wreckedcarzz,
@wreckedcarzz@lemmy.world avatar

Automatic response. Nobody that I am close with is actually happy (or even fine), but when staff asks you in greeting if you’re having a good day and did you find everything okay, you know they are bullshitting the “I’m doing well, and yes, thanks”. Same sort of automatic bullshit response.

We are living paycheck to paycheck (some not even that), with slowly rising levels of debt, in dead-end jobs while the earth slowly boils us and rich fucks get richer. In tight-knit circles, suicide is often discussed openly and often, and death is welcomed. My best friend recently told me that (if they die before me, as if lol) when I attend the funeral, if anyone suggests that they had a happy life, I am to punch that person in the face, without hesitation.

Life is pain. But it’s so much quicker to fake that your existence isn’t hell, so lying to people in ways that doesn’t matter is way easier.

Happy holidays.

RainfallSonata,

Personally, merry Christmas just sounds better than happy Christmas. Something about the repeated “m” sound, I think.

Varyk,

That’s called euphonics, and I agree

Deceptichum,
@Deceptichum@kbin.social avatar

It was bad when Hitler did it and I’m not going to suddenly start agreeing with it.

ivanafterall,
@ivanafterall@kbin.social avatar

It's Christmas! Let the guy do a little euphonics if it makes him happy.

Varyk,

Euphonics?

TheGalacticVoid,

Replace “euphonics” with “eugenics” and the joke will make sense

ObviouslyNotBanana, (edited )
@ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world avatar

In my country we say “Have a good Yule”.

Lmaydev,

Well your country is wrong.

ObviouslyNotBanana,
@ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world avatar

Nä, julen är äldre än kristmässan.

Deceptichum,
@Deceptichum@kbin.social avatar

No, Jul are older than Christmas?

odium,

*is

I think

ObviouslyNotBanana,
@ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world avatar

Yes.

odium,

Crazy how easy it was to understand that sentence perfectly without speaking any Nordic languages

ObviouslyNotBanana,
@ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world avatar

Det är bra att man kan göra sig förstådd såhär i juletider.

odium,

Now this sentence I don’t understand at all

ObviouslyNotBanana,
@ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world avatar

Det var verkligen jättetråkigt :(

Wodge,
@Wodge@lemmy.world avatar

no u

espentan,

God jul!

ObviouslyNotBanana,
@ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world avatar

God jul och glad fortsättning!

PlasterAnalyst,

Yule see, yule all see!

kubica,
@kubica@kbin.social avatar

But you are hoping for the best for someone else. Better wish them to be merry than just happy then?

lemmus, (edited )
@lemmus@lemmy.world avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • macgyver,
    @macgyver@federation.red avatar

    Idk what country you’re in but Americans would say merry Christmas or happy holidays in most circumstances.

    Wodge,
    @Wodge@lemmy.world avatar

    Am British, also use Nadolig Llawen.

    donuts,
    @donuts@kbin.social avatar

    I've lived in America for almost my entire life and I've never once heard an American say "Happy Christmas". "Happy Holidays", sure, but that's mostly reserved for the days leading up to Christmas. On Christmas Day it's always just "Merry Christmas".

    ndru,

    Merry Christmas is a popular expression in the UK too.

    I think that merriment is actually much easier to attain than happiness. One could be miserable in life, but have a few drinks and be merry.

    phorq,

    Is it wrong for me to say that the pessimism with a side of alcohol is the most British you could possibly describe being merry?

    whenigrowup356,

    Insofar as there’s a distinction between the two, I feel like you’ve got it switched. Merriment would be a night out with drinks and friends, whereas deep happiness would be more like contentedness with your life choices. But they’re about the same. Plus “A Christmas Carol” uses Merry, and it’s like the ultimate Christmas story.

    berkeleyblue,
    @berkeleyblue@lemmy.world avatar

    Tradition, mostly.

    Dickens used Merry Christmas in his Christmas Carol and the US used the greeting since the 19th century.

    In the UK however, happy christmas is more common as the royals used that phrase.

    There’s apparently no big thing behind it. Just the way language evolved with different influences in different regions.

    Breakyfix,
    @Breakyfix@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    am from uk. merry christmas is very much the common phrase here by a long shot

    hellothere,

    Agreed - it’s merry christmas and happy new year.

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