Mother’s
Day and Father’s Day are token holidays.
Actually, for a non-religious person, all of the holidays are a token. On the 4th of July people blow
things up, and I guarantee that most kids are NOT thinking about the cost of
American independence when they light each fuse. But Mother’s and Father’s Day are unique
because they don’t celebrate an event so much as they attempt to celebrate an IDEA: “you are appreciated”.
The
best presents are trivial: handmade
cards, hand-picked flowers, an invitation to lunch. The present itself is largely irrelevant. Children are not supposed to present lavish
gifts to their parents; it’s the thought that counts. I realize the propensity to revert to a cliché
here, but clichés are sometimes idioms:
self-evident truths. I don’t care
about the gift, but I do pay attention to the effort. When a child makes no effort to reciprocate
generosity or acknowledge sacrifice, the “token” gift becomes symbolic. It’s no longer just a card; it’s a LACK of a
card. It’s a LACK of acknowledgement. That means something.
A birthday
falls under the same general category. A
birth is an incredible series of events, in which a mother takes every single
bit of energy (both mental and physical) she has, and gives birth to a
person. And who gets celebrated? Not the person who agonized through labor or
worried about the details for nine months.
The child gets celebrated. The
one person who did absolutely nothing but arrive is the one who is showered
with gifts and taught to think they did something special.
All the
celebratory things that people do seem so odd to me. They celebrate Christmas by buying gifts
under the guise of Jesus’s birth. They
celebrate Lent by giving up something inane, when they should really being
giving up FOOD for 40 days.
I want
to celebrate, but I’m afraid I’m going to have to create my own celebratory
days to acknowledge, because I can’t subscribe to the stupidity of common
culture. I’m not a downer; I’m not a
depressive – I’m simply tired of the same old bullshit masquerading as “tradition”. Celebrations should be spontaneous and
revolutionary, not required. Suggestions
welcome.
birthdays aren't saying a person did anything by arriving, it is simply an appreciation for life in general (at least to me) the celebration because people are happy that a person had another year of life. Most holidays can go screw themselves though I must admit. The only reason i like holidays is that there is half-priced candy the day after the holiday. More capitalistic motivation
ReplyDeleteI don't think that holidays can technically screw themselves, but I am also a fan of the post-holiday capitalism sales. And though birthdays are pretty lame, I do love any excuse to go out to eat and bake things. So...
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