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Wednesday, December 31, 2025

130 Stories later: The Best of The Ex4mined L1fe (2025 Edition)

They say the unexamined life is not worth living. Well, after 130 blog posts this year alone, I think it’s safe to say this life has been thoroughly examined!

From the quiet corners of prayer to the chaotic aisles of the grocery store, and from the profound theology of Advent to the questionable price of a fast-food lunch, we covered a lot of ground in 2025. If you missed a few entries between the "dings" of your inbox and the busyness of life, here is a curated look back at the moments that defined the year on The Ex4mined L1fe.

The Holiday Deep Dive. 
December was a marathon of reflection. We didn't just look at the shiny wrapping paper; we looked at the history, the humor, and the holy chaos underneath.

When Christmas Turns the Page:
We explored why December 26 isn't just a day for leftovers—it’s the Feast of Saint Stephen. It’s a reminder that the story doesn’t end at the manger; it moves immediately into action and, sometimes, sacrifice.

The 12 Days of Bankruptcy:
In A Wallet-Busting, Bird-Filled Tale, we crunched the numbers on your "True Love’s" gifts. Spoiler: 364 total gifts later, you’re looking at a serious financial crisis and way too many birds.

The Scandal of 1952:
We looked back at how “I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus”—a song we consider harmless fluff today was once condemned by the Church and caused a national pearl-clutching incident.

Bing Meets Bowie:
Perhaps the most incredible "odd couple" in music history. We revisited the 45-minute recording session in 1977 that produced Peace on Earth/Little Drummer Boy.

Faith, Doubt, and the "In-Between"
This blog has always been about living at the intersection of devout faith and the messy real world.

Are We All Innkeepers?
One of the most poignant questions we asked this year: Christmas isn’t about having space. It’s about making it. We looked at the mirror Luke 2:7 holds up to our busy lives.

John 3:16 and the Data:
Unleashing my inner data geek, I found that John 3:16 gets 2.1 million searches per month. But the post wasn't just about numbers; it was about why we quote Scripture to steady the room, even when we aren't "Bible Study People."

God, Guts, and Giggles:
I wrote about growing up with the Baltimore Catechism, but keeping the door open for curiosity. 
Believing deeply doesn't mean thinking narrowly.

The Lighter Side of Life
Because if you can’t laugh at yourself (or polyester), what’s the point?

The Itchy Truth: My confession as a "Human Fabric Detector." In a world of blends and synthetics, I stood my ground for 100% cotton, much to my family's amusement.

Whatever Happened to Lunch? A lament for the wallet. I asked the hard question: When did a simple sandwich and drink turn into a financial commitment that requires a credit check?

Unplugging Without Apology: After years of telling teachers to rest, I finally took my own advice. I learned that the world actually keeps spinning even if I don't check my email for 24 hours.

Roots, Identity, and "Home"
This year was also personal. It was about names, family, and where we come from.

What’s in a Name? (Medellin-Sturgill): I shared the decision to hyphenate my name to honor my Hispanic roots and my mother’s side of the family. It was a reclaiming of heritage that had been too long quiet.

One Man’s Trash: We reflected on the "Island of Misfit Toys" and the fear of irrelevance, realizing that, like the tools on my grandfather’s workbench, we are all built to last if treated with care.

A Final Thought for 2025
I didn’t set out to write 130 posts. I set out to get the noise out of my head. But somewhere along the way, this became a conversation—in parking lots, in hallways, and in the comments. Thank you for reading, for sharing, and for examining life right alongside me. Here’s to turning the page to 2026.

Happy New Year!

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Stop Cheating on Your Future With Your Past: A Year-End Reflection & Forward-Facing Manifesto


This past year, I did something unexpected.

It didn’t magically fix everything. It didn’t erase pain. It didn’t turn life into a highlight reel. But it did give me clarity.

After a long season of untangling my thoughts, loosening the grip of things I couldn’t control, and finally releasing the weight of other people’s opinions, I’ve arrived at the end of this year in a healthier place mentally. That alone feels like a quiet victory.

And then, while scrolling, as we all do, I came across a simple line: “Stop cheating on your future with your past.”

It stopped me cold. Not because it was new wisdom. But because I finally had the space to hear it.  
What does that even mean? Cheating on your future doesn’t look reckless. It looks familiar.

It looks like: Making decisions based on who you used to be. Letting old wounds interpret new moments. Replaying stories you’ve already survived

Sometimes we return to the past not because we want pain, but because it’s predictable. And predictability can feel safer than hope. But safety isn’t the same as growth. 

Before reading further, take a breath and consider: Where am I still consulting my past for permission? Which version of myself keeps showing up out of habit, not need? What am I protecting myself from that no longer exists?

There are no wrong answers here. Only honest ones. The truth about healing. Healing isn’t a straight line. And it’s definitely not a calendar event.

Some of us made significant strides this year. Some of us are still standing at the trailhead, exhausted just from surviving. Both realities deserve grace.

Progress doesn’t mean you’re “done.” Struggle doesn’t mean you’re failing. Sometimes progress is simply noticing the pattern instead of being swallowed by it.

Your past deserves acknowledgment. It shaped you. It challenged you. It taught you things you didn’t ask to learn. But it does not get to make future decisions on your behalf. Remembering is different from reliving. Honoring is different from obeying. You can carry the lessons forward
without carrying the weight.

A Forward-Facing Manifesto (I will return here often)
When the old patterns whisper, I choose to remember:
  • I do not owe my past to my future.
  • Survival skills are not lifelong instructions.
  • I can feel disappointment without letting it define me.
  • Growth can be quiet and still be real.
  • Rest is not quitting—it’s recalibration.
  • I am allowed to change my mind, my pace, and my direction.
  • I don’t need to be healed to be hopeful.
  • Small promises kept are more potent than big resolutions broken.
  • The healthiest version of me makes the next right choice—not the perfect one.
  • I am moving forward, even when it feels slow.
A final reflection for the year ahead
If you’re ending this year proud, unsure, exhausted, hopeful, or all of the above, my friends, you’re not alone. If you haven’t made the progress you hoped for yet, hear this clearly: You are not behind.
You are still becoming.

The future doesn’t require you to forget your past. It simply asks that you stop letting it drive.

So as this year closes, may we stop cheating on what’s possible by clinging to what’s familiar. 
May we walk forward, imperfect, aware, and still brave enough to hope.

Monday, December 29, 2025

WHAT ARE YOU CARRYING: That won’t fit through the gate?

 

“It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.”— Gospel of Matthew 19:24

We hear this verse and instinctively think: That’s impossible. But Jesus wasn’t closing the door. He was explaining how the door works.

What most people miss is this... In ancient Jerusalem, tradition speaks of a narrow city gate often called the Eye of the Needle. It wasn’t wide enough for a camel to walk through standing tall. To pass through it, the camel had to be unloaded. It had to kneel. It had to crawl forward slowly. Nothing carried through untouched. And that was the point.

Jesus wasn’t saying rich people can’t enter the Kingdom. He was saying no one enters while clinging to everything. Not pride. Not possessions. Not reputation. Not the illusion of self-sufficiency. The Kingdom is open. But it is not spacious.

The Kingdom Doesn’t Need Your Baggage. A significant obstacle for some of us is that we often want Jesus plus what we’ve built. Our success. Our security. Our identity. Our control. But the gate isn’t wide enough for all of it. Something has to be set down. And kneeling is not optional.

The Tombsite of Lazarus

Coming back to life is not graceful. There’s another detail Scripture doesn’t romanticize. When Jesus raises Lazarus from the dead in the Gospel of John 11, the tomb is below ground. To respond to “Come out!” Lazarus had to navigate a cramped passage. Climb uneven ground. Move while wrapped in a burial cloth. Stumble forward still smelling like death. Resurrection wasn’t instant elegance. It was an effort.

Jesus gave Life, but Lazarus still had to walk out of the grave. 

Following Jesus Was Never Easy—On Purpose

“Enter through the narrow gate…” — Gospel of Matthew 7:13

The easier path was never the promised one. The Rich Young Ruler
“He went away sad, because he had great wealth.” — Gospel of Mark 10:22
Jesus didn’t reject him. Attachment did.

Peter on the Water. “Come,” Jesus said. — Gospel of Matthew 14:29
Faith held, until fear reclaimed control.

The Cost of Discipleship: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily.”— Gospel of Luke 9:23

Crosses weren’t symbols. They were surrender.

All the abovementioned isn’t about being Rich! This isn’t about money. It’s about weight. Everyone carries something that doesn’t fit through the gate. Pride disguised as confidence. Comfort is mistaken for a blessing. Control masked as responsibility.

The Kingdom doesn’t reject people. It resists what we refuse to release. 

The Come-to-Jesus Challenge
So here’s the question that a simple man like Greg believes Jesus asks us: what’s weighing you down? What are you still gripping that won’t fit? Because the door is open. But you don’t walk in standing tall. You kneel. You unload. You crawl forward, trusting the other side is worth it.

Jesus never said it would be easy. He said, “Follow me.”
And that invitation still stands

Sunday, December 28, 2025

From Verse to Years: Understanding Biblical Timelines (Starting with the Birth of Jesus)

 

One of the most common frustrations for thoughtful Bible readers is this: Scripture often feels as if it happens all at once, whereas real life never does. A few verses pass, and suddenly, Jesus is born. Wise men arrive. Innocent children are massacred. A family flees to another country. A king (Herod) dies. And then everyone is back home, with a new zip code in Nazareth. 

It reads bang–bang–bang. But the Bible is not written like a modern history book. It is theologically selective rather than chronologically exhaustive. Once you understand that, the timeline begins to breathe. Let’s walk through the birth of Jesus, not just as a list of events, but as a real-life timeline unfolding over months and years.

Most of the time, Biblical time feels compressed. Biblical authors rarely indicate how much time elapsed between events. What didn’t happen, or how long people waited, worried, traveled, or hid. Instead, they focus on meaning rather than duration. A single verse can represent weeks of silence, months of travel, years of fear or waiting. This is especially true in the opening chapters of Matthew.

Jesus was born in Bethlehem during the reign of King Herod. That one sentence anchors the entire story historically, but it does not imply that everything that follows occurred immediately. The familiar nativity scene blends events that were never meant to be simultaneous:

Jesus was born during the reign of King Herod.
Herod orders the Massacre of the Innocents.
Joseph, Mary, and Jesus flee to Egypt.
After Herod dies, they return and settle in Nazareth.
The text implies that the interval between Jesus’ birth and Herod’s death was months, or at most a couple of years.

The Bible itself keeps them distinct; "We" just merge them for convenience.

The Visit of the Magi, most likely, wasn't on Christmas Night. Matthew reports that the Magi arrive later, finding the child in a house rather than a stable. This visit likely occurred weeks or months after the birth of Jesus. Possibly close to a year later.

Herod’s reaction gives us the clue. When Herod orders the killing of boys two years old and under, he is not guessing wildly. He is calculating based on when the star appeared, padding the range to ensure no rival survives.  This does not mean Jesus was two years old. It means Herod was ruthless. This single verse extends the timeline beyond what many readers realize.

After the Magi leave, Joseph is warned in a dream. The family flees to Egypt immediately. What follows is another quiet stretch of time, the Bible barely describes living as refugees, waiting for news, surviving under a violent regime from afar. Scripture moves on quickly. Life would not have.

After Herod dies, does the family receive word that it is safe to return? Historically, Herod died shortly after Jesus’ birth, most likely within a year or two. But even that “short” span includes:

  • fear
  • displacement
  • silence
Time expands again. When the family returns, they don’t go back to Bethlehem. Another ruler now governs Judea. Another dream redirects them north. And with that, Matthew’s story closes—not because life settled, but because the purpose of the narrative was complete.

Once you see this, you see it everywhere:

  • Abraham waits decades between promises
  • Moses spends 40 years in obscurity—twice
  • David is anointed king long before he wears the crown
  • Jesus disappears for 18 years between childhood and ministry

The Bible regularly compresses long obedience into short paragraphs. When Scripture feels rushed, ask what time is being skipped? What fear, faith, or waiting might live between these verses? What does the author want me to notice rather than measure? The Bible is not ignoring time. It is trusting you to imagine it.

The story of Jesus’ birth is not a frantic chain of miracles. It is a slow unfolding of courage, danger, obedience, and trust, compressed for clarity, not speed. Once you read it that way, the Bible stops feeling unrealistic. It starts feeling honest.  If this helped clarify the Christmas story, it may also reshape how you read the rest of Scripture, especially the long silences between God’s promises and their fulfillment. What makes the Bible feel confusing here is not contradiction—it’s compression. Scripture often tells the truth without telling the time, and modern readers instinctively try to read it like a minute-by-minute transcript.

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Good King Wenceslas… Ambushed on the Way to the Appalachians

 

Some plans are bigger than us. Some plans, no matter how carefully laid, have a way of going sideways. This year, my “big plan” was a Boxing Day pilgrimage back home to eastern Kentucky, my own little Good King Wenceslas moment, complete with loaded gifts, bags packed, and a hybrid gassed up and ready for the road.

We spent weeks preparing: laundry done, clothes laid out, Christmas gifts stacked high. By Christmas Eve, I felt ready. My brother, however, had other plans. A fever, vomiting, and a night spent precariously close to the indoor outhouse made for a holiday I wouldn’t wish on anyone. Yet, in that fleeting moment of improvement, he sent the text: “I’m doing better, load up the car and come on down!”

The plan was back on. We were going to Appalachia. I could almost hear the brass of a royal procession.

Then, hours before departure, came the dreaded update: he was worse. “Come on down at your own risk.” Suddenly, our well-planned journey felt like a foolhardy quest into the icy unknown, a modern-day Wenceslas ambushed by the harsh reality of illness, timing, and family obligations.

We’ve spent decades chasing the perfect Christmas: visits lined up, cousins hugged, meals planned. We’d even survived the Mid-Missouri Sturgills in a houseful of laughter and chaos, armed with a commercial-grade HEPA filter and an ionizer. We were ready. Or so we thought.

Lying in bed that night, staring at the ceiling and re-running every decision in my mind, I heard the unmistakable voice of Mick Jagger: “You can’t always get what you want, but if you try real hard, you get what you need.”

And I realized: I wasn’t sure I knew what I needed. What I wanted was clear: family, travel, tradition, but what I needed was something else entirely: presence, patience, safety, rest, and maybe, just maybe, mercy on myself for letting the plan go.

Good King Wenceslas ventured into the cold to do what was right. But sometimes, love isn’t about walking through snowdrifts; it’s about recognizing when to stay where you are and care in the way that matters most. Sometimes, the heart’s journey is inward, not on the road.

So yes, I didn’t make the eight-hour trek to eastern Kentucky this year. But in not going, I got what I needed: clarity, health, and the reminder that love doesn’t always require a GPS.

And who knows? Next year, Wenceslas may just lead the way, after we all get a good night’s sleep.

Friday, December 26, 2025

December 26: When Christmas Turns the Page

 

For many of us, December 26 feels like a quiet exhale, the day after the wrapping paper is cleared and the leftovers appear. But historically, December 26 carries a surprising amount of meaning, sitting at the intersection of faith, generosity, and action.

December 26 is the Feast of Saint Stephen
In much of Western Christianity, December 26 marks the Feast of Saint Stephen, remembered as the first Christian martyr. His story is not soft or sentimental. Stephen followed Christ so closely that it cost him his life. The Church places his feast immediately after Christmas as a reminder: the incarnation isn’t just something we admire, it’s something we live.

Christmas celebrates God coming near. Stephen’s day asks what happens next.
“On the Feast of Stephen…”

If you grew up singing Good King Wenceslas, you may have missed how pointed the opening line really is: “Good King Wenceslas looked out, On the Feast of Stephen…”
That’s not poetic filler. It’s a timestamp.

The carol deliberately sets its story on December 26, when the Church remembers a martyr, and then tells the story of a king who notices a poor man gathering wood in the cold. What follows isn’t charity from a distance, but shared suffering. The king doesn’t send help. He goes himself, walking into the snow, feeding the hungry, warming the cold.

The message is subtle but strong: The proper response to Christmas is movement.

December 26 is also Boxing Day.
In many countries, December 26 is also known as Boxing Day. Its roots trace back to the practice of opening “Christmas boxes” gifts for servants, laborers, and those in need. Long before it became associated with sales or sporting events, it was a day shaped by practical generosity.

Suddenly, the pieces line up: Christmas proclaims good news. Stephen embodies costly faithfulness. Wenceslas models compassionate action.

Boxing Day puts love in motion.
The calendar is doing something intentional here. Right after the glow of Christmas morning, we are invited to ask: What does love look like when it’s inconvenient? 
Who do we notice when the celebration ends? Are we willing to step into the cold for someone else?

December 26 gently but firmly shifts the focus from celebration to continuation.

Maybe today isn’t about doing something dramatic. Perhaps it’s as simple as: giving time instead of gifts. Listening instead of rushing. Serving instead of consuming.

Christmas doesn’t end on December 25. It begins to take shape on December 26.

And like Stephen… Like a carol we’ve sung for years… Like a king who walked into the snow… Christmas is meant to be lived.

Thursday, December 25, 2025

Merry Christmas, in Every Language

 

Christmas is a season of joy, connection, and celebration. And while we all might say it a little differently—Feliz Navidad, Joyeux Noël, メリークリスマス, Maligayang Pasko—the sentiment is the same: warmth, love, and hope.
Across the globe, people share greetings that carry the spirit of the season, reminding us that no matter where we are, Christmas is about community, kindness, and the joy of giving. From snowy European streets to sunny tropical beaches, the message echoes: Merry Christmas—in every language, to every heart.
So, whether you say it in your mother tongue or learn a new one this year, share the joy. Spread a smile. Connect with someone near or far. After all, the magic of Christmas is universal.

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Unplugging Without Apology: Learning to Rest


For years, I asked my school communities to allow space for our teachers and anyone carrying the weight of the daily grind to Rest. Relax. Recharge. I meant it. But I never truly followed my own advice. I would throw out lines like, “There will be rest for me when I’m dead,” chasing ministry, work, and obligations as if exhaustion were a badge of honor.

In the past few months, though, I’ve discovered the miracle of unplugging. I’ve learned to step away from constant dings, calendar alerts, and email notifications. To put my phone on silent. To not peek at emails or invoices from Friday afternoon until Sunday evening, until after dinner.

It doesn’t make problems vanish. But it limits how much of my energy I devote to someone else’s priorities, and that is liberating.

This Christmas break, I finally set a boundary I never had before. When someone tentatively tried to slip a problem into my holiday, "I don't want to ruin your Christmas break," I said calmly, “Then don’t. That problem will wait until I’m back on the clock.” Their surprise was palpable, but it’s becoming easier to imply without saying a word. This doesn’t mean I don’t care; it means my time, especially my family time, is sacred.

Even with these boundaries, the first day of “freedom,” I still woke at 4:30 a.m. The next day, my wife nudged me awake about the same hour. This morning, one of our granddaughters popped into bed at 6 a.m., whispering stories, jokes, and secrets for over an hour with Nonna before finally moving to another room, giving Pa a chance to "pretend he could sleep."

Tomorrow will be the first Christmas morning in decades without our own children or grandchildren under our roof, eagerly awaiting what Santa brought. Those days were magical, but life-shortening without adequate rest.

After Christmas, we’ll travel to the Appalachian Mountains, a nine-hour drive from here. I know we’ll wake at first light, as is our habit. And yet, somewhere along those long roads, amid early mornings and familiar paths, my hope is that I’ll finally stop, not just to refuel the car, but to refuel myself. To rest. To recharge. To experience the elusive gift I’ve been preaching about for years.

Because rest isn’t laziness. It isn’t avoidance. It’s stewardship. Care for yourself so you can continue to care for others, and perhaps finally learn what it feels like to truly unplug.

Are We All Innkeepers? Christmas isn’t about having space. It’s about making it.

Each Christmas, we hear the familiar refrain: Keep Christ in Christmas.

It’s stitched into sermons, printed on yard signs, whispered between carols and candlelight. And yet, for those of us who grew up straddling two Christmas worlds—one faith-filled, the other secular, commercial, noisy, and nostalgic—it’s not always simple. It’s complicated. It’s crowded. But it’s still possible.

This image stops me every time: “Each of us is an innkeeper who decides if there is room for Jesus.”(Luke 2:7)

That’s not a children’s pageant line. That’s a mirror.

Over the years, I’ve wandered all around the Christmas story. I’ve written about Tonight We Ride—the long, mysterious journey of the Magi. Those strange, brilliant outsiders remind us that Christmas has always carried a universal, multicultural heartbeat: people from distant lands, following an unfamiliar celestial signal, traveling far beyond their comfort zones simply to honor something holy, hopeful, and new.

The Magi story is fun. It’s quirky. It’s unresolved. It’s filled with unanswered questions. And maybe that’s why we’re still talking about it two thousand years later.

I’ve explored Santa’s many faces across history. I’ve traced the roots of Christmas songs, traditions, and the ache of going home for the holidays—even when “home” exists primarily in our dreams. In many ways, we’ve circumnavigated the entire season.

But when the wrapping paper is gone, and the playlists fade, we’re left with the brass tacks:

What if we were the innkeeper?

What would we have done differently?

Would we have gone so far as to make physical space in our own home for the Holy Family?
Or would we have said, “All I have is a place out back with the animals. It’s not much—but it’s yours.”

Would we have made room not just in our house, but in our hearts—for Mary, Joseph, Jesus, and all the unexpected guests that followed? Where exactly do you put choirs of angels? Shepherds and their sheep? Traveling royalty from the Orient?

Could we have slept with that massive star blazing overhead like neon from an all-night diner?

And finally, would the story feel any less awe-inspiring if Tom Bodett had been there, keeping the light on for weary travelers? Would Jesus’ story change if the infant had been born in a Holiday Inn Express instead of a manger?

Probably not. But the question still lingers, uncomfortably and beautifully:

Are we making room? Not just for the idea of Jesus. Not just for tradition. But for the interruption. For the inconvenience. For holy disruption.

Because Christmas doesn’t arrive quietly. It knocks. It crowds. And it asks something of us. 


BONUS QUIZ: WHICH INNKEEPER ARE YOU?
A Christmas Reflection Micro-Quiz

Christmas is more than a memory—it’s a moment of decision. The innkeeper in Luke’s story never speaks. But his choice echoes through history. Take a minute. Answer honestly. There are no wrong answers, only invitations.

QUESTION 1

It’s late. You’re exhausted. Someone knocks unexpectedly. You…

A. Don’t hear it. You’re already overwhelmed.
B. Pause—but think, “I don’t have anything left to give.”
C. Open the door, unsure what you can offer.
D. Immediately start rearranging space.

QUESTION 2

Your schedule during the holidays feels…

A. Packed beyond capacity.
B. Full—but manageable with effort.
C. Flexible if something truly matters.
D. Open by design.

QUESTION 3

When faith interrupts your plans, your first reaction is…

A. Discomfort.
B. Hesitation.
C. Curiosity.
D. Welcome.

QUESTION 4

“Making room for Jesus” feels most like…

A. A beautiful idea—but unrealistic.
B. Something you want to do better.
C. A daily, imperfect practice.
D. A guiding priority.

QUESTION 5

The innkeeper’s most significant challenge was…

A. Not knowing who was knocking.
B. Being stretched too thin.
C. Fear of inconvenience.
D. Recognizing holiness in ordinary moments.


Mostly A’s → Full Innkeeper
Mostly B’s → Willing but Weary
Mostly C’s → Making-Room
Mostly D’s → Open-Door
(Tie-breakers default to the gentler result—never shame)


THE FULL INNKEEPER
You’re carrying more than most can see.
This season isn’t about guilt—it’s about grace.
Sometimes rest is the room Christ asks for first.
Reflection: What might it look like to release one burden instead of adding one more?

THE WILLING BUT WEARY INNKEEPER
Your heart is open—even when your hands are full.
You may not feel ready, but willingness is holy ground.
Reflection: Where could you offer something small without apology?

THE MAKING-ROOM INNKEEPER
You understand that faith rarely arrives perfectly timed.
You’re learning that “not much” can still be enough.
Reflection: Who might be waiting for the space you’re already creating?

THE OPEN-DOOR INNKEEPER
You expect the holy to arrive unexpectedly.
You live with margin—because you believe interruption is invitation.
Reflection: How can you help others recognize the knock when it comes?


Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Are We Becoming a Nation of Holidays?

 


When Donald Trump periodically declared December 24 and 26 as federal holidays for government workers, the reaction was mostly shrugs and smiles. Who argues with time off? But zoom out, and a larger question looms: Are we becoming a nation that governs by calendar more than conviction?


When Everything Gets a Holiday, Nothing Feels Holy! Once upon a time, holidays marked survival and sacredness:

  • harvests that kept people alive

  • victories that kept nations intact

  • holy days that oriented souls

Today, we add holidays not because crops were gathered or wars were won, but because recognition feels like resolution. Juneteenth. Indigenous Peoples’ Day. Expanded observances, renamed observances, reinterpreted observances.

Each carries meaning. None are frivolous on its own. Together, they quietly transform holidays from anchors of memory into pressure valves for the presentThe question isn’t “Do these days matter?” It’s “What happens when every unresolved tension gets a day off instead of a reckoning?”

Rome Took the Day Off Too! Historians estimate that citizens of the Roman Empire enjoyed upward of 150 festival and holiday days a year, sometimes closer to 200, depending on the emperor and the era. Rome didn’t fall because people rested. It fell because spectacle replaced responsibility.

Bread was subsidized. Circuses multiplied. Work was optional. Attention was managed. Sound uncomfortably modern? Is the Super Bowl: Our New Saturnalia? We joke about making the Monday after the Super Bowl a national holiday, but jokes are how cultures rehearse future decisions. For one night:
  • productivity halts

  • calories don’t count

  • tribal loyalties flare

  • Commercials cost more than small towns

It’s a civic ritual, whether we admit it or not. Which brings us to the arena.

Gladiators in Shoulder Pads. The athletes of the National Football League are not slaves, but they are bodies offered for collective catharsis. They:
  • sacrifice long-term health for short careers

  • entertain massive crowds

  • absorb violence so society can cheer without guilt

Rome had gladiators. We have fantasy leagues.  Here’s the part history always whispers too late: Civilizations don’t collapse when they work too hard. They falter when meaning is replaced with management, when discomfort is anesthetized with holidays, spectacles, and symbols. A day off is not the same as progress. Recognition is not the same as repair. And entertainment is not the same as purpose.

Rome didn’t fall on a workday. It fell during a festival.

Monday, December 22, 2025

Which Santa Are You?

 

Pick the answer that feels most like you. No overthinking. Santa never does.

Question 1

At a holiday gathering, you’re most likely to:

  • A) Helping quietly in the background

  • B) Keeping things on schedule

  • C) Making sure everyone feels welcome

  • D) Watching it all unfold with mild amusement

Question 2

Your relationship with tradition is:

  • A) Sacred — don’t touch it

  • B) Important, but adaptable

  • C) It’s about the feeling, not the rules

  • D) Let’s reinvent this thing

Question 3

How do people describe you?

  • A) Dependable

  • B) Thoughtful

  • C) Warm

  • D) Put together

Question 4

Your biggest seasonal strength?

  • A) Generosity

  • B) Organization

  • C) Connection

  • D) Innovation


 Results Guide

  • Mostly A’sSaint Nicholas / Clement Clarke Moore Santa

  • Mostly B’sSinterklaas / Thomas Nast Santa

  • Mostly C’sFather Christmas / Coca-Cola Santa

  • Mostly D’sMovie Santa / AI Santa (2025)

  • Even mixHybrid Santa (Most of Us)

Santa Type    3-Word Snapshot
Saint Nicholas        Quiet • Generous • Principled
Sinterklaas        Observant • Organized • Fair
Father Christmas        Festive • Warm • Social
Clement Clarke Moore Santa        Traditional • Steady • Sentimental
Thomas Nast Santa        Visionary • Defining • Foundational
Department Store Santa            Patient • Empathetic • Tired
Coca-Cola Santa        Warm • Approachable • Iconic
Movie Santa        Adaptive • Emotional • Reflective
AI Santa (2025)        Polished • Efficient • Evolving
Hybrid Santa        Balanced • Human • Real

The Many Faces of Santa Claus: A Visual History in 10 Jolly Evolutions

 


Santa Claus has had more wardrobe changes than a pop star and more origin stories than a Marvel character. He has been a saint, a sprite, a moral enforcer, a marketing icon, and, most recently, an AI-rendered marvel with cheekbones no human chimney crawl could justify.

Let’s take a Bryson-style wander through 10 of the most influential Santas in history, mainly told through images, because Santa, like history itself, is best remembered visually.


1. Saint Nicholas (4th Century)

The Man Before the Myth


Before Santa had a sleigh, he had a staff and a reputation. Saint Nicholas of Myra was known for secret gift-giving, generosity, and an apparent fondness for helping people anonymously—an early adopter of what we now call the Santa business model.

Fun fact: He wasn’t rotund, red-suited, or North Pole–adjacent. He was thin, serious, and deeply religious—proof that no one in history looks like their eventual brand.


2. Sinterklaas (Medieval Europe)

Santa with Rules


In the Netherlands, Saint Nicholas evolved into Sinterklaas, a tall bishop who arrived by boat, not sleigh. He kept lists, delivered gifts, and—crucially—judged children.

This version of Santa walked so the “naughty or nice” concept could run.


3. Father Christmas (16th–18th Century England)

The Spirit of the Season

Father Christmas wasn’t about gifts—he was about feasting, merriment, and good cheer, essentially a walking holiday vibe.

He wore green, not red, and symbolized celebration more than surveillance. If modern Santa is a logistics manager, Father Christmas was the morale officer.


4. 🇺🇸 Early American Santa (1800s)

Imported, Adjusted, Americanized

As European traditions crossed the Atlantic, Americans began remixing Santa. He shrank in size, lost the bishop’s robes, and started looking more approachable—less “church authority,” more “friendly neighbor.”

Think beta version.


5. Clement Clarke Moore (1823)

The Poem That Changed Everything

“A Visit from St. Nicholas” gave us:

  • Eight reindeer

  • Chimneys as entry points

  • A jolly, plump elf

It also quietly locked Santa into Christmas Eve, which every delivery driver since has deeply resented.


6. Thomas Nast (1860s–1880s)

Santa Gets a Permanent Look


Nast did for Santa what the Renaissance did for anatomy—standardization.  He gave us:

  • The North Pole workshop

  • A defined body shape

  • A recognizable, repeatable Santa

Also, fun trivia: Nast is why Santa is associated with American patriotism during the Civil War.


7. Department Store Santa (Early 1900s)

Santa Goes to Work

This is when Santa entered the workforce. Department stores realized that if Santa showed up, wallets followed.  Children sat on laps. Parents took photos. Santa learned patience.


8. Coca-Cola Santa (1931)

The Red Suit Becomes Canon

Illustrated by Haddon Sundblom, Coca-Cola’s Santa:

  • Looked warm

  • Looked human

  • Looked like he might actually enjoy cookies

This Santa didn’t invent the red suit—but he made it non-negotiable.


9. Pop Culture Santa (1950s–2000s)

From Miracle to Mall Cop

Movies, TV specials, and cartoons multiplied Santa’s personalities:

  • Wise

  • Goofy

  • Exhausted

  • Occasionally existential

By now, Santa had become a mirror, reflecting whatever the culture needed him to be.


10. The 2025 AI Santa

Perfect Beard. Impossible Symmetry.

Today’s Santa is:
  • Flawless

  • Cinematic

  • Slightly unsettling

AI Santas glow, muscles subtly visible beneath velvet, snowflakes perfectly placed. He looks less like a chimney climber and more like he’s about to host a prestige streaming series.  And yet, we still recognize him instantly.

Why Santa Endures? Santa works because he evolves. He adapts to belief systems, commerce, art styles, technology, and even algorithms, while somehow remaining familiar. He’s proof that myths don’t survive by staying pure. They survive by staying useful. And cheerful. Always cheerful.

Sunday, December 21, 2025

What’s in a Name? Why Names Matter in Music and Life

 Names are powerful. They carry history, identity, and sometimes even a story within a single word. For artists, a name can be a muse, a character, or a tribute. For us, names can connect us to family, heritage, and cherished memories.

Music has long celebrated the magic of names, whether it’s literally in the song title or woven into the lyrics. Some artists highlight the word “Name” itself:

Songs With “Name” in the Title

  • “Name” – Goo Goo Dolls

  • “Stop! In the Name of Love” – The Supremes

  • “You Give Love a Bad Name” – Bon Jovi

  • “Pride (In the Name of Love)” – U2

  • “Where the Streets Have No Name” – U2

  • “What’s Your Name?” – Lynyrd Skynyrd

  • “I Call Your Name” – The Beatles

  • “Sign Your Name” – Terence Trent D’Arby

  • “Where Everybody Knows Your Name” – Gary Portnoy (Cheers theme)

  • “I Got a Name” – Jim Croce

  • “The Name Game” – Shirley Ellis

  • “The Name of the Game” – ABBA

  • “In the Name of Love” – Thompson Twins

  • “You Know My Name (Look Up the Number)” – The Beatles

  • “My Name Is Prince” – Prince

  • “Say My Name” – Destiny’s Child

  • “A Horse With No Name” – America

  • “A Boy Named Sue” – Johnny Cash

Here, the word “Name” itself becomes a focal point—sometimes playful, sometimes spiritual, always meaningful.

But names in music are not always abstract. Many songs celebrate specific people, real or imagined, using their names to tell stories of love, loss, admiration, or fun:

Popular Songs With Real Names in the Title

  • “Eleanor Rigby” – The Beatles

  • “Sweet Caroline” – Neil Diamond

  • “Layla” – Derek and the Dominos

  • “Roxanne” – The Police

  • “Angie” – The Rolling Stones

  • “Maggie May” – Rod Stewart

  •  “Alison” – Elvis Costello

  • “Jane” – Starship

  • “Sweet Melissa” – The Allman Brothers Band

  • “Jessica” – The Allman Brothers Band

  • “Billie Jean” – Michael Jackson

  • “Fernando” – ABBA

  • “Bennie and the Jets” – Elton John

  • “Jolene” – Dolly Parton

  • “Mandy” – Barry Manilow

  • “Sherry” – The Four Seasons

  • “Valerie” – Amy Winehouse

  • “A Boy Named Sue” – Johnny Cash

  • “Cecilia” – Simon & Garfunkel

  • “Peggy Sue” – Buddy Holly

  • “Hey There Delilah” – Plain White T’s

  • “Olivia” – One Direction

  • “Michelle” – The Beatles

  • “Lola” – The Kinks

  • “Rosanna” – Toto

Every one of these songs gives life to a name, transforming it into a story, an emotion, or a celebration. Some are love letters, some are tributes, and some are just fun.

Why Our Names Matter

Just as these songs carry meaning, our names do too. Many of us are named after grandparents, parents, or family friends—people who shaped our lives or who we want to honor. When we say our own name, we are connecting to a story, a heritage, and a legacy.

Artists celebrate names because names are personal. And we should, too. Whether your name is common or rare, long or short, hyphenated or unique, it’s yours—and it tells a story.

So next time you hear a song with a name in the title, or see your own name in writing, remember: names matter. They anchor us. They honor the people we love. And sometimes, they even inspire a hit song.

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