Things have changed since about 2000, when I stopped joining my wife and in-laws at their annual Sushi Hell on the eve.
I blame all my back and hip troubles that I’m now experiencing, on the sushi rolling.
Be that as it may … who’s complaining, right? What's past is past.
Throughout the years, I always have taken a shower just
before midnight, so I can enter the New Year as clean as I left it. I always
brush my teeth, I always change my towels, I always change my toothbrush, and I
always remake the bed with clean sheets.
I always shave, and I always have a fresh haircut. I fill
the car’s gas tank, and I pay any outstanding bills. I try to eat some “good
luck” kuro mame (Japanese sweet black
beans) and noodles.
I used to stay up until midnight, but these days, I tend to
fall asleep earlier. It’s easier to do that now because the sounds of fireworks
and screaming aerials have diminished drastically since the new permit system
has been integrated into our lives.
Not since Hawaii ushered in Y2K has there been a cacophony as
loud and spectacular as that one. Standing on a high roof, I witness it and
thought I was in a war zone. Honolulu looked like it was on fire.
Now, the only thing that’s burning on New Year’s Eve is my
indigestion from consuming too much good food at dinner.
I used to have certain rituals, but life changes and so do the rituals or lack thereof.
ReplyDeleteNot having a ritual is actually ... a ritual, right? LOL.
ReplyDelete