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article listingsholidays, history and traditions surrounding the winter solsticesubmitted by robertkamper on sat, 2007-12-15 20:37. terms: general articles
For several years I have been compiling mix CDs to send to friends and relatives during the winter solstice holiday season, and have been gradually moving away from tunes related to the celebration of Christmas and Hanukah to tunes with no particular religious association. Last year I went overboard and made four CDs, one which was primarily instrumental and non-religious, one which had piano and guitar instrumentals with no discrimination against the words that might go along with the music, one that was full of "pop culture" songs such as the cast of Bonanza or R2-D2, C3PO, and other characters from Star Wars, singing Christmas songs. The 4th CD was "I Don't Believe In Christmas" and featured a number of punk and other tunes that reject the modern observance of the holiday (for example, "Father Christmas" by the Kinks). The CD ended with non-religious but good tidings to all songs like "The Parting Glass", "May You Never", and "Auld Lang Syne". Since I knew that many of the tradiitions of the current winter holiday celebrations pre-dated the Christian religion, I thought I would do a little internet research on the pagan roots of this celebration that generally occurs around the winter solstice. Where to start but with a Christian oriented site on the origins of christmas?
tags: wiccan pagan christmas yule solstice mithra saturnalia wassail celtic oak king holly shamash sol invictus an irish tea storysubmitted by lesley on tue, 2006-11-28 14:58. terms: general articles
Susan's article on tea reminded me of my Irish roots and our deep love of that beverage we call tea. My grandparents came from the deep rural area of Southern Ontario that was populated by Irish immigrants during the potato famine years (mid-1800's). Even though they were born here in Canada, their parents, Irish to the bone, raised them with strong Irish traditions. As a child I recall visiting my grandparents and watching Grampa "putting the tea on"... driving below the speed limitsubmitted by daniel on fri, 2006-04-14 19:10. terms: general articles
I find it fascinating to see how severely upset people get when they come upon someone having the nerve to drive the speed limit. I used to drive about 20 km/h over the speed limit on a regular basis. I got very few speeding tickets over the years, and I never had an accident as a result of my speeding. But I was simply very, very lucky. tags: hybrid emissions tailgating ford escape speedlimit speeding ecodriving |
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