Cheers to a new year!

Across America, given the fractured state of our collective hearts, attempts to embrace the New Year will be paddled with reverence, or a little whoop, a bit of holler and Auld Lang Syne;  in splashes of patriotism, the traditional sounds of churning and noisemakers and fireworks that will mingle with the ringing of bells in churches, as the nation moves away from the historic tragedy of an unwanted ongoing war.

Shedding the wrinkled skin of an old year gives a welcome sense of another chance. So welcome winter, welcome new year. Is there a term for the way dusk drapes, begins at noon, and across and around us in the next couple of hours? Is it after light, after glow?

Where are we headed?

Do we take life as a journey, a safari  or a pilgrimage, or perhaps as a garden if not as the highest art? We have lived  the questions, ready to embrace the answers. Chronologically, we’re at the end of the year, yet at the beginning of a journey.

We will make some discoveries, as we keep on a look out for soulful markers that surround us savoring the stops along the way These are what makes the journey marvelous, meaningful and memorable. As you find and honor your own pace,  stirring your mind, body and spirit, through the parting of the mists where faith and doubt meet, we will find, not who we are—but what we are.

I am not fazed by cynicism and betrayals. I will sprinkle it on my oats, add it as a boost to my  Ensure. It keeps me young. But for a week more, I will put all that on hold. Forget the cynics, those that give you grief. Feed them to the alligators!  If you’re sad  at New Year’s you really have only yourself to blame. Candles, firelights, bubbling wines can keep their heads above them.

I will laugh  when I hear favorite lines gleaned from beaujolies, savaged only by the twisted wisdom of my collegeues. That pointed out that there were different rules  for old  women with money; I vowed to one day be one.

Regardless, it will always be a day for voluntary kindness and charity for family and friends. For celebrating freedom and the bounty it creates, without undermining the fact that almost half of the globe has universally collapsed into a heap of poverty, devastation, denial and finger pointing.

I let the pine tree live, on that Christmas morning that came and gone. I threw open my window on a bright, delightful and shining world for the 72nd time. The bustling street falls strangely quiet. The living room rests, ankle-deep in an effluvia of ribbons, papers and bows, empty cardboard boxes that held presents. In the background, Tchaikovsky gives the evanescent joy of music into a yearning heart.

With that human imperative to celebrate, the biggest party will take place on the Strip of Las Vegas (with its ecstatic festivities) the center party of the universe.

It won’t bring world peace, but with this primordial capacity for collective joy, why not put it to  use?

Celebrations that create occasion for communal joy — a sort of idiocy passed from generation to generation, like an heirloom. It does not seem less than generous to protest whatever traditions others may cherish this season.

And least we forget this about Christmas and New Year: children are the best ornaments, friends are the real feasts. Like life, the holidays will be over, before you know it. But on the brighter side, the lengthening of each day from this point, promised the vital return of spring.

So, welcome winter. Welcome the New Year!

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E-mail Mylah at [email protected]

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