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Valerie Tarico

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Celebrating Love and Light: 10 Holiday Tips for the Post-Religious

Posted: 12/16/10 01:49 PM ET

Is the holiday season more glitter than glow for you lately? Are you a former Christian who finds that hymns don't resonate anymore? Do you roll your eyes about the "war on Christmas" manufactroversy? Does the cherubic little Jesus-in-a-Manger fail to flood your body with sweetness? Do you feel mixed about participating in a religious holiday now that you're not religious? Get the scrooge out with these ten tips:

1. Remind yourself that our celebrations from December 21 through January 1 are not Christian in origin. All over the northern hemisphere, people have celebrated this time as one of birth and new life. Solstice is the reason for the season, and Dec. 25 was the day of solstice under the old Roman calendar. The return of light, the budding of new life, the promise of fresh starts -- these were particularly precious to agrarian people who entrusted themselves, one year at a time, to the cycle of the seasons, but they are precious to us all.

2. Discover the magical, mystical origins of the Christmas story. If you love mythology in any form, from the epic of Gilgamesh to the epic of Frodo Baggins, the Christmas narratives are rich with threads of hero quest that have been woven and rewoven and can be traced across time and culture. Why was the virgin birth added late to the Jesus story? Why were stories of dying and rising gods so common in the ancient Near East? What can these ancient stories tell us about who we are as human beings? Antiquities scholars, both Christian and secular, can set you on your own journey of discovery.

3. Claim what fits. In weddings, the saying "old, new, borrowed, blue" reminds us that mixing and matching are what ritual and celebration are made of. Every culture and religion borrows from those that came before. (Syncretism, they call it.) So does every person. So, pick what you cherish from your tradition or others and do your own mixing. One wonderful thing about moving beyond dogma is that the quest for meaning is yours. You and only you know which old traditions are still meaningful.

4. Don't be afraid to embrace explicitly Christian elements. If you've been wounded by Christianity or feel like our world is being wounded, it is easy to be bitter or reactive and to pass that reactance on to any children who look up to you. A better approach is to treat Christianity just like you would any other mythic or cultural tradition. All of them reflect the struggle of our ancestors to determine what is good and what is real and how to live in community with each other. All contain a mixture of wisdom and foolishness and downright immorality. Take what seems timeless and wise and move on.

5. Get creative. Draw on your inner artist. The best art takes old elements and assembles them in a way that is unique to the artist. Create your own rituals. What is your life about? What do you want to celebrate and with whom? What might the decorations look like? Which smells and tastes do you savor? What music does resonate? Do what feels genuine, and then persist. Developing a solid sense of ritual and tradition takes time and repetition.

6. Find common ground with visiting relatives. All relationships (teacher-student, work colleagues, friends, partners, children, cousins) require that we come together around things we have in common: shared interests, respect for each other's good qualities, overlapping values, the appreciation of a good meal or a football game. Your family may not share your skepticism, curiosity or desire for personal growth. If not, don't go there, and don't let them draw the conversations into your areas of disagreement. Take deep breaths, exercise self control, and change topics. Save deep, painful conversations for another time. Trust yourself. Schedule coffee with sympathetic friends. It may be sad, but it is ok for you to grow emotionally and spiritually even if people you love don't come along.

7. Be a little wicked if you like. Religious people use the holidays for drawing in new believers or old believers who have fallen by the wayside. Sometimes their evangelism comes from the thoughtless assumption that you share their point of view, and sometimes it is intentional. It's part of our cultural dynamic, so feel free to do the same. Send solstice cards. Invite even religious friends to your celebrations. Give a receptive friend the gift of growth: If someone is wobbling their way out of Christianity, give them a copy of my book, Trusting Doubt. For a friend who may be ready to move from born again "beliefism" to a more thoughtful form of Christian faith, give Bruce Bawer's Stealing Jesus. For someone who would like to see the Bible through the eyes of an unflinchingly honest Christian antiquities scholar, get Thom Stark's, The Human Faces of God.

8. Balance your gift giving. Stand on principle -- some of the time. Face it, certain kinds of gifts don't mean much, but not giving them does. Your integrity doesn't stand or fall based on whether you give the token "Christmas" gifts to your boss, co-workers or neighbors. Go to Starbucks and buy a dozen gift cards, or if time costs you less than money right now, bake those cookies. Tell people you wish them well -- because you do -- and be done with it. When it comes to real time and money, though . . .

9. Pay attention to your deeper values. Your resources are finite, so how do you want to use them? What are you trying to say to other people with your gifts -- about them, about you, about your relationship, about the things that make life rich and full and that you want to share with them? If you are tired of the consumer rat race, opt out. Give some Kiva credit or a goat through the Heifer Project, or adopt a sea turtle or whatever. Then wrap the gift certificate around a really good bar of chocolate.

10. Immerse yourself in the real gifts of the season -- love, light, joy, generosity, kindness, gratitude, wonder and shared hope. In the end, what else is there?

Valerie Tarico is a psychologist and writer in Seattle, Washington. She is the author of Trusting Doubt: A Former Evangelical Looks at Old Beliefs in a New Light, (Revised ed of The Dark Side) and the founder of www.WisdomCommons.org. Her articles can be found at Awaypoint.Wordpress.com.

 
 
 

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09:44 PM on 12/17/2010
Your experience of religion was repressive, conservative, and anti-free-thought. Consequently, you're convinced that looking at religion open-mindedly and critically necessarily involves getting out of it to some extent or another.

What you're really doing is reducing the whole of religion to your experience of it. No doubt, you feel you're being very fair and balanced in your view of Christ, Christmas, and midwinter festivals, but condemnation lite is still condemnation.

Re solstice being the reason for the season, please. Celebrations are about people, first, cycles of nature, second. Seen one midwinter festival and you've seen 'em all? Doubtful.
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07:50 PM on 12/17/2010
Hey Valerie, I just noticed the title of your book - "Trusting Doubt: A Former Evangelical Looks at Old Beliefs in a New Light". Without giving away the entire book; how did you manage to break away?
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JohnFromCensornati
The End is near
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08:47 PM on 12/17/2010
Muchas gracias.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
12:25 PM on 12/17/2010
You forgot the twelfth day of Christmas: Theophany (in the west: Epiphany). This commemorates the day that Christ was baptized in the River Jordan and was for the first time publicly revealed as the son of God. This is celebrated January 6th.
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JohnFromCensornati
The End is near
01:35 PM on 12/17/2010
New friend for you.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Ohbeewun?action=comments
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
05:31 PM on 12/17/2010
Perfect! Thank you for the intrduction :-)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
12:19 PM on 12/17/2010
Why didn't they let JFC's comments through?! Hilarious.
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JohnFromCensornati
The End is near
01:29 PM on 12/17/2010
They did. Did I say something that's not here?
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JohnFromCensornati
The End is near
02:14 PM on 12/17/2010
The fundy responses are a riot.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elijah24
Ubuntu
11:24 AM on 12/17/2010
I hate Christmas, but I love giving gifts. I think it's a really a good way to tell someone you know them and love them. Not so much the new ipad or video-game systems, but things that really shout that persons name when you see them through the year. My mother likes poetry, for example; so I got her a first-edition of Walt Whitmans "Leaves of Grass", on ebay for next to nothing. My dad is into Roman hystery, so I got him an authentic ring from that era for about the same price as the book.
I like giving things that people wouldn't think to get themselves, and usually arent expensive at all, but that really speak to the person.
This year, My dad started doing the same thing: He knows I'm into politics, and that I'm a Democrat. He found me a Campaign hat from the John F Kennedy campaign.
It's just a good way to show appreciation for the people you love.
Happy solstice, all.
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JohnFromCensornati
The End is near
10:30 PM on 12/16/2010
12. Eat the cookies. They're the best part of Mythmas anyway.
07:39 PM on 12/16/2010
11. Remember that most Christians out there do what they do out of love. Like any group of individuals in the world there are always some bad apples. Give the rest of the group the benefit of the doubt and go with it. You may find that you enjoy Christmas more. And I would think you would expect the same respect with anything you feel that passionate about.
06:53 PM on 12/16/2010
"Give a receptive friend the gift of growth: If someone is wobbling their way out of Christianity, give them a copy of my book, Trusting Doubt."

Or if you're in the giving mood you could send it to us free of charge, Valerie. The "gift of growth" should be free right?
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JohnFromCensornati
The End is near
03:10 PM on 12/16/2010
So this is a Wikileaked first draft War on Chistmas strategery document? May I add my two cents worth?

11. When somebody says "Merry Christmas", the proper Militant Evangelical Fundamentalist New Atheist response is "Go #### yourself".

Happy Holidays!
thebigbike
ran away to be a cowboy
09:56 PM on 12/16/2010
Why aren't atheists allowed to have good manners and just assume the phrase intends well to the hearer? Unless it's followed by a proselytizing tirade I'll be comfortable with the de-religionized verson of the holiday and just wish them a "Happy Holidays" right back, or even ( don't shudder with horror now - hear me out) "Merry Christmas" since they are going to celebrate according to their sect, what's wrong with a little more merriment in the world?
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JohnFromCensornati
The End is near
10:27 PM on 12/16/2010
"Why aren't atheists allowed to have good manners . . ."

I don't know really. It's against the rules?
06:42 AM on 12/17/2010
Right on!!! Regardless of my personal practises and beliefs I have no problem wishing somebody a merry christmas if they are christian because I hope their christmas is happy, a happy Hannukah because I hope they are happy during Hannukah or Ramadan Kareem because I hope their Ramadan is bountiful. All the bickering over how to greet someone during the holiday season seems so childish. I am comfortabl­e enough in my beliefs that being wished a merry christmas doesn't bother me, if it makes people happy around the holidays I am all for it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
05:34 PM on 12/17/2010
This is the one I thought hadn't gone through. Absolutely hilarious and the perfect spoof of all of us. I love it. The very best holidays to you as well!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
03:35 AM on 12/18/2010
It should say: *on all of us.
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Mriana
Freethinking mother of two grown sons and two cats
02:34 PM on 12/16/2010
Valerie, you just gave me an idea with #7. My mother is always sending me Xian Xmas cards. Maybe it is time I sent her a Human Light Day card. That would be wicked, but it would seem turn about if fair play, despite how upset she may get. Her getting upset may give me an opportunity to express how I feel, maybe pointing out that it is similar. I've respected her and have not sent her a holiday that expresses my views, but have kept them secular (with a small "s"). Maybe I should take your suggestion. It could help some of my seasonal depression and alike.