December 27 signals the end of the Christmas season. All the stores are having huge Christmas sales to clean out the Christmas merchandise just in time for the swimsuit season. Radio stations have stopped playing Christmas music and television programming has returned to its usual fare. It seems like no more Christmas cards arrive and all the beautiful Christmas lights are turned off.

I believe that the Christmas season begins on December 25 or in this case the 20th and not the day after Halloween or Thanksgiving. The months of November and December are a time to prepare our hearts and spirits; to take time and be thankful for all our gifts and to show others that they are appreciated.



In Erika’s post the other day you saw a list of all the holidays in the month of December. All of these holidays had a common theme of celebration and gift giving. So my suggestion for you no matter what your celebration; take time to enjoy it, share with family and friends. Mostly give yourself and the holiday its due. Don’t let it end after the meal is finished and the wrapping paper scattered about. Savor the season, be infused with all that the season is meant to be. I know I certainly intend to.

Happy Winter Holidays.

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Tricia Drammeh via Google+

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A wonderful message from Chris Weigand reminding us to Savor the Season!
 
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Ruth de Jauregui via Google+

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Chris Weigand​ reminds us to take time to enjoy the holidays on #OurAuthorGang.
 
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Ruth de Jauregui

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I so agree! One of our customers reminded me that there's 12 days of Christmas, so there's still time to get a gift out to a loved one by January 6th. Savor the season, it will be gone in a few short days.
 
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Toi Thomas via Google+

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Today, Christina Weigand reminds us to savor the season. #OurAuthorGang
 
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Erika M Szabo shared this via Google+

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Stephanie Collins shared this via Google+

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Erika M Szabo originally shar


Tuesday, December 25, 2018

Holidays in December

December is the month of celebration

Courtesy of public domain pictures and information from Wikipedia and various websites

December, the cold winter month is a popular time for parties and celebrations. While some are filled with solemn tradition, others focus on fun and frolic. All pose opportunities for an interesting view of different cultures, history, and religion.

Some of the holidays celebrated in December around the world:

Christmas
This is a Christian holiday that's grown in popularity and celebrated by many non-Christians. Christmas is one of the paid holidays by employers in the U.S. Non-religious people celebrate this holiday with family, giving gifts, volunteering to help with charity events, or donate to good causes.

Religious people celebrate this Christian holiday by going to church, giving gifts, and sharing the day with their families. In some parts of Europe, “star singers” go caroling—singing special Christmas songs—as they walk behind a huge star on a pole.

The Christmas festivities in Ireland tend to be more religious in nature rather than being about gifts. Christmas celebrations last from Christmas Eve until January 6 (Epiphany). On December 26, known as St. Stephen’s Day, an Irish tradition that is known as the Wren Boys Procession takes place. 

The Christmas Eve festivities in Ukraine are known as Sviata Vechera, which means “Holy Supper.” The celebration begins when the first evening star is sighted in the night sky. In farming communities, the household head brings in a sheaf of wheat, which symbolizes the wheat crops of Ukraine. It is called “didukh,” which translates to “grandfather spirit.” In homes within the city, a few stalks of wheat may be used to decorate the table.

Hanukkah
For eight days each November or December, Jews light a special candleholder called a menorah. They do it to remember an ancient miracle in which one day’s worth of oil burned for eight days in the temple. During Hanukkah, many Jews also eat special potato pancakes called latkes, sing songs, and spin a top called a dreidel to win chocolate coins, nuts, or raisins.

St. Nicholas Day
A popular December holiday in many European countries, St. Nicholas Day, celebrates St. Nicholas of Myra, the man whose life inspired the tradition of Santa Claus and Father Christmas. He gave all of his money to the needy and was known for his compassion for children and all those in need. The holiday honors the man on the anniversary of his death, December 6, 343 A.D. Many celebrate with parades, feasts, gift giving, and festivals.

Our Lady of Guadalupe
Also known as the Virgin of Guadalupe, is a Catholic title of the Blessed Virgin Mary associated with a Marian apparition and a venerated image enshrined within the Minor Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City.

Kwanzaa
Kwanzaa, which means “First Fruits,” is based on ancient African harvest festivals and celebrates ideas such as family life and unity. During this spiritual holiday, celebrated from December 26 to January 1, millions of African Americans dress in special clothes, decorate their homes with fruits and vegetables, and light a candle holder called a kinara.

Three Kings Day
At the end of the Twelve Days of Christmas comes a day called the Epiphany, or Three Kings Day. This holiday is celebrated as the day the three wise men first saw baby Jesus and brought him gifts. On this day in Spain, many children get their Christmas presents. In Puerto Rico, before children go to sleep on January 5, they leave a box with hay under their beds so the kings will leave good presents. In France, a delicious King cake is baked. Bakers will hide a coin, jewel, or little toy inside.

Epiphany holiday
Also Theophany, Denha, Little Christmas, or Three Kings' Day, is a Christian feast day that celebrates the revelation of God incarnate as Jesus Christ

Winter Solstice
The Winter Solstice occurs around December 21. It is the shortest day of the year. People all over the world participate in festivals and celebrations. Long ago, people celebrated by lighting bonfires and candles to coax back the sun.

St. Lucia Day
To honor this third-century saint on December 13, many girls in Sweden dress up as “Lucia brides” in long white gowns with red sashes and a wreath of burning candles on their heads. They wake up their families by singing songs and bringing them coffee and twisted saffron buns called “Lucia cats.”

New Year
In the Gregorian calendar, New Year's Eve, the last day of the year, is on 31 December which is the seventh day of Christmastide. In many countries, New Year's Eve is celebrated at evening social gatherings, where many people dance, eat, drink alcoholic beverages, and watch or light fireworks to mark the new year.

In Ecuador, families dress a straw man in old clothes on December 31. The straw man represents the old year. The family members make a will for the straw man that lists all of their faults. At midnight, they burn the straw man, in hopes that their faults will disappear with him.

ÅŒmisoka
New Year’s Eve, is considered the second-most important day in Japanese tradition as it is the final day of the old year and the eve of New Year’s Day, the most important day of the year. Families gather on ÅŒmisoka for one last time in the old year to have a bowl of toshikoshi-soba or toshikoshi-udon, a tradition based on eating the long noodles to cross over from one year to the next.

Chinese New Year
Children dress in new clothes to celebrate and people carry lanterns and join in a huge parade led by a silk dragon, the Chinese symbol of strength. According to legend, the dragon hibernates most of the year, so people throw firecrackers to keep the dragon awake.

Eid Al-Fitr and Eid Al-Adha.
Eid Al-Fitr is celebrated at the end of Ramadan (a month of fasting during daylight hours), and Muslims usually give zakat (charity) on the occasion which begins after the new moon sighting for the beginning of the month of Shawal.

Happy Winter Holidays

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Tricia Drammeh via Google+

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There's so much to celebrate in December!
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Ruth de Jauregui via Google+

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Erika M. Szabo​ shares the holidays that fill the last days of the old year and the first few days of the new year on #OurAuthorGang!
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Ruth de Jauregui

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What a wonderful tribute to the many holidays that fill the last part of November, December and the first days of January! Thank you!!
 
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Chris Weigand shared this via Google+

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Toi Thomas via Google+

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#OurAuthorGang presents a tribute to some of the December Holidays celebrated around the world.
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Erika M Szabo via Google+

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Some of the holidays celebrated in December around the world
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Happy Holidays!

Eva Miranda via Google+

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Toi Thomas originally shared this
 
#OurAuthorGang presents a tribute to some of the December Holidays celebrated around the world.
 
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