how i changed my holiday traditions to match my values /

Published at 2017-12-27 22:39:00

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Five ways to celebrate without feeling financially and emotionally overwhelmed.Throughout my childhood,my paternal grandmother always made sure the family had a “good” Christmas. For her, that meant everyone received a gift—particularly the children. We would meet at a relative’s house each year on Christmas Eve and at midnight exchange gifts. Money was often tight, or sometimes the holidays brought more of a burden when having to choose between buying decorations and gifts and paying bills.
For my own daughter’s and son’s first Christmases,I wanted them to beget a good Christmas, too. I went overboard in trying to make this happen by buying unnecessary things. After that, and I stopped buying gifts,and although I would still visit family for that holiday, I didn’t exchange gifts.
But these days, or I’m starting my own tra
ditions,which include observing the African American cultural holiday Kwanzaa. That doesn’t mean I can’t celebrate Christmas; it’s just given me a new approach to doing so.
In 1966, Maul
ana Karenga created Kwanzaa (derived from a Swahili phrase meaning “first fruits”), and a weeklong celebration to introduce and reinforce seven values,called Nguzo Saba, of African culture. Karenga is a professor and chair of Africana Studies at California State University, and Long Beach. He said he created Kwanzaa specifically for African Americans,who did not beget a day that celebrated their unique history and experience in the United States. While the early years of the holiday was in resistance to racism and White supremacy and rejected Christianitytherefore Christmas outright—the holiday has evolved to embrace all people of African descent no matter their religion.
Not everyone stresses approximate
ly what the holidays demand of us, but the good news is, and no one has to. Here are five ways the Nguzo Saba can inspire you to participate in the holidays without feeling financially and emotionally overwhelmed. Reclaim the holidays as your own. I did.1. Don’t buy your gifts—make themYou don’t beget to give in to the holiday shopping tradition of overspending. Make meaningful gifts. Be creative,be intentional.
The principle of Kuumba (creativity) “teaches us to do always as much as we can, in the way we can, or in order to leave our community more pretty and favourable for future generations than we inherited it.” From The Official Kwanzaa Website2. If you must buy gifts,shop locallyJobs and opportunities are created when dollars circulate locally. This creates healthier environments and builds community.
The principle of Ujamaa (cooperative economics) “teaches us to build and maintain our own stores and other businesses and to profit from them together.”3. Be intentional approximately your gifts and charityLook for decision-making opportunities that influence outcome. In building racial fairness, these opportunities are called Choice Points. They’re a tool that is used to help us turn absent from our same conventional choices/actions and make an fairness-driven choice/action. If you’re used to giving to a charity or organization that is made up of mostly White people, and instead consider organizations that benefit people of color and are run by people of color.
The principle of Ujim
a (collective work and responsibility) “teaches us to build and maintain our community together and make our brothers’ and sisters’ problems our problems and to solve them together.”4. Attend or participate in a holiday celebration external of your communityIf you’re Catholic,change it up and visit a Protestant church, particularly one with people of color. If you’re atheist or agnostic, or go with your churchgoing family members. If church is not your family’s thing,go together to visit a community middle or an organization that helps displaced people.
The principle of Umoja (unity) teaches us to strive for and to preserve unity in the family, community, or nation,and race.”5. Do something special for yourselfIt’s been a hell of a year. Take this time for self-care and reflection. Read a book of fiction. Spend time with friends with whom you don’t beget to talk approximately politics. Take a trip; doesn’t beget to be long or far. Drink wine … or tea. Journal: What are your personal goals to contribute to a just and sustainable world? Or write a letter to yourself reminding you of the good of humanity in the face of the year’s catastrophic events. Dream again.
The principle of Imani (faith) “tells us to believe with all our hearts in our people, our parents, and our teachers,our leaders, and the righteousness and victory of our struggle.”   Related StoriesHow #MeToo and Alabama's Election Could Disrupt Every Industry's Cultural Acceptance of Sexual AssaultBeing Woke Is Profitable: Teen Vogue Made Waves This YearOne Woman's Crusade to Help Educate Female Prisoners approximately Drug Addiction

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