Showing posts with label NZ Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NZ Christmas. Show all posts

Tuesday, 5 November 2019

A Solution to Crazy NZ Holidays

Here in New Zealand, our holidays make no sense.
         
Queens Birthday weekend?  That queen doesn't live here.  Sure, we're part of the 'Commonwealth' but what does that actually mean anymore?  Besides those people who actually watch the Commonwealth Games, ex-pat Brits or the elderly, does anyone care?  Does the British monarchy still hold bearing for us here in Aotearoa?  And what happens when there's a change in leadership?  If Charles takes the reins will the holiday move to November?  Any why do we not also have a holiday to celebrate our Māori Kiingi Tūheitia's birthday on the 21st of April?  This holiday seems outdated and redundant.

Will Charles ever get an official holiday?        

Just like Labour weekend.  Sure, achieving the 8 hour work day was a big deal at the time.  But at this current time where personal median income is less than half of that required to get into the housing market in Auckland, it seems a little redundant.  Especially when you consider that back in the 1950's, the total cost of a house was about 2 - 3 times an average annual household income.  Not only are more than two average incomes required to gain what for many is a benchmark for financial stability, but working more than the 8 hour day is necessary for many to simply survive in the current economic climate.  Stats NZ figures show that 2/3 of Kiwi's will have worked beyond 7 - 7 Monday to Friday at some point in the last month.  These days it's not unusual for people to have more than one job just to put food on the table.  And while our average hours worked has dropped over the last 45 years, in many industries 50 hour work weeks are the norm.  On average, our truckies work 60 - 70 hours per week.  And with shopping considered an integral part of daily life, retail workers still go to work on that holiday Monday.  For me, the best thing about Labour weekend is getting time and a half and a day in lieu.

          The peaceful settlement of Parihaka was
invaded by 1500 armed constabulary on November 5th


Thankfully, Emily Writes just wrote something fabulous that says almost everything I need to say about Guy Fawkes.  Celebrating hanging a human for standing up to 'the man' is macabre.  Fireworks scare our pets and children*.  While it's not worthy of a day off, it still exists as a holiday in the hearts and minds of many.  A day where we celebrate murder by torturing our most vulnerable with lights and fire and noise.  A day where we test the reserve and skills of our firefighters because November is also quite a flammable time of year here in Aotearoa.  This is just madness.  Plus the 5th of November marks the first day of the invasion of Parihaka.  Something the Crown acknowledged and apologised for just this year.  This is not a day to celebrate**.

The last census results showed that more New Zealanders now identify as having no religion than identify as Christian - the previously dominant faith system.  But Christianity still dominates our holidays.  And while both Easter and Christmas were both created around existing Pagan traditions to make spreading The Faith simpler, in the Southern Hemisphere all these celebrations are backward.  While Easter is about celebrating rebirth after surviving the harsh Winter, here in New Zealand it's Autumn.  Everything is falling into decay around us as the cold creeps in.  And while Christmas is about celebrating with feasts and friendship to stave off the depression that accompanies the cold, it falls in the middle of our hot Kiwi Summer.

A Christmas Tree installation made from used plastic bags
                             by Luzinterruptus    
                         

Of course, consumerism has rebranded both of these holidays as something available to all.  Media propagates the notion that we must spend, or at least give the illusion of spending, to show our loved ones we care.  And because it is difficult to exist outside of consumer culture nowadays, the majority of us consider this a palatable rebrand.  This feels increasingly at odds with the global shift toward environmentalism.  With Greta Thunberg now a household name you would think maybe there would be a downturn in celebrating this holiday in such a consumables focused way.  So far, statistics say no.  Last year our Eftpos transactions were at a record high just two days out from Christmas.  And this is Eftpos, so these stats come from physical retailers.  So we know for a fact these were not charity gifts from places like Oxfam Unwrapped or Gifted.

Is a chocolate Jesus just a tastier way to    
partake of the body of Christ?           
Maybe this year will be different?

What does Jesus have to do with chocolate?  I mean, I like Jesus*** and I like chocolate, but otherwise I can't find a connection. Is it some kind of Christian rebrand to suck the kiddies in like the Pagan holiday rebrand?  Nope.  Just more big business cashing in with unnecessary marketing, unnecessary calories and more shiny, shiny landfill.

Man I'm a downer...

Given all I've just said it might seem like I hate holidays.  I don't.  I need holidays.  I think we all need time to celebrate, time with those we love and time to recharge.  I just think our current holidays could do with a bit of a shake up.  It's weird giving people cards with snowmen on them during a time when you can literally get 3rd degree burns from walking barefoot on the beach.  Almost every holiday is based around stuff that happens on the other side of the world.  That makes no sense to me.

There is one existing holiday I'm ok with: Waitangi Day.  It makes sense.  It is celebrated on the main day of the signing of Te Tiriti O Waitangi rather than being Mondayised for convenience.  It is a celebration of the beginning of a new era for New Zealand, and while a lot of shit accompanied that era, particularly for
Māori, I feel like Waitangi Day is a time we can remember this, and talk about it, and work toward doing better.  I like Waitangi Day because it has relevance to all of us who call New Zealand home.

I do think we need a new holiday.  I think we should be celebrating Matariki.  Not only because it's an important time for
Māori, but because we need a mid-Winter celebration.  We need that time to gather together to stave off insanity.  We need something to work toward during those rainy, muddy bleak months.  And Matariki reflects our place in the world.  I say Matariki should be a public holiday.  Matariki should become our new time to celebrate the joy of life with those we love.  A fresh beginning together as a community.

I love Diwali

The other holiday I'd like to implement is Diwali.  I reckon we get rid of Guy Fawkes, we get rid of Halloween, and swap both for Diwali.  Not only is it relevant to a big part of our community, but it's also just an awesome celebration.  The festival of lights, in simple form, is the celebration of light overcoming darkness, of good overcoming evil.  Etta's simple analogy: Diwali is like Star Wars.  And it can be celebrated with fireworks displays****.  This would satisfy that weird human desire to watch stuff explode, in a safe and controlled way.  It makes sense to me to celebrate Diwali in Spring.  The lead up to Diwali is almost literally about Spring cleaning and redecorating.  What better time is there to celebrate Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth, good fortune and prosperity, than after Winter?  When we are seeing this wealth demonstrated in the world springing back to life around us.  And I like celebrating a lady deity.  I mean, I'm down with Jesus, but he ain't the be all and end all. 

        Good Ol' Kate Sheppard

Speaking of the ladies, I say we start celebrating being the first self-governing nation to give women the right to vote.  Kiwi's happily flaunt this factoid when making claims that we are a 'progressive'***** nation.  Rather than just being something to talk about when mansplaining feminism to someone, why not celebrate this?  Maybe it will remind us of the power we have as a nation to actually improve things?  Even if suffrage came about here purely as an attempt to implement temperance, who cares?  We actualised a big change.  I propose celebrating Suffrage on the date this change came into law, September 19th.  Colloquially known as Kate Sheppard day, this will be a day of celebrating our mothers, our sisters, our daughters, our lady co-workers, neighbours and shop keepers.  A day where you can choose to do as Kate did and teetotal, or do what other Kiwi women unexpectedly did, and vote to keep on drinkin' that hooch!  But most importantly, a day where we remember our power as people to bring change that empowers those groups who are marginalised.

So my updated New Zealand holiday calendar goes like this:

Jan/Feb - New Years, if you like, or Chinese New Years if you prefer******
Feb 6th - Waitangi Day
April - Easter/Extra Long DIY Weekend Holiday
June/July - Matariki/Winter Solstice
19th September - Kiwi Suffrage/Kate Sheppard Day
October/Nov - Diwali
December - Christmas/Over-indulgence and time with family day

What would your ideal holidays look like?







* As the parent of a kid with sensory issues, I can tell you - fireworks season SUCKS for our household.

** Unless it's your birthday.  Happy birthday shout out to Phoebe and Uncle Hemi!

*** I'm not religious.  But I have read a fair amount of theosophical texts and for the most part, I'm down with Jesus.  Being kind to strangers?  Washing the feet of beggars?  Consorting with working girls?  Turning water into wine?  Jesus is totally my homeboy.

**** I think fireworks for home use should be banned.

***** They're wrong in that we're progressive.  We still have some of the highest family violence rates in the OECD, a pay gap and unequal representation in parliament/government to contend with.  We have a LOT of work to do on this front.  Most people who tout this fact are just trying to maintain the status quo.  We can be, and should be trying for much better than the status quo. Our status quo is a mess.

****** Chinese New Year is certainly my preference.  There are special foods.  There are special dances.  There is much community celebration, and I love the 12 year cycle of coming into New Years.  Pakeha New Years (in my experience) is just about getting drunk enough to pash a stranger in town, waking up with regrets and a hangover.  And it's expected you stay up until at least midnight.  These are not my idea of ways of celebrating.  I always offer to work New Years Day precisely because I know many of my younger co-workers still partake in that tradition.




Friday, 15 December 2017

On A Santa Free Christmas

So it's that time of year again...

For me, it's a hectic, stressful time.  Not just because Christmas, but because I work retail at Christmas.  This year, I have decided to pull back a bit, which has been helped by enforced limitations (broken oven, poor health).  Being on medication has aided me greatly in my ability to do this.
Me last Christmas night after all the madness.  
Enjoying some quality time with our cat family.

Don't get me wrong - I love Christmas.  For me, Christmas is the season of giving - which is why I often end up over-committing myself to gift projects and baking and events.  It is also the season of family.  Christmas Day is all about spending time with family - both my immediate and extended.  The time around Christmas is all about showing those friends and whanau further afield that I care.  This is important, because in the craziness that is daily life I know I miss a lot of opportunities to do this.  Christmas time is an opportunity to give to those who have already given so much to me.

And I can do all of these things without Santa.

The major problems I have with Santa are all expressed in this blog post from four years ago.  There is no point in restating these issues - for me nothing has changed. 

What has changed is that I now have more cognitive children who have their own ideas.  Whilst we have iterated to Etta that Santa is not real, but is a modern representation of St Nicholas (who we have taught her about), that many children grow up thinking he is real, and that is ok too.  While I'd love to say she understands that part of things - she doesn't.  I heard her tell her bestie that Santa wasn't real.  The bestie replied that she was wrong - he was real - she'd seen him at the mall.  Etta has also seen him at the mall.  She is on the fence about the reality of Santa.

Terrifying Queen Street Santa - 
The lord of creepy marketing

And that's ok.  The main thing for me is that I'm not lying, and there is no pressure on the 'good' and the 'bad' regarding presents at home.  What Etta chooses to believe is her choice.  We will not denigrate it.  But we will also not reinforce it by introducing gifts from this fiction at home.

Working in retail I have seen a new negative side to Santa.  The first weekend that Santa was in the mall the shopping atmosphere changed.  Overnight, it shifted from cavalier shoppers looking at their lists and feeling a bit smug about being on track for Christmas, to folk madly darting this way and that aimlessly searching for 'the right gift'.  I actually told a man who appeared to be losing his mind to go sit down and have a coffee and make a list on his phone before stepping back inside Farmers.  I was genuinely concerned for his ability to make rational decisions he wouldn't regret.  This was on the 25th of November.

This is in no way Mall Santa's fault.  This is 100% the fault of marketing and consumerism.  For many, Santa has become a visual symbol of the need to fulfill some weird emotional/fiscal obligation.  This is just sad.  While I agree with what many friends and family say - Santa is about giving - he has been commercialised to the point that he is also now associated with buying.  This is sad.  And it reaffirms to me that keeping my home free of this symbol is not a bad thing.

I work in retail, so I know that product placement for Christmas actually begins the last week of September.  Three months before the 25th of December.  It sounds insane (and I am of the mind that it is), but from a profit generation perspective it isn't.  It programs folk to be looking ahead for Christmas.  It helps fix that shopping mindset into the back of shoppers brains.  This is a great little read about just a few of the tactics employed by retailers coming up until Christmas.  Christmas is all about the dollars for retailers.

And Santa... Santa is the icon of the spending.

*         *          *         *         *         *          *         *          *         *          *         *        

This is just my perspective.  I am just trying to explain why we don't have Santa.  As I said earlier, I have no issue with other people having Santa.  And I am not trying to convince you to get rid of Santa - I am not going to be the Vegan at the Christmas dinner explaining all the bad things about pig farms* while you eat ham.  Eat the ham if you want - just understand that it's ok if I choose not to partake.

I am saying this as we have experienced all sorts of responses to us not having Santa.  From straight up outrage, to accusations of 'ruining the magic of childhood', to assumptions that we must be Jehovah's Witnesses - or more generally that we must not celebrate Christmas.  I do struggle to understand why something which has no impact on anyone but us, is any kind of a big deal to anyone else.

Because for us, it's not.  It helps us focus on our family and how we show appreciation for each other.  Our kids know their gifts come from us, because we love them and work hard to choose things that both reflect our values, and their interests.  It helps us not go OTT.  Christmas is a time to recharge - Christmas stocking fillers in our house include things like batteries, new felt pens (if needed), sunblock, bubble bath and fruit.  They do get treat things too, but we try to keep these to a minimum as we know they will be spoiled with this stuff from other family members**.

Shoeboxes with little gifts and treats (under $15 each)

Simplifying also helps us have a little more money at Christmas time to give to others who have greater need than us.  This year the kids decided to do Christmas In A Shoebox and we made up boxes for children in Northland that may otherwise not have very much (if anything) for Christmas.  When they are bigger, I hope we can do more together for charity.  To me - this is all part of giving at Christmas - it's important to give back to our community.

People are in shock that many children are asking for socks and underwear for Christmas.  I struggle to understand how this is shocking when we have the worst homelessness rates in the OECD.  I cannot say how big my Christmas wish is that this were not the case.  I am not trying to be a downer - but I cannot celebrate Christmas without being conscious that so many others are less fortunate than I am.  And it is important to me that my children understand this so they can have compassion for others at what, for some, is an extremely difficult time of the year.

Christmas is a time of added stress for many.  It is unsurprising that our domestic violence rates peak during the holiday period.  There is more financial pressure, there is more pressure on additional childcare (holidays) and there is more pressure to spend time with family.  It is also a time where people may acutely feel a lack of family - maybe they have become estranged, maybe someone they love has passed away in the last year.  During this time of year, these losses can feel much more acute.

Christmas can be hard for many people for many reasons.  It is important to remember this.

In saying that, we still celebrate.  We still gather as a family.  We have a tree.  I make and bake gifts.  We still eat delicious food*** and crack crackers and tell bad jokes.  We still enjoy each others company and share gifts and good times and kindness.  We can remember others, and we can still celebrate what we have.
 
And our kids still definitely share in the magic that is Christmas.     

Etta and Abby last Christmas playing with a singing Christmas ball
in a tent at Nana and Poppa's


Meri Kirihimete everyone!  No matter how you celebrate.  No matter how much or how little you have, I wish everyone peace and love and kindness at this time of the year.

* This example is not indicative of all vegans.
** And we have a really big family! 
*** No ham in this house either.