Tag Archives: holiday

dia de los muertos.

Standard
one of our classrrom families
came in to teach us about
this very moving and beautiful tradition.
what a lovely way to celebrate and remember our loved ones.
Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) is a Mexican holiday celebrated on November 1 and 2 and is a time to remember and honor deceased loved ones. 
The holiday has its roots in pre-Hispanic Mesoamerican cultures,  and it is a unique and beautiful blend of indigenous and Catholic traditions.
On Dia de los Muertos, families build altars in their homes and cemeteries to honor their deceased loved ones. The altars are decorated with photos of the deceased, as well as their favorite foods, drinks, and other belongings. Families also visit cemeteries to clean and decorate graves, and to leave offerings for their loved ones.
Dia de los Muertos is a time for celebration, not mourning. It is a time to remember the lives of loved ones who have passed on, and to celebrate the bond that continues to connect them to the living.

“to live in hearts we leave behind is not to die.”

-thomas campbell, author

indigenous peoples.

Standard

At The Water’s Edge, 1910. Edward S. Curtis photographed Piegan tepees at the Blackfeet Indian Reservation in northwest Montana. The Reservation is bordered by Canada to the north and Glacier Park to the west. Browning, site of tribal headquarters, has an average of 196 days per year with temperatures below freezing.

In Montana, Blackfeet is used as both the singular and plural designation for tribal members. The Siksika of Canada describe themselves as Blackfoot.

 

“it does not require many words to speak the truth.”

– Chief Joseph, of the Wallowa Band of Nez Perce

 

 Indigenous Peoples’ Day is a holiday in the  United States that celebrates and honors Indigenous Americans and commemorates their histories and cultures. It is celebrated across the United States on the second Monday in October, and is an official city and state holiday in various localities.

 

credits: text and digital restoration of photo, gary coffrin, edward s. curtis, native american history site

labor.

Standard

honoring all workers on labor day in america

 

“the supreme accomplishment is to blur the lines between work and play.”

-arnold j. toynbee

 

 

 

image credit: next nature nework

 

 

4th.

Standard

happy 4th of july, may you celebrate your independence today and every day

lose your head.

Standard

a cinco de mayo

public service motivational reminder:

some days you just lose your head.

(but there’s always at least one mini tootsie roll still up in there)

–“

“it’s a lot easier to lose your head than to keep it.”

– suzanne collins

he bring of the chocolate.

Standard

“the rabbit of easter.  he bring of the chocolate.”

-david sedaris

photo credit: from my favorite chocolatier with a cause, peace by chocolate

https://peacebychocolate.ca/

link to my earlier post about their story:

https://ididnthavemyglasseson.com/?s=peace+by+chocolate

year of the rabbit.

Standard

happy lunar new year

in the year of the rabbit

to all who celebrate

“leonardo fibonacci, the great 13th century italian mathematician (1175-1250)

created the ‘fibonacci sequence’ to explain behavior in nature mathematically.

history has it that the first question he posed

was how many rabbits would be created in one year starting with one pair.”

-rick santelli

little something.

Standard

love to do last-minute surprise drop-offs of cards and tiny gifts.

 

“christmas is doing a little something extra for someone.”

-charles m. schulz

image credit: etsy.com

most just happen.

Standard

this is pretty much me on any given day

for the next few weeks

as we head into the new year

all activities and adventures are on the table

some planned and most just happen.

 

“it’s the mishaps that make if fun, and brings you the surprise.”

-anna wintour

only 30 more.

Standard

Santa speaking to crowd in front of J.L. Hudson department store

during the annual Thanksgiving Day Parade-1942

only 30 more sleeps!

“to celebrate a festival means;

to live out, for some special occasion and in an uncommon manner

the universal assent to the world as a whole.”   

-josef pieper