Wow, so interesting. I'm a yes; our family has pancakes for supper on Fat Tuesday, dresses up in Mardi Gras gear, and watches live feeds on YouTube for carnival parades around the world.
Wow, so interesting. I'm a yes; our family has pancakes for supper on Fat Tuesday, dresses up in Mardi Gras gear, and watches live feeds on YouTube for carnival parades around the world.
I need to wordsmith this kind of poll. A lot of the responses said things like, no, but I have pancakes. That feels like an observance to me.
@evan I don’t celebrate Christmas but I have a tree … and eat Chinese cuisine.
@rickscully see, I would say that by getting a tree, you are celebrating the holiday. What am I missing?
@evan Maybe the differences are in terminology. Celebrate is not the same as ... participate or observe? I was raised Catholic but I wasn't even aware of pancakes as a Shrove Tuesday thing until I was in my late teens. I like the nostalgia associated with Christmas, but I haven't been Christian in over 40 years, so I wouldn't say I am celebrating Christmas. Maybe a person who has pancakes just has pancakes on Fat Tuesday because they always have, but they may also hate their childhood religion?
@rickscully So, I guess for me "celebrate" means "have fun", "do fun things". Like celebrating a wedding or a birthday. I guess if you consider "celebrate" to mean "a religious observance", then it doesn't really match. I am going to try using "observe" or maybe just "do anything for/on" to make it clearer.
@evan Gong Hei Fat Tuesday