That's just one complaint, and a surface complaint at that. No, the real issue goes deeper. I feel it my heart. I have become distracted. Some years, I think I just want to throw off all the endless festivities that purport to celebrate, but somehow, seem to drain the season of all meaning. One year I'll actually do it - no parties, no festivals, no made-for-TV movies, none of the accoutrements that we consider indispensible - just a single, solitary observance focused on the true meaning of daylight savings time.
In the final analysis, it's not daylight savings time that has lost its way. It is we who have lost our bearings. But it doesn't have to be that way. Will you join me in rediscovering the joyful simplicity that is the end of daylight savings time?
3 comments:
Mark, your post has really inspired me. But I believe the government has also heard what you've said. I think this is the reason that they've changed the dates for daylight savings time in the coming years. By "shaking things up", they are hoping to bring us back into the spirit of the season.
(that was from me, by the way)
-DC
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