While we're on the subject...
Dec. 24th, 2005 04:19 pmI've decided. I can't leave holidays up to their parents. Because Jenn'd mess everything up!
*blinks*
No, really, this isn't as crazy as it sounds. Jenn really doesn't get as enthused about holidays as I do, so it makes sense that I should, um, be a driving force here. Besides, it'd give me something to *do* with all my holiday-related enthusiasm, while giving Jenn et al. a chance to not have to do anything.
Naturally, I'm taking my reasoning as an excuse to go completely overboard with holidays of all sorts.
So! *cracks knuckles* What're some common things people do for various holidays wherever you're from? What do you think of those things? What does your family do?
Yes, this post is prompted by the discovery that one can order Christmas Crackers online and get them in the US. It sounds about as fun as fortune cookies, and I'm always up for that. (Hey - it's for the kids, right? As we all know, that justifies everything! Yes, even that! And that! In all seriousness, I think it justifies letting me do something constructive with my insanity.)
Edit: They don't have to be strictly holiday traditions. Just post.
Edit again: I still don't want kids of my own. They'd be spoiled brats. Seriously. And I wouldn't get to go home every day.
*blinks*
No, really, this isn't as crazy as it sounds. Jenn really doesn't get as enthused about holidays as I do, so it makes sense that I should, um, be a driving force here. Besides, it'd give me something to *do* with all my holiday-related enthusiasm, while giving Jenn et al. a chance to not have to do anything.
Naturally, I'm taking my reasoning as an excuse to go completely overboard with holidays of all sorts.
So! *cracks knuckles* What're some common things people do for various holidays wherever you're from? What do you think of those things? What does your family do?
Yes, this post is prompted by the discovery that one can order Christmas Crackers online and get them in the US. It sounds about as fun as fortune cookies, and I'm always up for that. (Hey - it's for the kids, right? As we all know, that justifies everything! Yes, even that! And that! In all seriousness, I think it justifies letting me do something constructive with my insanity.)
Edit: They don't have to be strictly holiday traditions. Just post.
Edit again: I still don't want kids of my own. They'd be spoiled brats. Seriously. And I wouldn't get to go home every day.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:43 pm (UTC)Until last year, when I'd finally moved away before the decorations went up, we always, always always made a new star for the tree every year, out of tin foli and cardboard and tape and glue and glitter. Thant was fun :D And we still get stockings (not proper Christmassy ones, they never have been- just Dad's old fishing socks which are really thick and wooly) on Christmas morning, delivered by Santa, which have to have a satsuma in the toe even though we're all aware that my brother will not eat his at all and will give it to me immediately. And it used to be a Christmas Eve tradition to watch the Snwoman (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084701/) and Father Christmas (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0180691/) (reliably on on Channel 4, around 3pm on Christmas eve every year!), except this year the Snowman's on on Christmas Day and I don't seem to have seen Father Christmas in years. I've never been able to shake the need to watch them though.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:52 pm (UTC)Oooh, and the Twilight Zone Marathon on New Years.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:43 pm (UTC)Carol services, carol singing around the houses, Christmas tree and decorations up on Christmas Eve, mince pies out for Father Christmas that night (it's 9.40pm here and we've put our son to bed and eaten the mince pies already <g>), stockings hung on the bedposts or draped over the foot of the bed, getting up very early and eating the traditional chocolate/satsuma/nuts out of the stocking, turkey dinner (not the same set-up as a Thanksgiving dinner, though), crackers at dinner, the Queen's speech, Christmas sitcom specials on TV, selection boxes (Cadbury's chocolate bars, mmm), sherry for the grown-ups and coma-inducing sugar highs for the kids, turkey curry on Boxing Day, bank holidays (two this year, Monday and Tuesday), 12 Days of Christmas culminating in a Twelfth Night party when all the decorations come down. ;-D
no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:51 pm (UTC)Now, on the stockings. In the US, you buy these very stylized stockings and hang them over your mantlepiece (or, failing that, someplace mantle-like) and they stay there until you take the gifties out later. But I remember reading that in England you use actual socks?
12th Night, that's the day before Little Christmas, right? Which you only find a very few Americans celebrate (mostly Hispanics, and they call it Three Kings Day, I've discovered) - we're really deprived :(
no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:55 pm (UTC)12th Night - yes, the night before Epiphany. Epiphany's not widely celebrated in the UK, except via Twelfth Night and church, but much of Europe makes a fuss of it and thus so do my Italian half of the family. We may keep up those traditions for my son, we may not, not sure yet.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 10:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-25 08:07 pm (UTC)http://shop.store.yahoo.com/bobbleheadworldstore/nununspwi.html
no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 11:06 pm (UTC)I'm not really doing anything this Christmas but usually people here have a Barbeque and go for a swim and play in the sun and eat salad and cold chicken. I imagine it being summer here makes quite a difference :p.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-25 06:49 am (UTC)All my traditions revolve around food, Christmas Eve is the big deal, not Christmas day. Thats a day to recover from all the fish you eat.
Oh and my mom used to buy me pajamas every Christmas eve but she stopped a few years ago...but does for my kids so I guess thats ok.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-28 08:52 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:43 pm (UTC)Until last year, when I'd finally moved away before the decorations went up, we always, always always made a new star for the tree every year, out of tin foli and cardboard and tape and glue and glitter. Thant was fun :D And we still get stockings (not proper Christmassy ones, they never have been- just Dad's old fishing socks which are really thick and wooly) on Christmas morning, delivered by Santa, which have to have a satsuma in the toe even though we're all aware that my brother will not eat his at all and will give it to me immediately. And it used to be a Christmas Eve tradition to watch the Snwoman (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084701/) and Father Christmas (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0180691/) (reliably on on Channel 4, around 3pm on Christmas eve every year!), except this year the Snowman's on on Christmas Day and I don't seem to have seen Father Christmas in years. I've never been able to shake the need to watch them though.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:52 pm (UTC)Oooh, and the Twilight Zone Marathon on New Years.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:43 pm (UTC)Carol services, carol singing around the houses, Christmas tree and decorations up on Christmas Eve, mince pies out for Father Christmas that night (it's 9.40pm here and we've put our son to bed and eaten the mince pies already <g>), stockings hung on the bedposts or draped over the foot of the bed, getting up very early and eating the traditional chocolate/satsuma/nuts out of the stocking, turkey dinner (not the same set-up as a Thanksgiving dinner, though), crackers at dinner, the Queen's speech, Christmas sitcom specials on TV, selection boxes (Cadbury's chocolate bars, mmm), sherry for the grown-ups and coma-inducing sugar highs for the kids, turkey curry on Boxing Day, bank holidays (two this year, Monday and Tuesday), 12 Days of Christmas culminating in a Twelfth Night party when all the decorations come down. ;-D
no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:51 pm (UTC)Now, on the stockings. In the US, you buy these very stylized stockings and hang them over your mantlepiece (or, failing that, someplace mantle-like) and they stay there until you take the gifties out later. But I remember reading that in England you use actual socks?
12th Night, that's the day before Little Christmas, right? Which you only find a very few Americans celebrate (mostly Hispanics, and they call it Three Kings Day, I've discovered) - we're really deprived :(
no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:55 pm (UTC)12th Night - yes, the night before Epiphany. Epiphany's not widely celebrated in the UK, except via Twelfth Night and church, but much of Europe makes a fuss of it and thus so do my Italian half of the family. We may keep up those traditions for my son, we may not, not sure yet.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 10:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-25 08:07 pm (UTC)http://shop.store.yahoo.com/bobbleheadworldstore/nununspwi.html
no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 09:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-24 11:06 pm (UTC)I'm not really doing anything this Christmas but usually people here have a Barbeque and go for a swim and play in the sun and eat salad and cold chicken. I imagine it being summer here makes quite a difference :p.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-25 06:49 am (UTC)All my traditions revolve around food, Christmas Eve is the big deal, not Christmas day. Thats a day to recover from all the fish you eat.
Oh and my mom used to buy me pajamas every Christmas eve but she stopped a few years ago...but does for my kids so I guess thats ok.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-28 08:52 am (UTC)