11-21-2007, 03:40 PM
There was certainly nothing political about my comment. I don't think the decision to get a Christmas tree is a political decision. But the island makes you look at things in new ways. You are naturally more deliberate about bringing something all the way to the island, than you would be if you are considering buying that same object on the mainland. At least some people are.
My partner and I had a heated discussion when he had a strong craving and so bought frozen Salmon at the Malama Market.....Atlantic Salmon! Salmon caught IN THE ATLANTIC and flown across the mainland, put on a container ship, and floated to Hawaii. I totally didn't get that. I didn't get dinner that night.
I don't think that anyone need feel guilty because they want a tree, but I do think importing Christmas trees to Hawaii is an odd extravagance. There are (or were) a lot of Christmas trees in Germany where the tradition began. None in Hawaii. They have to be grown in farms on the mainland and then loaded in containers and shipped to Hawaii. How many does Hawaii get? I'll say 25 containersful. Dat's a lot of Saudi Arabian oil.
My first Hawaiian Christmas was spent on Kauai. It was 82 degrees and dry. Not too many people decorated for Christmas and
I realized that I liked how low key the holiday seemed in the islands. Then I realized that some holidays and traditions just don't travel --or translate-- very well, at least for me.
But I have been feeling that Christmas has been overblown for some time, and has drifted quite far from Christmases we once knew. When I was a kid, the season began a couple weeks before the Holiday. The best way to get away from this was to just "sit the frenzy out" and to focus on downsizing the whole affair. My partner and I do put up a tree here (it comes out of a box), but we buy few presents, and instead focus on rest, reflection and rejuvenation during the holidsys. And count the money we saved compared to the old days when we went all out.
Being in Hawaii for Christmas intensified this feeling that maybe one year, we ought to just sit Christmas out completely.
So no tree for me this year. Most Americans will make a different choice. More power to them.
That's why I choose to live in a completely anarchic country with no principles other than the desires of the marketplace.
My partner and I had a heated discussion when he had a strong craving and so bought frozen Salmon at the Malama Market.....Atlantic Salmon! Salmon caught IN THE ATLANTIC and flown across the mainland, put on a container ship, and floated to Hawaii. I totally didn't get that. I didn't get dinner that night.
I don't think that anyone need feel guilty because they want a tree, but I do think importing Christmas trees to Hawaii is an odd extravagance. There are (or were) a lot of Christmas trees in Germany where the tradition began. None in Hawaii. They have to be grown in farms on the mainland and then loaded in containers and shipped to Hawaii. How many does Hawaii get? I'll say 25 containersful. Dat's a lot of Saudi Arabian oil.
My first Hawaiian Christmas was spent on Kauai. It was 82 degrees and dry. Not too many people decorated for Christmas and
I realized that I liked how low key the holiday seemed in the islands. Then I realized that some holidays and traditions just don't travel --or translate-- very well, at least for me.
But I have been feeling that Christmas has been overblown for some time, and has drifted quite far from Christmases we once knew. When I was a kid, the season began a couple weeks before the Holiday. The best way to get away from this was to just "sit the frenzy out" and to focus on downsizing the whole affair. My partner and I do put up a tree here (it comes out of a box), but we buy few presents, and instead focus on rest, reflection and rejuvenation during the holidsys. And count the money we saved compared to the old days when we went all out.
Being in Hawaii for Christmas intensified this feeling that maybe one year, we ought to just sit Christmas out completely.
So no tree for me this year. Most Americans will make a different choice. More power to them.
That's why I choose to live in a completely anarchic country with no principles other than the desires of the marketplace.