I mknow there has to be a few...….who celebrate nothing!
I celebrate many things, but I don't celebrate the non-birthday of a person that didn't exist. My family calls themselves Christian, but most are non-religious and only identify themselves that way. They wouldn't go to church unless it the big one was coming and the church was the only fallout shelter within 100 miles. They go batshit crazy for Christmas though, no expense spared. That's what turned me off of it. If they celebrated in an understated "season of good cheer, time to be with family" kind of way I'd probably still go along with it. But as bad as it is for people who really believe in the fairy tales to get so caught up in the commercial aspects of the holiday to me it's 1000 times worse to see non-believers get so gung-ho about it. That turned me off completely and I ditched Christmas about the same time I ditched religion in general, high school. I have not participated in any aspects of the holiday for ages now and could not be happier that I get to skip it. What an incredible waste of time, effort and money for no good reason. Can't you invite your relatives over for drinks and food in the middle of February just because you want to? If the only time and the only reason you behave this way is because it's Christmas that's kind of sad.
And since the vast majority of the people in the world are non-Christian, I'm relatively sure I'm not alone in feeling that way.
I truly am sorry for your loss!Little brother died a couple of weeks ago, not really feeling it this year, but for the sake of the kids forcing myself to go to sister in laws....sigh...
I cant argue with you there! I have lost a lot of friends and some family. Christmas is just not the same!I don't anymore. It's not the same "Christmas" without the people you really care about. 🙁
That really sucks but, did this really come from out of the blue? Your company has no history of doing anything like this before?I think I've reached the age of being indifferent, but this year my employer made sure its employees would go into the end of the month with a very negative demeanor as we were all informed what after the first of the year we would once again be facing more workforce reductions (and for my org that means wireless infrastructure/deployment), abolish the telecommute benefit and expectations job hunting when you are +50 years old. So, this has made it so my family will not be celebrating any holidays, not taking any vacations, etc in the foreseeable future. Happy Surplusmas!
And within twelve hours of my org being told this our VP sends out a Happy Holidays company email wishing us well and suggesting we spend the time relaxing (with depression) and our families (while we have them). Wasn't that a nice double-edge message?
Little brother died a couple of weeks ago, not really feeling it this year, but for the sake of the kids forcing myself to go to sister in laws....sigh...
We dont buy a lot for Christmas. The kids get to choose a few things. It's more about getting family and friends around and feeding them too much food and giving them too much drink.Not really.
One of the things I liked about living in Asia is they don't really practice Christmas. You aren't bombarded with Christmas ads, and you aren't pressured to buy anything.
Well I'm slinking off for a sleep before my night shift its 1400 here, but theres a 92 year old and an 84 year old trying to work their way through my Christmas booze so I'd not necessarily agree that older people aren't into it!Seems like the older you get the more Christmas seems like work ... hopefully grandchildren will lighten the mood at some point!
Merry Christmas anyway ATOT! 🙂
Not really.
One of the things I liked about living in Asia is they don't really practice Christmas. You aren't bombarded with Christmas ads, and you aren't pressured to buy anything.
Lol yes they are part of the chhristmas consumerism. Even more so in Lunar New Year.
Probably. I know they like to spend just like we do. Sadly.
While it has issues that need to be addressed certainly, trade has been probably the single most prolific mechanisms for peace in human history.
Yeah, right up to the moment when it isn't.
Pop quiz, what do the American Revolutionary War, the American Civil War, the Opium Wars, the Punic Wars, the Anglo-Indian Wars and oh, about a dozen other wars have in common? For every two countries united in a beneficial trade relationship there are ten more that want to horn in on the action.