Holidays

I hear tell someone in Congress wants to make the Monday after Easter a Federal holiday. Seems to me just another way to take Christianity out of the most holy of Christian celebrations – if anything, the Friday before Easter should be the holiday.
I never really cared for this Monday substituting for an actual holiday. Holidays aren’t holidays anymore; they’ve turned into nothing more than 3-day weekends – mostly for the benefit of Federal employees. A paid day off work – who cares why?
I may not be Christian in the traditional sense but this is/was a Christian-based nation founded mostly on Christian principles. Unfortunately, it’s the Christian “turn the other cheek” that has led to the coming – or past – ruin of the nation and its ideals. As has been said: “Tolerance for the sake of tolerance is no virtue” … and we’ve seen the effects of too much tolerance. Now any attempt to return to those ideals will be met with laughter, derision, and lawsuits – “My rights are violated“; “I’m offended“.
Christmas and Easter are fundamental celebrations in this nation – yet neither can be properly acknowledged. But Ramadan is OK … Kwanzaa is OK.
The muse isn’t clear to me tonight and I’m not expressing myself as I desire but may I wish you all a Blessed Easter season.

I have been mostly non-religious for most of my life and believe in letting others do as they want and expect the same in return. You know, the “Golden Rule”. Does that make me religious?
Holidays for our family are all about family and nothing more, or less. I don’t care what a gov’t or other people think as long as it doesn’t effect me. Gov’t mandated holidays can be problematic when they cause me or mine to not be able to access gov’t controlled or influenced necessities, like banks or postal things.
Days off from work have always seemed enigmatic to me even when they are payed for. They are counterintuitive to the very reason for having a job – to earn money. And as much money as humanly possible. The only reason I can see for an employee to want a day off, payed of otherwise, is if they truly do not like their work. And if you don’t like your work you’ll not do it as well as you can. Fact. You’re always looking for a way to not work.
My wife and I will celebrate this coming Easter much like we have for the past 42 years, privately and smallish. I’ll give her an artificial flower arrangement and 2 BIG bags of M&M’s, and she’ll give me a Dove chocolate bunny which I will open immediately and bite the ears off!
The Golden Rule is mentioned in Matthew Chapter 7 as is “Do not give what is holy to dogs or throw your pearls before swine lest they trample them underfoot and turn and tear you to pieces”. For example is you feed corn to Canadian geese every winter, they cease to know they should fly south for the winter. If you oversupply homeless with housing and food, there is no inclination for them to get off drugs/booze and get a job. I believe turn the other cheek means to let many things go. We cannot go to war over anything and everything, yet we can be included to because man’s natural state is war. Someone flips me off while driving, so what? I am usually armed and there is no reason to escalate such infraction to violence. Christ did not ask us to be doormats to the world. Present to me and my family violence and I will likely react with extreme violence. Even Christ demonstrated that it is reasonable to be upset when injustice is present, as He did in the temple when it was turned into money making scheme.
I am a Christian. Let me make it very clear here that I am not going to be up for sainthood any time soon and I am not a theologian. I am just some dood finding his way.
Happy Easter season to you all.
Thank you, DT. I think you have expressed yourself very well. I wish
you and everyone who visits this site the same Blessing.
Here’s a poem, The Interface, by Gerard, posted four years ago today:
For My Fatherby Vanderleun on April 18,
The Interface
–for my father, Albert John Van der Leun
1.
The empty rituals and dusty opulence
of the nightmare’s obvious ending dwindle,
and the sounds of departing automobiles
fade into the thrum beyond the cul-de-sac.
Inside the house, my mother sits quietly,
surrounded by the plates of finger food
that everybody brought and no one ate,
and wonders if she should begin to take
his clothes from the closet, call the Goodwill.
Some blocks away, the Methodist minister
hangs his vestments on a peg,
and goes to lunch.
I drive the Skyway to the town named Paradise,
park his car at the canyon’s rim, and sit awhile
in the hot silence of the afternoon looking out
at the far Sierras where, in June, the winter lingers.
On the seat beside me, a well-taped cardboard cube
contains what remains of my father. I step out
and, taking the cube under my arm, begin to climb
down the canyon’s lava wall to the stream below.
The going is slow, but we get to the bottom by and by
and sitting on some moss, we rest awhile, the cube and I,
beside the snow-chilled stream.
The place we have come to is where the pines lean out
from the rounded boulders lodged above the stream;
where what the stream saves builds up in the backwater,
making in the mounds of matter an inventory of the year:
Rusted tins slumped under the fallen sighs of weeds,
diminishing echoes of the swallows’ chevroned wings,
laughs buoyed in the hollow belly of stunted trees,
gears, tires, the bones of birds, brilliant pebbles,
rasping windwhish of leaf fall crushed to dust,
the thunk of bone on bark, the thud of earth on wood,
the silence of soft ash sifted onto slow chill waters.
And in such silence, he fades forever.
2.
The stream, its waters revolving round
through river, ocean, clouds, and rain,
bears away the hands and eyes,
but still the memory remains,
answering, in pantomime, the questions never asked:
Are these reflections but the world without,
carried on but never borne onward, westward,
towards sunlight glazed on sea’s thigh?
Or are such frail forms shaped upon the water
all the things that are, and we above immersed in air
the forms that fade, only the mere mirrors of the stream?
Is this life all that is and, once life lost,
the end of all that was, with nothing
left to be, with no pine wind to taste,
nor sun to dapple mind with dream?
Is All that Is but ash dissolving,
our lives mere rain in circles falling?
Or are we yet the center of such circles?
Is our fall a rise beyond the shawl of night,
where all shall shine contained within
that single soul, that heart of stars;
that space where sun and water meet,
that golden hand whose wounded palm
once we have shimmered into sunlight,
still remains held out forever
and ever open even in the coldest light of day.
***
Happy Easter to all.
Am I the only one who thinks that it is dusty in here?
My God. He was such a wonderful writer.
And yes….Happy Easter, everyone.
Dare I say, legendary?
Thank you, Walt. A perfect Easter offering.
Spring has sprung.
The fritillaries are blooming.
Happy Easter to all!