The Fourth is just an excuse to blow shit up.
I try and remember to hang my Army flag outside on June 14th, and we are good trick-or-treaters come All Hallows Eve.
But other than that, not so much.
So when I say that we really didn't plan for much celebration of the "Autumn Moon Festival" you should probably not be surprised.
Not. And especially not going home to have a big meal with the fam so the grands can pester the grandkids and complain about their kids, the uncles can get drunk and watch football, and the older kids sit out back in the cold smoking and bitching about having to do this every year, as our guide said was the real Chinese way to celebrate the mid-autumn festivities?
Yeah.
Right.
Ha.
But the funny thing is, we DID do some Moon Festivally-things this weekend.
Friday night we took blankets, pillows (and Pillow Pets) and a telescope out to the vast asphalt expanse of Astor Elementary playground and looked at the moon. Except that palled after a while, so the kiddos ran around while Mojo and I looked at Jupiter and its four Galilean moons, which was cooler.
And today we went downtown to the Lan Su Chinese Garden, took in some lion dancing and scoped out the foliage. Then went and at spaghetti for lunch which, as I explained to little Miss as she scarfed it down (girl is in the middle of a growth spurt, I swear, or has picked up a tapeworm...), was actually a Chinese invention.Then we went to Starbucks. So, OK, we weren't THAT autumn festivally.
But, hell, I think we deserve an "A" for effort.
3 comments:
Every celebration is worthy, regardless of how grandiose the effort.
In our case, yes, since we are such poor celebrators...
I think we all tend to forgo the proper celebrations of things that make life a pleasure. Instead, we're jammed into these silly calendar-approved themes.
If you do even mundane things with joy, you are a very GOOD celebrator. Good coffee and butter croissants is a veritable jubilee for me :) Add in a good read or pleasant convo, and what could be better?
There should be no "mandatory" celebrations.
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