Fat Tuesday, eh?
Feb. 24th, 2009 09:14 amIt's that time again apparently.
I am not Catholic, not even in the recovering sense. The closest I've ever gotten to being so is going to St. Patrick's in NY around Christmas to light candles for people. But I've always been fascinated by Lent. Really I've also been fascinated by Ramadan and Passover as well, as all three holidays seem to work on the same principle of ritual fasting from something, usually food, but really any sort of usual indulgence will do. And I've always admired people who manage to tough it out without $x for the month, 40ish days, 2 weeks whatever. My willpower is not that strong.
I've been amused by what people giving up for Lent this year. Sex. Facebook. Livejournal. The Internet. 4chan.Caffeine. Sugar. Exercise (this from a dedicated nigh unto rabid gymbunny). TV. Shopping. I'll be interested to know how people do with that. I've also heard of people who are not exactly Christian taking a different spin on it and adding something to their lives instead of giving something up, usually in the vein of healthier choices (exercise, vegetables) or just dedicating the time to projects or aspects of their lives that have been previously neglected - hanging out with friends more, working on that creative pursuit every day of the 45, seeing one new movie per day, reading like a fiend). Some people are doing a combination of both.
I'm always tempted to do something for it, personally, but I never really know what to do, and I don't have much faith in my ability to sustain something consistently for over a month, be it giving something up or adding something in. Hell, these days I can barely manage a week. It's why I don't do New Years resolutions either. But I suppose you'll never know what you can do unless you try, right?
I am not Catholic, not even in the recovering sense. The closest I've ever gotten to being so is going to St. Patrick's in NY around Christmas to light candles for people. But I've always been fascinated by Lent. Really I've also been fascinated by Ramadan and Passover as well, as all three holidays seem to work on the same principle of ritual fasting from something, usually food, but really any sort of usual indulgence will do. And I've always admired people who manage to tough it out without $x for the month, 40ish days, 2 weeks whatever. My willpower is not that strong.
I've been amused by what people giving up for Lent this year. Sex. Facebook. Livejournal. The Internet. 4chan.Caffeine. Sugar. Exercise (this from a dedicated nigh unto rabid gymbunny). TV. Shopping. I'll be interested to know how people do with that. I've also heard of people who are not exactly Christian taking a different spin on it and adding something to their lives instead of giving something up, usually in the vein of healthier choices (exercise, vegetables) or just dedicating the time to projects or aspects of their lives that have been previously neglected - hanging out with friends more, working on that creative pursuit every day of the 45, seeing one new movie per day, reading like a fiend). Some people are doing a combination of both.
I'm always tempted to do something for it, personally, but I never really know what to do, and I don't have much faith in my ability to sustain something consistently for over a month, be it giving something up or adding something in. Hell, these days I can barely manage a week. It's why I don't do New Years resolutions either. But I suppose you'll never know what you can do unless you try, right?
no subject
Date: 2009-02-24 02:22 pm (UTC)Personally, I do both (giving up and taking on) because for me the intent is to meditate on what keeps me removed from God/general Divine/being the best fin that I can be, and there are honestly things I could stand to give up and things I could start to do to help accomplish that goal.
And sometimes you tell yourself "today is the only day I have to make it through" and you make it through that day. You just keep on doing that. If there's a day you fuck up, you just accept it and move on, don't beat yourself up, and when you wake up tomorrow, tell yourself "today is the only day I have to make it through".
no subject
Date: 2009-02-24 02:47 pm (UTC)We also had to follow the tradition of no meat on Fridays not just during Lent, but throughout the entire year. Since I don't eat seafood of any kind the first thing I always wanted to give up for Lent was fish, and everyone just laughed at me.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-24 03:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-02-24 03:35 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-02-24 03:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-02-24 05:13 pm (UTC)I know that in my experience as an Episcopalian, there are a lot of former RCers come into our church (they joke that we're Catholic Lite) and though it's lovely to see a surge in that congregation, I do feel bad that it seems that their own Church is pushing them away like that.
Thank you for sharing your experiences with me! It's good to remember that not every congregation/area has the same traditions, even though generally the RC Church is very big on traditions as a whole.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-24 05:35 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-02-24 08:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-02-25 03:30 am (UTC)That time of year also marked the most excitement I have ever seen two grown men exhibit toward birthday cake. My Academic Directors had gone to a lot of trouble to get me a cake, and about four seconds after prayer they were both hammering on the door of my room. "We have a surprise for you! You should come down and see it! YOU SHOULD COME AND SEE IT RIGHT NOW!" These were the sorts of guys who would have played through Portal even if the stakes never got raised. (And who would probably been a lot more vengeful upon finding out it was a lie.)
I didn't participate on the grounds that I am an atheist and that I was already having enough trouble eating. But I tried not to eat in front of people or be a jerk about it.[/tangent]
Shakabuku
Date: 2009-02-25 04:27 am (UTC)This year, I'll practice meditating every day. It's a different form of discipline, and also counts under bringing something in to my life. Double score!
So... what do you want to give up? I have a really hard suggestion, if you're interested. And it's not a personal commentary--its something I'm also trying to give up, though I haven't made it into a Lent thing because I'm not sure how I'd police it for me. But, given that you actually frequently post things, here's the suggestion: Give up venting.
No, really. I've been seeing a therapist for my insomnia issues, and he mentioned that venting doesn't alleviate negative emotion--it does the opposite. The longer you vent, the longer you're in a negative mindset. And while I think emotional expression is absolutely important, maybe figuring out where the line is between between healthy expression and venting/keeping yourself in a negative place would be useful.
Totally take my suggestion with a grain of salt. Or an entire salt lick. But you posted on Lent and I've gotten the sense from your blog that you want to get rid of negativity. Maybe this could be your shakabuku.
But don't give up writing/blogging. And take each day at a time to figure out what expressing yourself without venting means. It should not mean letting others walk all over you or repressing yourself. I will whap you for that, and you'll soon be within whapping range. :)
So... you interested? Or am I crazy?