What are you holiday traditions?
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Not Christian personally, and my girlfriend grew up Messianic Jew, so Christmas isn't really a thing. She's not practicing so Hanukkah isn't really important either. Most important day to us is definitely the Winter Solstice. @ShaunS
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@thanksajdotcom said in What are you holiday traditions?:
Not Christian personally, and my girlfriend grew up Messianic Jew, so Christmas isn't really a thing. She's not practicing so Hanukkah isn't really important either. Most important day to us is definitely the Winter Solstice. @ShaunS
That's interesting - why that day?
As a non-religious person, I don't find one day more important than the next from a religious perspective. But I do have days of importance. My wedding day, my and my wife's birthdays.
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@thanksajdotcom said in What are you holiday traditions?:
Not Christian personally, and my girlfriend grew up Messianic Jew, so Christmas isn't really a thing. She's not practicing so Hanukkah isn't really important either. Most important day to us is definitely the Winter Solstice. @ShaunS
Pagan holidays are great, because they are aligned with stuff in nature. No cultural or religious dividing lines, just a celebration of the Earth doing what she does.
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@Dashrender said:
@thanksajdotcom said in What are you holiday traditions?:
Not Christian personally, and my girlfriend grew up Messianic Jew, so Christmas isn't really a thing. She's not practicing so Hanukkah isn't really important either. Most important day to us is definitely the Winter Solstice. @ShaunS
That's interesting - why that day?
As a non-religious person, I don't find one day more important than the next from a religious perspective. But I do have days of importance. My wedding day, my and my wife's birthdays.
Winter Solstice is a day of power. It's the transition between autumn and winter. We won't be "celebrating" but it's a significant day for us. That's all.
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@RojoLoco said in What are you holiday traditions?:
@thanksajdotcom said in What are you holiday traditions?:
Not Christian personally, and my girlfriend grew up Messianic Jew, so Christmas isn't really a thing. She's not practicing so Hanukkah isn't really important either. Most important day to us is definitely the Winter Solstice. @ShaunS
Pagan holidays are great, because they are aligned with stuff in nature. No cultural or religious dividing lines, just a celebration of the Earth doing what she does.
What I love about paganism, in general, is that it's not any set of hard-and-fast rules. It's very individualized and personal to each person, and if you wanted to classify it, it'd be much better quantified as a spectrum than by any specific set of beliefs.
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@thanksajdotcom said in What are you holiday traditions?:
@RojoLoco said in What are you holiday traditions?:
@thanksajdotcom said in What are you holiday traditions?:
Not Christian personally, and my girlfriend grew up Messianic Jew, so Christmas isn't really a thing. She's not practicing so Hanukkah isn't really important either. Most important day to us is definitely the Winter Solstice. @ShaunS
Pagan holidays are great, because they are aligned with stuff in nature. No cultural or religious dividing lines, just a celebration of the Earth doing what she does.
What I love about paganism, in general, is that it's not any set of hard-and-fast rules. It's very individualized and personal to each person, and if you wanted to classify it, it'd be much better quantified as a spectrum than by any specific set of beliefs.
Which is why I get along very well with pagans.
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@RojoLoco said in What are you holiday traditions?:
@thanksajdotcom said in What are you holiday traditions?:
@RojoLoco said in What are you holiday traditions?:
@thanksajdotcom said in What are you holiday traditions?:
Not Christian personally, and my girlfriend grew up Messianic Jew, so Christmas isn't really a thing. She's not practicing so Hanukkah isn't really important either. Most important day to us is definitely the Winter Solstice. @ShaunS
Pagan holidays are great, because they are aligned with stuff in nature. No cultural or religious dividing lines, just a celebration of the Earth doing what she does.
What I love about paganism, in general, is that it's not any set of hard-and-fast rules. It's very individualized and personal to each person, and if you wanted to classify it, it'd be much better quantified as a spectrum than by any specific set of beliefs.
Which is why I get along very well with pagans.
Same. I don't personally consider myself pagan, but I'm probably much closer to that than anything else at this point.
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Maybe we will watch White Christmas today while trapped in the hotel.