So today is St. Patrick’s Day or Lá Fheile Pádraig and all over the world communities are celebrating with parades, a day off work, wearing shamrock on their lapel and downing a pint of the black stuff.
This morning Oldest Boy asked me why 17th March
was picked to be St. Patrick’s Day. Was he
born today? Did he die today? Was today the day he drove all the snakes out
of Ireland?
I couldn’t answer him despite having celebrated his feast
day all of my life so realising I knew nothing about the man, I made a swift appointment
with Dr. Google.
I discovered, amongst some other interesting facts, St.
Patrick is reputed to have died on 17th March, hence the birth of
St. Patrick’s Day.
Some other 9 things you may or may know have known about the
patron saint of Ireland are:
He’s not Irish
Shock! He was born in
Britain. His parents are believed to have
been Romans of some means complete with slaves.
The snake myth
Ireland was water locked thus making it impossible for
snakes to have ever been here. Maybe they
confused them with politicians.
He enjoyed his
whiskey
Going so far as to encourage people to indulge on his feast
day. Rumour has it he gave out to an inn
keeper who was a bit mean with his measure.
Maybe he was Irish after all.
Blue and green should
never be seen
Apparently he favoured blue clothing and not the ubiquitous
green we see on his feast day.
He was a slave
Captured when he was a teen he didn’t turn to god until he
was an adult. Tending sheep all day in the
Irish countryside might just do that to you.
Voices in his head
The voice urged him to make his way to a port where a ship
waiting for him would take him back to Britain.
The unlucky soul was captured during the attempt and was taken to France
where he spent 60 days and was introduced to the monastic life.
The Great Escape Part
Deux
They say god loves a tryer and it obviously worked for Paddy
who made another run for it. This time he
was successful and became a priest eventually becoming a bishop.
Missionary Position
It appears things took off for Paddy in his thirties. He returned to Ireland where he successfully
converted Celtic pagans to Christianity.
He invented the
Shamrock
Not really but he is responsible for it becoming an Irish
symbol. As a preacher St. Patrick used
it to represent the holy trinity: the father, the son and the Holy Spirit.
BC (Before Childers) St. Patrick’s Day was a very important
day for me purely because it meant extra time off work or school but since
becoming a parent, like the weekends, it is now just another 24 hours. A day spent inventing excuses not to take
four small boys into a bustling town to stand behind scores of people and look
at their arses because they are too short to see anything above that
height. I possess just one pair of
shoulders and they are reserved for my bag so learning from previous years of, “I’m
bored,” “I’m cold,” “I’m hungry,” “When can we go?” “I can’t seeeeeeeeee,”and
usually in wet rain, this year I took a different approach to our public
holiday.
We had pancakes for breakfast and one of them was coloured
green for the day that was in it. I made
only one because I knew it would be received with strong suspicion and slight
disgust.
I was right.
“That looks like someone sneezed on it!” The other pancakes were greeted with great
enthusiasm and hovered up. Then we went for a family swim which was
lovely.
Home for a quick snack and the afternoon stretched before us. Sometimes kids have great ideas and one of
them suggested bringing the pooch to the woods.
This beat my unvoiced idea of the playground hands down.
We had a lovely hour and a half of aimless wandering around
where small voices asked “are we lost?” once or twice. When one of them wanted
to know, “are we going to die here?” I thought it was time to “find” the correct
trail back to the car and go home.
The secret, dear reader, to a successful bank holiday
weekend with kids, is to run the collective backsides off them. On returning home one of them will inevitably
fall asleep in the car. On getting into
the house, the others will sit, silently watching the goggle box.
It was a minor St. Patrick’s Day miracle in itself. Three of them sat side by side without
killing each other over remote control rights and couch space. They were too tired to do anything else
except talk nicely to each other and
watch television in agreeable companionship.
Me? Back in the
kitchen making my second large batch of pancakes of the day.
Lá Fhéile Pádraig gach duine!
No comments:
Post a Comment