I know there is a lot of controversy over the question: When should you start celebrating Christmas? Is it midnight on Nov. 1? Halfway through November? As soon as Thanksgiving dinner is over? No one really knows. Everyone has their own opinion on Christmas decorations, and it creates a lot of tension right around āThe Most Wonderful Time of the Year.āĀ
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Personally, I choose to celebrate Christmas year-round. Sounds pretty crazy, right? But there are just so many reasons why I choose to do so. Who doesnāt love warm, homemade Christmas cookies that always seem to lift your spirits? Or maybe sometimes you just need to hear a peppy Christmas song to get you through that next exam. The glittering tinsel and lights on the tree that makes you feel right at home, even if you are so far away.Ā And besides, some years thereās just not enough time to decorate specifically for the designated āChristmas Season.ā I grew up traveling during the holidays; one set of grandparents lived in Wisconsin, the other in Maryland, whereas I lived in Pennsylvania. We had this rotation: Thanksgiving in Maryland and Christmas in Wisconsin. The next year it would switch and we would celebrateĀ Thanksgiving in Wisconsin and Christmas in Maryland. Sure, we still decorated for the holidays, I remember watching my parents struggle to hang all those lights on the house and smelling the fresh baked cookies my mom and I had just cut out into little gingerbread men and Christmas trees. But we never fit that ācookie-cutterā mold of when to decorate for Christmas; it was impossible for us. By the time we got back to our own house from Thanksgiving, we would have approximately three weeks before weād have to leave for Christmas, and by the time we got back home again, it was already New Years and everything was āsupposedā to be put away. My family decided to leave up decorations and keep the Christmas season alive for however long we wanted. I distinctly remember one year where we put up the Christmas tree as soon as we got the Halloween decorations down, and then left the tree up until my momās birthday in late February.Ā
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(Image: Authorās Own)Ā
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Not to make Thanksgiving less of a holiday, itās a great time to visit family and eat some of my favorite foods–homemade apple crisp, am I right?–but thereās something about the Christmas season that never fails to make me smile. I just donāt know what it is; maybe itās just the general happiness that everyone feels, talks of peace and goodwill towards men. Universal peace, thinking of others first as you struggle to find the perfect gift for that special someone; everyone just seems to be happier in December.Ā
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Iāve heard arguments that Christmas is all about the consumers or receiving gifts. Sure, we can note that producers start encouraging spending for the holiday season starting in October, but thereās so much more than that. Itās like as Dr. Seuss said in those famous words from The Grinch Who Stole Christmas, āMaybe Christmas, he thought, doesnāt come from a store. Maybe Christmas…perhaps…means a little bit more.ā Christmas is more than just receiving gifts, itās about unity, love, joy and hope. Christmas is for finding out what we truly cherish in life, and making others feel as happy as they make us feel year-round. Christmas brings out the best in people, and I canāt help but want to feel that kind of happiness that only the holiday season brings all the time.Ā
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We dream of Christmas year-round, so why not live it year-round, too?Ā