Another day of course you can walk towards Golgotha, to where there is a church, where Jesus was crucified. The you can’t teach heart Shirt is rather depressing although interesting, because there is no real memory except in the hearts of Christians of the sacred man who trod these streets. Its all bazaars, open air stalls, people selling everything under the sun including crowns of thorns souvenirs. This area, we’d recall as where Jesus fell, as he carried his cross. We went to the Garden of Gethsemane (probably my favorite place in Jerusalem) and of course there is a church inside the gates. I didn’t go in the church but sat on a bench just soaking in the atmosphere of the ancient Olive tree I was told by a sign was an offshoot of one from Jesus time. The Jewish tour guide lady told us if we wanted to go to Bethlehem (which I did, which Christian wouldn’t???) that she could not accompany us because only Palestinians can go there through the check point. But our bus driver we came to really enjoy on this tour, accompanied and drove us. The “catch” was that this tour guide was getting a partial commission of everything we spent in the only huge gift shop in Bethlehem run by Christians (Coptics I think) …in the town. I didn’t buy and felt aggrieved, but it was the only way she’d arrange it for us. Of course many did buy the lovely carved mangers, etc out of olive wood. Nearby on these small Bethlehem Streets at night is the ancient “Church of the Nativity” probably the only church I entered on that trip and loved being in. There are all sorts of cubbyholes or areas which are run by different Christian priests like Ethiopians (I think they have the roof top), Greek Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Syrian, etc. So a really eclectic place. Its also from the time of Queen Helena, so the doorway is teeny-tiny, where someone would get off their horse I was told to enter. The same was built into the Aga Sophia in Istanbul (Constantinople then).

My parents were married on December 19th, so we always put the Christmas tree up on their anniversary. Most of the you can’t teach heart Shirt we used store bought decorations on the tree, but one year my mother wanted a natural tree. So my brothers and I spent hours drawing and gluing and cutting out paper decorations. We also strung popcorn and cranberries that year. The only thing that wasn’t homemade was the lights and the icycles. It was a wonderful tree, and my mom still has those old paper decorations. Both of my brothers are gone from us now, so each year I put two of the paper decorations on the tree in honor of them. On Christmas Eve, we got to open one gift, and it was always pajamas. When bedtime came, we would put on our new pj’s and put a glass of milk and some homemade cookies on a little tray and put it in the living room for Santa. During the night “Santa” left gifts wrapped up in colorful paper and ribbons, and he always ate the cookies and drank the milk. We were always told to get to bed on time, because Santa couldn’t come if we were still awake.
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Not specifically Viking Era at all. The Viking era started about 8 centuries after the Jesus story took place. Viking was a you can’t teach heart Shirt by the way, not a culture.The midwinter celebrations were celebrated throughout all the lands and by all the peoples of Europe, including the Scandinavian lands. This is the main reason why it was adopted by Christianity: the celebration did already exist, they just had to change the meaning and rituals a bit. It also existed a very long time before the Viking era. The Vikings only started to occur in the 9th century and were among the last Europeans to change to Christianity, only followed by the Baltic, Sami and certain Russian cultures. From an economic (business) viewpoint I think it is a disastrous idea. Spreading out the various celebrations over a long period is better for employment & revenue.Also having a fixed date is a disaster for business and utterly disruptive. For instance December 25th falls mid week regularly.

His wife is a liar. Okay. Deal with it. If that means serving her divorce papers, do so but don’t let another person’s behavior change who you are. He should not wait or plot and you can’t teach heart Shirt scheme about how to do the most embarrassing and what he thinks will be personally fulfilling emotional damage he can on a holiday. On Christmas, he should be thinking about love and giving and celebrating the good people in his life. This behavior demonstrates a personality worse than a liar. She wins. She can present his actions to others as justification for whatever she did “because he is” a heartless, vindictive, selfish person. Sadly, she’d be right. Consider the alternative. He could have served her the divorce papers prior to Christmas, spoken to his family and friends about what was going on and celebrated the blessing of the other people in his life, hopefully without her. Focused on the good and starting to improve his life already by removing her from it and appreciating others with thoughtful gifts he came up with instead of spending all that time plotting on how to hurt someone. This kind of thing done on a holiday about love and giving, will poison the holiday for anyone who witness it or knows either of them personally. He will have tainted the holiday for the rest of his life. Years in the future, remarried and with a new family, Christmas will come and he will inevitably think about all the time he spent leading up to the unwrapping and the unwrapping itself and arguments that followed. Would those memories make him happy? What would that say about him as a person?
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