Tuesday, January 1, 2013

New Year's Day

Today is New Year's day! The traditions of New Year's Day are many. Most can be considered pure superstition, but the idea that you should keep in good spirits and have hope for the future just it isn't something that should be abandoned as nonsense. As the famous Catholic Bishop, Óscar Romero once said, “Hope is not resignation; it is a commitment to continue to struggle.”

On this, the first day of the Gregorian calendar, we should take time to train ourselves to not let minor problems in life overwhelm us. We should take note of the things that give us hope, and why hope itself is so important to us. And we can treat it as a fresh start, clearing our minds as much as possible, readying ourselves for the future. Doing all of these things once a year isn't nearly enough, but New Year's Day is the perfect time for us to do it all together!

Introduction.

I thought I should take a minute to explain why I’m doing this project. Why a holiday calendar is so important to me. I apologize if this post seems broken up. I'm still not sure if I'm completely happy with it, but I wanted to get it out as early as I could. There is so much to include but I did not want the introduction to be excessively long. Some of the major ideas of this came from a speech given by Alain de Botton about how he thinks the secular world should adopt the ritualistic, moralistic, and communal teaching methods of religion.

To paraphrase what he said, religions have had thousands of years of trial and error to learn the best ways giving us morality, guidance and consolation. There was a time when universities tried to offer these same things to students. They used culture instead of the doctrines of religion, teaching about people like Shakespeare, Plato, and Jane Austen. The idea hasn’t been forgotten, and it’s always mentioned in speeches like commencement addresses, those lyrical claims that the process of higher education will make us into nobler and better human beings. But, Alain de Botton and I believe that these claims simply aren't true anymore.

Universities are not in the business of personal assistance. They think of us as rational adults who just need information and data. And the way they teach is to sit us in a classroom, tell us about Plato, and then send us into our career for 40 years, thinking those lessons will stick with us somehow. Religions treat us as children in need of assistance, and over thousands of years of trial and error, they have come up with some fantastic ways of helping us grow and mature into stable, productive adults. Not just in what they teach, but in how they teach. Two important ways are repetition and calendars.

Alain de Botton feels that we need to restructure our secular world. I completely agree and what I would like to do is start the ball rolling with a holiday calendar. Calendars are a way of arranging time and making sure that, as we go through our year we come across certain very important ideas. On certain days we are given time to digest and think about specific ideas, deciding why they are important to us. We repeat the same calendar every year because repetition is the only way that we retain ideas and learning. And, synchronizing encounters means that we are given time to practice that very powerful tool, group learning! These are terrific ideas, and there is no reason why even a stark atheist shouldn’t find a reason to celebrate holidays like Christmas or even Easter. This blog is where I will introduce each holiday and explain how I believe we should celebrate them.