Posted January 05, 2015
j0ekerr: Gooood Morning GOOOOG!
As some of you may have noticed, (most will not, I mean, who pays attentions to the ramblings of a psychopathic bunny whose first soluton for any given problem is always chainsaw?) I've been rather insistent with the whole date of epiphany, almost obnoxiously so.
Today I will explain why with some detail.
Today is the 5th, known as Night of the Kings or Night of the Magi (or epiphany's eve). It is the day before the last day of christmas and it is also known as the night of the children. Why? Because tonight the 3 wise men, or magi, will deliver toys to all the good chidren. Throughout the day, there will be parades with fantasy floats in all the major cities, and even small towns, in which the 3 magi will travel in procession, and shower everyone who comes to see with candies thrown with machine gun intensity. There's always someone who gets hit in the eye by a particularly powerfully thrown piece candy and complains about it later. Some of the smaller parades even give out small inexpensive toys. Tomorrow morning, the children will wake up to find their shoes filled with presents, or coal if they've been bad.
We give our presents on the very last day of christmas, not the first. As a child I used to despair about having to wait until the very end to get my presents. But even then, I liked having something to look forward to. As an adult, I like having an important celebration still being left after christmas and new year. Something big and flashy to finish the festivities with. I've always thought that in other countries christmas seemed to dwindle away, and went off, not with a bang, but with a whimper.
It also means we get one more day of national holiday wohoooo!
And, that in the spirit of giving, I will be doing a (very) small giveaway.
I meant to respond to this earlier but my head almost exploded (not because of your post!). I find it really interesting how major religious festivals are celebrated around the world. I don't have a religious cell in my body (well, maybe one or two, but I couldn't tell you where they are) but it fascinates and intrigues me how the same basic stories/theologies are interpreted from country to country, and the effect that belief has on different people(s). I found the above post really interesting, so thank you for that, and I hope you are having/will have a pleasurable experience...with no coal in your shoes. Its at times like this that this forum really delivers by popping me out of the bubble I spend most of my time in and making me aware that, although we are basically all the same, we have significant differences that need to be understood and even embraced, if only for the fact that by doing so we give ourselves (I'm talking about the world here, not just the forum) a better chance of getting on. Sermon over, but thanks again ;-)As some of you may have noticed, (most will not, I mean, who pays attentions to the ramblings of a psychopathic bunny whose first soluton for any given problem is always chainsaw?) I've been rather insistent with the whole date of epiphany, almost obnoxiously so.
Today I will explain why with some detail.
Today is the 5th, known as Night of the Kings or Night of the Magi (or epiphany's eve). It is the day before the last day of christmas and it is also known as the night of the children. Why? Because tonight the 3 wise men, or magi, will deliver toys to all the good chidren. Throughout the day, there will be parades with fantasy floats in all the major cities, and even small towns, in which the 3 magi will travel in procession, and shower everyone who comes to see with candies thrown with machine gun intensity. There's always someone who gets hit in the eye by a particularly powerfully thrown piece candy and complains about it later. Some of the smaller parades even give out small inexpensive toys. Tomorrow morning, the children will wake up to find their shoes filled with presents, or coal if they've been bad.
We give our presents on the very last day of christmas, not the first. As a child I used to despair about having to wait until the very end to get my presents. But even then, I liked having something to look forward to. As an adult, I like having an important celebration still being left after christmas and new year. Something big and flashy to finish the festivities with. I've always thought that in other countries christmas seemed to dwindle away, and went off, not with a bang, but with a whimper.
It also means we get one more day of national holiday wohoooo!
And, that in the spirit of giving, I will be doing a (very) small giveaway.
Post edited January 05, 2015 by Stilton