Y2K
Yawn
by Mary-Lou Weisman
Dear
Rudy,
New Year's
Eve is a holiday the puts a gun to your head. First you have to have
a date. Then you have to get dressed up. Then you have to have fun.
And then you have to stay up until midnight.
When
I was in college I didn't fully realize what a drag of a holiday it
was. All I knew was that having a date was very important, so important
that some people went so far as to get married to solve the problem
permanently.
Now that
I'm married, it turns out find a date was easy compared to figuring
out what to do. This year, due to the millennium, the problem of what
to do was exactly a thousand times worse. What, short of throwing myself
into an active volcano, would have been an adequate response?
It's
not as if there weren't thousands of amazing celebrations and destinations
to choose among. I could have partied in the Millennial Dome in Greenwich,
England or on the bridges of Paris. There was a drumming festival in
Taos and a 24-hour chanting session in Cape Town, South Africa.
I could
have been among the estimated million people in Times Square watching
a crystal ball slide down a 77-foot flag pole. Or I could have gone
to Egypt. I could have seen laser lights bounce off an especially constructed
gold-encased capstone set atop the pyramid of Cheops, all the while
listening to a new opera commissioned especially for the occasion. Or,
I could have sailed to Tonga on the international dateline and been
the first in the world to greet the new millennium. I could have done
all these things and many more that travel agents on drugs had dreamed
up. But I stayed home.
Now that
the second millennium is over, I wonder...how did people celebrate the
first? Did the Knights of the Round Table wear paper hats? Did anyone
lower a ball? Did Joan of Arc have a date? History doesn't tell us.
I did
learn that Leif Ericson was discovering Nova Scotia in 1000 A.D. and
that King Macbeth, who was a real person, was probably born that year
and therefore may have been attending his own bris. But what about everybody
else?
The religiously
inclined let their crops rot and then gathered together on a mountain
top to wait for the end of the world. Pagans, on the other hand, had
a very big Y1K problem: evil spirits. Millennial people were not concerned
about planes falling from the sky or not being able to use their ATM
cards. They were worried that unless they warded off the evil spirits
with a really impressive celebration, the coming year would be plagued
by pestilence and famine.
In Ecuador,
the superstitious would burn a straw man at midnight. In Scotland they
welcomed the New Year by climbing inside a cow's hide and running around
every house in the village three times. Hey, they'd been doing it for
years, and so far the world hadn't ended.
In South
East Asia they whooped it up by tossing bowls of cold water over one
another. Romans preferred a rambunctious "throw your bric-a-brac out
the window" party.
Or you
could have sex. This was a popular pagan party choice, particularly
in agricultural societies who believed that men and women must set a
good example for the crops by copulating in the fields, thereby insuring
a good harvest in the New Year. It was one's civic duty.
I just
came upon the results of a nationwide newspaper poll that asked people
what they did New Year's Eve. The results were surprising. Only 28 percent
went out to celebrate. Seventy-two percent stayed home. Of those 72
percent who stayed home, 20 percent confided to the pollsters that they
had celebrated the New Year by participating in a traditional millennial
fertility rite.
Now why
didn't I think of that?
This postcard was sent by Mary-Lou Weisman,
author of
My Middle Aged Baby Book; A Record of Milestones, Millstones
and Gallstones.
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