"When everything else has gone from my brain ... what will be left, I believe, is topology: the dreaming memory of land as it lay this way and that." Annie Dillard
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Monday, April 25, 2011
Easter Monday
In much of the world, the day after Easter is a holiday. In the Washington, D.C., area, it's the day of the White House Easter Egg Roll, which was one of those things I always meant to do when the children were little but never quite had the energy to pull off.
I wondered this morning, is Easter Monday known for anything other than being the day after Easter?
Turns out, it is. In Poland and elsewhere in Eastern Europe, Easter Monday is Dyngus Day or "Wet Monday," a day when boys wake girls by pouring water over the heads. There's a large Dyngus Day celebration in Buffalo, New York, too, involving polkas and squirt guns.
This reminds me of another holiday. The festival of Songkran in Thailand is when people pour water on your shoulders or head (or sometimes blast it at you from a fast-moving truck) to wish you a happy new year. Tom and I spent our honeymoon in Thailand and for seven days were dowsed every time we walked outside.
I'll spend Easter Monday as I spend most Mondays — writing, editing, reading, walking and doing laundry, which is about as close to ritual purification as I'll get today.