RedMuffin
OwO
- Joined
- May 6, 2024
- Messages
- 997
- Points
- 108
Christmas is supposed to be magical, with joy, love, and cheers. But it’s not like that for everyone, and that’s okay.
The same songs, over and over again, repeat for weeks, feel less like a celebration and more like auditory torture.
Red, green, and gold everywhere. For some, it’s festive but for others, It’s like someone puked a kindergarten craft project all over society. And if you happen to be red-green color blind, let's say it’s just... blobs. No offense @greyblob.
Picking the “perfect” gift and worrying about the budget... It’s just exhausting and feels less about generosity and more about obligation.
There’s this unspoken rule that you have to be happy during Christmas. But life doesn’t magically stop being hard in December. For some, all that pressure just makes things worse.
If Christmas is supposed to celebrate Christ, what’s with all the overspending and chaos? If Christ walked into your local mall right now and saw the overspending, the gluttony, the frantic sales, and the hollow consumerism he’d probably flip the Christmas tree over like the money changers’ tables. It feels more like a Black Friday sale than a holy celebration.
The global spread of Christmas as a “universal” holiday? A colonialist project wrapped in tinsel and stuffed in stockings.
At its core, Christmas is capitalism’s crowning achievement. Everything from the decorations to the music is designed to make people spend more. It’s a holiday built on convincing people that overspending and competition are somehow synonymous with love and goodwill. Christmas isn’t some universal season of joy; it’s a giant marketing ploy wrapped in fake sentimentality and topped with a guilt bow.
The same songs, over and over again, repeat for weeks, feel less like a celebration and more like auditory torture.
Red, green, and gold everywhere. For some, it’s festive but for others, It’s like someone puked a kindergarten craft project all over society. And if you happen to be red-green color blind, let's say it’s just... blobs. No offense @greyblob.
Picking the “perfect” gift and worrying about the budget... It’s just exhausting and feels less about generosity and more about obligation.
There’s this unspoken rule that you have to be happy during Christmas. But life doesn’t magically stop being hard in December. For some, all that pressure just makes things worse.
If Christmas is supposed to celebrate Christ, what’s with all the overspending and chaos? If Christ walked into your local mall right now and saw the overspending, the gluttony, the frantic sales, and the hollow consumerism he’d probably flip the Christmas tree over like the money changers’ tables. It feels more like a Black Friday sale than a holy celebration.
The global spread of Christmas as a “universal” holiday? A colonialist project wrapped in tinsel and stuffed in stockings.
At its core, Christmas is capitalism’s crowning achievement. Everything from the decorations to the music is designed to make people spend more. It’s a holiday built on convincing people that overspending and competition are somehow synonymous with love and goodwill. Christmas isn’t some universal season of joy; it’s a giant marketing ploy wrapped in fake sentimentality and topped with a guilt bow.