Showing posts with label Holiday Greetings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holiday Greetings. Show all posts

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Happy Holidays to all

I must admit that I have been working like a mad dog (to translate a bizarre Latvian phrase I often use recently) at my day job. We're all reporters now, with me covering telecoms in the broadest sense, including postal services (often a disaster in Latvia), so I get asked to go to some pretty strange events (Santa Claus at a Riga post office).
Anyway, it is only now that I get around to wishing all my readers a Merry Christmas, Happy Kwanza and belated Happy Hanukkah (this lunar/?/ calendar thing of Jewish holidays shifting around always confuses me). Also, all the best for the New Year and new decade (or is it?).
As for me, I am taking a break from the "running of the mad dogs" (skrienam kā traki suņi) to go to the US via London on Sunday (Monday -- to the States). I will spend a few (maybe too few) days near Boston at my mom's place and visit my brother and nephews/son's cousins (my wife and son are also flying). Then we go to Orlando for around a week (for the warm weather) and back to Latvia via London again.
I hope to get into a groove again despite my different workload and write more often for this blog in the New Year. Consider it a resolution with, perhaps, the same fate as most...:)

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Happy Holidays to all

I want to wish Happy Holidays (be it Christmas, Hannukah, Kwanza or Winter Solstice) to all my readers. I will be in the US from December 26 to January 11. To the extent possible, I will post anything of interest on this blog.

Monday, December 24, 2007

Merry Christmas and all other seasonal holidays!

 A Merry Christmas to all my readers who celebrate the holiday. I have apparently missed Hannukah (it only sometimes falls on the same dates as Christmas, but I do hope that any Jewish readers celebrated it well).  And yes, a Happy Kwanza, to any African-American readers who follow this tradition (around Christmas time, if I am not mistaken) as well as, I suppose, any Africans. Maybe I should stick to Season's Greetings and stop struggling to do the ethno-politically correct thing for everyone? :)  
Oh yes, and a Happy Solstice (Saulgrieži) to any and all Latvian Keepers of the Diety (Dievturi).
Did I miss anyone?