Note: The Unitarian
Universalist blog-o-sphere is burning up this month with posts on a common
theme—egad, sex. You can easily track them down by using the hashtag #SexUUality. This will come as a big surprise. Most folks don’t associate UU’s with sex—talking
about sexual and gender identification justice
and inclusion maybe, but gooey,
sticky, sweaty, gross sex? Well
yuck! We may as well be ferns.
I avoid generalizations and
there are, of course exceptions, but we don’t tend to be a touchy-feely bunch. Hug-you-neighbor
or the kiss of peace hasn’t
caught on with us. We tend to surround
ourselves with the largest indivisible personal
space spheres of all denominations—there
must be a Pew study to confirm
that. But folks far more self-revelatory than I—white bread, gay, trans, kinky, abstentious, coupled, solo by choice or chance, dating, rutting, old, not-so old but you know not creepy young, are essaying, sermonizing, and committing poetry for your edification
and entertainment. Me?
Well, I approach it obliquely by talking about something else. You may get a feeling that I yearn to kick loose,
but you will have not the slightest clue to my own private sordid or not sexual practices. And I aim to keep it that way…..
There are a
downsides to having been raised vaguely Protestant
and residing in sometimes inhospitable northern
climes. Perhaps the biggest is regarding with wistful envy the
liberating extravagance of Carnival
and Mardi Gras. It is the un-religious holiday—a day of wallowing
in the ways of the flesh and merry making before getting down to the serious
and unpleasant tasks of the proper piety
of Lent.
Catholics seem to know how to take advantage of
the opportunity, especially in warm places where the streets beckon—New Orleans and Rio de Janeiro most famously. But folks from countries where Romance languages are spoken can find
ways to celebrate even in icy Quebec
City.
The idea is simple. Finnish up the Christmas season on the Feast of the Epiphany, the fixed day of
January 6, and then coast
down the hill of Ordinary Time until
Ash Wednesday kicks off of Lent,
which by the lunar calendar falls anywhere from February to March,
gathering speed all the while. It is the dead of winter. Even in Mediterranean
countries it was dark and often cold. Folks stayed inside more, got
on each others’ nerves. But by Fat
Tuesday, the sap was running and Spring
seemed just over the horizon. Perfect for one last opportunity to bust
loose before breaking out the sack cloth
and ashes.
Protestants, particularly Calvinists, their decedents, and those who stood close enough by to
be infected, took a dim view of the whole process. More Papist/pagan
nonsense to them. A good Calvinist existed in a state of perpetual
Lent. The experience of any sensual
pleasure was regarded as a sinful
distraction from contemplation of the awesome majesty of God and our totally undeserving souls. It was for
good reason that Puritanism has been
described as the nagging suspicion that somewhere, somehow, somebody is having
a good time.
England, I
am told, once celebrated Carnival—a cultural gift of the Norman French aristocracy.
Cromwell and his boys pretty much
wiped that out at the point of the sword. Even when Kings remounted the Throne
and the Anglican Church regained the upper hand, the old
traditions fell away. Instead they shrank the celebration down to
something called Shrove Tuesday, which
is celebrated mostly by making and eating pancakes.
Now I bow to no man in my affection for the flapjack or griddle cake,
but even a high pile drenched in butter and real maple syrup is a poor
substitute for dancing semi-naked in the streets. They passed this
tradition on to all of the former pink
spots on the globe where the Empire
once ruled and to all of the Protestant sects derived from Anglicanism and
Calvinism.
Of course, not all Catholics party with absolute
abandon. Those from northern and eastern Europe either never celebrated or toned down Carnival. The Poles celebrate with Pączki Day (pronounced pŭtch-kē). In the old
country it was held on the Thursday before Ash Wednesday, but in the immigrant
communities of North America it is held on Fat Tuesday. Folks line
up at bakeries at the crack of dawn to purchase pączkis, a kind of jelly doughnut made only once a
year. This is a much bigger deal than it sounds.
In Germany,
the Baltic states, and Scandinavian Fat Tuesday is likewise
celebrated with special local pastries meant to use up the supply of sugar and
lard before the Lenten fast.
Tonight the
biggest and most honored Krews will be conducting their parades in New
Orleans. Down there, they take Mardi Gras seriously and have
stretched it to the whole season between the Epiphany and Lent. Various
parades have been winding down the streets of different neighborhoods for
weeks, each followed by its own Ball. The streets of the French
Quarter will be crowded. Many revelers will be drunken northerners
and Calvinist escapees. They will party next to the locals, drinking
copiously, begging for beads cast
from the parade floats, and eying
the pretty young girls flashing
their tits. Everyone will
forget that Rick Santorum or the Catholic Bishops exist.
And I wish
I was with them. It’s been far too long since I reveled in sin and degradation.
Love this. You may want to check your calendar - the Feast of the Epiphany (and the start of Carnival season) is January 6th on the Western calendar. It is the 13th day of (that is, after) Christmas. I think Jan 11th is probably the Eastern Orthodox date.
ReplyDeleteI grew up in southeastern Louisiana and fondly remember the parades and king cakes of the Carnival season. Less fondly do I remember being in the marching band in high school and having to walk those parade routes - the short ones were about three miles, the longer ones closer to five or six.
It was probably good for me. :-)
Of course the date is the 6th... I know that. Don't know how I made the mistake but am fixing right now. Thanks.
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