As people wished me a happy new year today I thought what are the we really celabreating?
The earth going around the sun approximately one time? That could be any day of the year if you think about. Yet today is the day they chose to start the calendar over.
So today we celebrate a new year, a new being to a future that we don't know but we hope for the best. Maybe thats all its really about.
So I say to all of you. Happy earth revolving around the sun day!!
Talk About Anything
Happy earth revolving around the sun day!
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gabrile23 - Posts: 1341
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Re: Happy earth revolving around the sun day!
i'm too hungover to know what your talking about...but right back at you!!!
Jesus Christ walks into a hotel, he hands the innkeeper 3 nails and he asks, "Can you put me up for the night?"
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Noodlez - ...on crack
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Re: Happy earth revolving around the sun day!
hahahaha happy revolving day to you too!!!
Ryan voted for me!!!
PSN: WHO_99
Rank: Sergeant (as of September 27th)
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Tue Jan 20, 2009 - 0-22 in resistance 2 online lol
PSN: WHO_99
Rank: Sergeant (as of September 27th)
website rank - Thumbs Up (officially awarded to me by fish)
8/26/08 - 13 sniper kills made in 1 game
1st Lt. of the RRB ground pounder squadron
Tue Jan 20, 2009 - 0-22 in resistance 2 online lol
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WHO_99 - Thumbs Up
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Re: Happy earth revolving around the sun day!
gabe you touch my heart and sense of humor. yes i would celebrate the earths orbit of the big yellow one.
you get a marathon of marx bro movies that night
you get a marathon of marx bro movies that night
MeatMonkeyMayhem
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twistedblister - Moderator
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Re: Happy earth revolving around the sun day!
WHO_99 wrote:hahahaha happy revolving day to you too!!!
Thanks who and noodlez.
It sounds like you had a lot of fun nood.
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gabrile23 - Posts: 1341
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Re: Happy earth revolving around the sun day!
twistedblister wrote:gabe you touch my heart and sense of humor. yes i would celebrate the earths orbit of the big yellow one.
you get a marathon of marx bro movies that night
Im glad you like my odd sense of humor TB.
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gabrile23 - Posts: 1341
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Re: Happy earth revolving around the sun day!
Gabe, I like your thinking so much better than the supposed truth
copy paste ftw...
Why do we celebrate New Year's Day on January 1st? It all goes back to Julius Caesar. Well, actually that date was chosen in 153 B.C. by the Roman Senate. That didn't matter much though, the New Year's Eve
date was celebrated whenever folks wanted to.........until Julius Caesar decided in 46 BC that it WOULD be celebrated on January 1st.
Julius actually created the Julian calender that year and decided the New Year would start on January 1st. That first year he had to make the year last 445 days in order to synchronize the calendar with the sun!
You'd think the New Year would be celebrated sometime around Spring. When things began to grow and everyone was glad to survive the winter. The Babylonians sure thought so! They celebrated New Year's Eve in 2000 B.C. with the first New Moon after the Vernal Equinox. Their celebration of New Year's actually lasted 11 days. The celebration was called Akitu.
Akitu was an enactment of a mythical battle fought between the new god Marduk and the old goddess Tiamet. It was the story of creation and sought to show bringing heaven and earth back into synch. They wanted to start the New Year fresh! At the end of the festival oracles were cast to determine the fate of the coming 12 months. Their most popular resolution was to return borrowed farm equipment!
That sure sounds like a battle between old man time of the passing year versus the new baby of the New Year. Add in some resolutions to determine your fate for the next 12 months! Actually the image of a baby was introduced by the Greeks somewhere around 600 B.C. They celebrated their God Wine, Dionysus by putting a baby in a basket on parade. That baby represented the annual rebirth of Dionysus as the spirit of fertility and rebirth.
Some Christian denominations celebrate New Year's Eve because they believe that was when Jesus Christ was circumcised!
Many churches today celebrate New Year's Eve with a "Watch Night". They start before midnight and going into the early morning. It's a time for giving thanks for all the blessing received in the old
year and praying for blessings in the New Year. The Moravians landed in the United States in the late 1700's. It's believed they started "Watch Night". Later on John Wesley (founder of the Methodists) picked up the tradition. In 1862, African Americans had their own very special Watch Night on New Year's Eve. January 1, 1863 was the effective date of the Emanicipation Proclamation. It was then known as "Freedom's Eve".
The Chinese invented fireworks and used them especially on New Year's Eve to dispel evil spirits. They didn't want those nasty spirits following them into the New Year!
What kind of traditions do we follow on New Year's Day? Lots of them! Here's just a few.
1. Kissing your loved one at midnight. Start off the New Year expressing love to last through the New Year. Kiss someone else and have your loved one mad at you for a year. Yikes!
2. First footer. That's a Scottish term. A first footer is the first person to enter your house on January 1st. Preferably, he should be about 210 pounds and tall, not cross eyed and have dark hair. You have to let him in (as opposed to him using a key). He should bring gifts like coal (to stoke the fire because it's cold in Scotland in January). He's got to come in one door and leave from another door. Don't let redheads or blondes be your first footer - they bring bad luck!.
3. Don't do laundry on New Year's Day! A family member could be 'washed away' (die) in the following months.
4. Don't pay back loans or lend money on New Year's Day. That means you will do that all year long!
5. Do something related to your work on New Years Day. And be successful at it! Don't do a lot of it though, because that would be bad luck.
www.fabulousfoods.com lists the following as food things to do to celebrate the New Years:
* Eating noodles at midnight is customary at Buddhist temples in Japan.
* A German/Pennsylvania Dutch tradition is to eat pork and sauerkraut on New Year's day for good luck.
* It is the tradition of Bosnia & Croatia (both of former Yugoslavia) to eat what is called "Sarma" or beef wrapped tightly in cabbage to bring good luck in health and wealth for the upcoming year.
* It is a Cuban tradition to eat 12 grapes at the stroke of midnight. The 12 grapes signify the last twelve months of the year.
* German folklore says that eating herring at the stroke of midnight will bring luck for the next year.
* Eating pickled herring as the first bite of the New Year brings good luck to those of Polish descent.
* In the southern United States, it is believed eating black eyed peas on New Year's eve will bring luck for the coming year.
* Also from the south comes the custom of eating greens such as cabbage, collard greens, mustard greens, kale or spinach to bring money.
* One more from the Southerners: eating cornbread will bring wealth.
* The Southern custom of eating greens can be found in other cultures as well, although the cabbage can take many forms, such as sauerkraut or even kimchee.
* In the Philippines, it is important to have food on the table at midnight in order to insure an abundance of food in the upcoming year.
Happy New Year!
copy paste ftw...
Why do we celebrate New Year's Day on January 1st? It all goes back to Julius Caesar. Well, actually that date was chosen in 153 B.C. by the Roman Senate. That didn't matter much though, the New Year's Eve
date was celebrated whenever folks wanted to.........until Julius Caesar decided in 46 BC that it WOULD be celebrated on January 1st.
Julius actually created the Julian calender that year and decided the New Year would start on January 1st. That first year he had to make the year last 445 days in order to synchronize the calendar with the sun!
You'd think the New Year would be celebrated sometime around Spring. When things began to grow and everyone was glad to survive the winter. The Babylonians sure thought so! They celebrated New Year's Eve in 2000 B.C. with the first New Moon after the Vernal Equinox. Their celebration of New Year's actually lasted 11 days. The celebration was called Akitu.
Akitu was an enactment of a mythical battle fought between the new god Marduk and the old goddess Tiamet. It was the story of creation and sought to show bringing heaven and earth back into synch. They wanted to start the New Year fresh! At the end of the festival oracles were cast to determine the fate of the coming 12 months. Their most popular resolution was to return borrowed farm equipment!
That sure sounds like a battle between old man time of the passing year versus the new baby of the New Year. Add in some resolutions to determine your fate for the next 12 months! Actually the image of a baby was introduced by the Greeks somewhere around 600 B.C. They celebrated their God Wine, Dionysus by putting a baby in a basket on parade. That baby represented the annual rebirth of Dionysus as the spirit of fertility and rebirth.
Some Christian denominations celebrate New Year's Eve because they believe that was when Jesus Christ was circumcised!
Many churches today celebrate New Year's Eve with a "Watch Night". They start before midnight and going into the early morning. It's a time for giving thanks for all the blessing received in the old
year and praying for blessings in the New Year. The Moravians landed in the United States in the late 1700's. It's believed they started "Watch Night". Later on John Wesley (founder of the Methodists) picked up the tradition. In 1862, African Americans had their own very special Watch Night on New Year's Eve. January 1, 1863 was the effective date of the Emanicipation Proclamation. It was then known as "Freedom's Eve".
The Chinese invented fireworks and used them especially on New Year's Eve to dispel evil spirits. They didn't want those nasty spirits following them into the New Year!
What kind of traditions do we follow on New Year's Day? Lots of them! Here's just a few.
1. Kissing your loved one at midnight. Start off the New Year expressing love to last through the New Year. Kiss someone else and have your loved one mad at you for a year. Yikes!
2. First footer. That's a Scottish term. A first footer is the first person to enter your house on January 1st. Preferably, he should be about 210 pounds and tall, not cross eyed and have dark hair. You have to let him in (as opposed to him using a key). He should bring gifts like coal (to stoke the fire because it's cold in Scotland in January). He's got to come in one door and leave from another door. Don't let redheads or blondes be your first footer - they bring bad luck!.
3. Don't do laundry on New Year's Day! A family member could be 'washed away' (die) in the following months.
4. Don't pay back loans or lend money on New Year's Day. That means you will do that all year long!
5. Do something related to your work on New Years Day. And be successful at it! Don't do a lot of it though, because that would be bad luck.
www.fabulousfoods.com lists the following as food things to do to celebrate the New Years:
* Eating noodles at midnight is customary at Buddhist temples in Japan.
* A German/Pennsylvania Dutch tradition is to eat pork and sauerkraut on New Year's day for good luck.
* It is the tradition of Bosnia & Croatia (both of former Yugoslavia) to eat what is called "Sarma" or beef wrapped tightly in cabbage to bring good luck in health and wealth for the upcoming year.
* It is a Cuban tradition to eat 12 grapes at the stroke of midnight. The 12 grapes signify the last twelve months of the year.
* German folklore says that eating herring at the stroke of midnight will bring luck for the next year.
* Eating pickled herring as the first bite of the New Year brings good luck to those of Polish descent.
* In the southern United States, it is believed eating black eyed peas on New Year's eve will bring luck for the coming year.
* Also from the south comes the custom of eating greens such as cabbage, collard greens, mustard greens, kale or spinach to bring money.
* One more from the Southerners: eating cornbread will bring wealth.
* The Southern custom of eating greens can be found in other cultures as well, although the cabbage can take many forms, such as sauerkraut or even kimchee.
* In the Philippines, it is important to have food on the table at midnight in order to insure an abundance of food in the upcoming year.
Happy New Year!
I hate it when the voices in my head go silent.....I never know what those fuckers are up to.
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fishki - Site Admin
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Re: Happy earth revolving around the sun day!
OMFG. another reason why i have really love this site. i learned somthing today. woooooooooooooooooot
the souhtern one with black eyed peas and cabbage yeah every year as a child we did this. :-)
the souhtern one with black eyed peas and cabbage yeah every year as a child we did this. :-)
MeatMonkeyMayhem
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twistedblister - Moderator
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Re: Happy earth revolving around the sun day!
Fish, I'm so glad you didn't type all that...
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twistedblister - Moderator
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Re: Happy earth revolving around the sun day!
* Eating noodles at midnight is customary at Buddhist temples in Japan. NOOOOOOOOOOOOOO wait never mind.
* A German/Pennsylvania Dutch tradition is to eat pork and sauerkraut on New Year's day for good luck.
I live in PA and someone at work told me this. unfortunately I don't like sauerkraut.
* A German/Pennsylvania Dutch tradition is to eat pork and sauerkraut on New Year's day for good luck.
I live in PA and someone at work told me this. unfortunately I don't like sauerkraut.
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gabrile23 - Posts: 1341
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Re: Happy earth revolving around the sun day!
I'm Dutch and i never heard of eating saurkraut with new year... We just get completely drunk and wake-up round 3pm the next day Oh and it is TIAMAT and not TIAMET... Any way.. Love your thinking gabe, and next year i'm going to celebrate it for 11 days
"Whenever people agree with me I always feel I must be wrong."
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nymphetomine - Posts: 676
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Re: Happy earth revolving around the sun day!
gabrile23 wrote:* Eating noodles at midnight is customary at Buddhist temples in Japan. NOOOOOOOOOOOOOO wait never mind.
* A German/Pennsylvania Dutch tradition is to eat pork and sauerkraut on New Year's day for good luck.
I live in PA and someone at work told me this. unfortunately I don't like sauerkraut.
duuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuude i love sauerkraut and pork or on a ruben mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm kick but
MeatMonkeyMayhem
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twistedblister - Moderator
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Re: Happy earth revolving around the sun day!
ha. happy new year Nymph. ha. rent an old George carlin. the one at Carnagie i think he does a bit on have a nice day. ha. you reminded me of that.
MeatMonkeyMayhem
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twistedblister - Moderator
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14 posts
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