Would you ban Christmas

if you could?

A deliberately controversial title Blush

How many people welcome Christmas with open arms, I wonder?

It's purportedly a Christian festival based upon a pagan one.

However, in the UK today (a secular society) and a lot of the West, the God being worshipped appears to be money.

When I was a child we were working class.

In those days (60s/70s) goods were far more expensive as the mass manufacturing we see today of cheap imported goods didn't happen.

Borrowing money from banks etc was far more difficult than it is today.

We didn't have much and didn't get much for Christmas.

Also, my mother became cyclically depressed every Christmas and because of all the arguments and misery during my childhood Christmases, I get depressed too.

There are other causes of the depression - bereavement, most of my life spent in deep anxiety about how I was going to pay for presents and spending time in mass gatherings I hated.

I went shopping today and the shops are mad, completely mad with people rushing around buying stuff that the recipients may not even want.

This is what Mind says:

https://www.mind.org.uk/information-support/tips-for-everyday-living/christmas-and-mental-health/christmas-and-mental-health/

What do you think?

Does it cause more misery than happiness?

Parents
  • I would not ban Christmas but people putting up decorations in the first week of November. That and shops playing music too loud, even with my ear defenders. To me it is the 25th of the month, just like any other. I agree with you regarding people buying things just for buying sakes and then getting more in to debt.    

Reply
  • I would not ban Christmas but people putting up decorations in the first week of November. That and shops playing music too loud, even with my ear defenders. To me it is the 25th of the month, just like any other. I agree with you regarding people buying things just for buying sakes and then getting more in to debt.    

Children