I do, but the Baby Jesus should get a look in too; it is a Christian festival on the top of a Pagan one.
It would be a great shame if it became simply a commercial one, although we seem to be heading that way on the journey to Hell, in a heavily sponsored handcart.
pagan religious festival
christian religious festival
consumerism religious festival
it is the (xmas) present
I think that's what my rantiness is aimed at; I really don't want Christmas to be a commercial event, not solely.
I don't do religion really, but I would rather that Christmas stayed religious than became some bastardised bump on a balance sheet, some cash driven festival of consumerism where the emotion is derived from the latest shop advert rather than any true feeling for our fellow people.
I'm not a misanthrope, I'm upset by the crass and shallow way we have come to appreciate something that despite all the crap, despite all the rubbish, is actually a genuine Good Thing, in a world where such things are increasingly rare.
I think in a tiny way.. those john lewis adverts are doing just what you ask..
using the powerful tool of the media bring a bit of love and sentiment into the proceedings.. if they sell a few more suitcases and socks on the back of it then fair play.. at least they made an effort
no one's a saint these days are they nicholas..?
I'm with Crikey on this, Christmas ads are the very definition of bathetic.
I think that probably speaks more about the penetration and power of the media within our society than about actual love and/or sentiment.
Dunno.
For all my grumpy ranting, I think I'm probably more of a romantic than those who think adverts can/should/do provoke emotion.
It's not about that. Christmas is a special time, but it has been hijacked, it has been appropriated by people who for all their 'artistry' and 'talent', will still sell their souls to the highest bidder.
I sat with a dying man this summer. He told me how much he earned, working for a big advertising company in London. He told me the campaigns he worked on, told me the work he had done and where to see it.
Then he told me that after 10 years of doing it, he realised he had sold his soul.
I don't really believe in souls, but I understand what he meant by it.
I'm actually on your side with this.. but I've gotten so fed up with mrs yunki telling me that I'm festively challenged that I've made an effort to embrace it all in recent years..
and besides.. it's a time for the kids really isn't it..?
How do you inject proceedings with a bit more integrity with regards to how the kids see the festivities..?
Again, dunno.
Opposition to the Commercial Christmas that seems to be the norm is a delicate tightrope to walk, because the default response is to be called Scrooge, and be accused of being a grumpy auld sod.
Yet Christmas and the associated emotions are one of the few times in the year that I do sit back and think about exactly these things, about the expectations that the media forces on us, about commerce and the crass, intrusive way we are expected to respond.
I make an effort to see my friends, to see my family, and to be as ...well... nice as I can to people who aren't going to have as good a time as me...
