Happy Leap Day!

a totally gratuitous picture of a cup of coffee
a totally gratuitous picture of a cup of coffee

Happy February 29th!

I always wonder about the births today – when do you celebrate your birthday? On March 1st? On February 28th?

One of the best-known traditions about leap year is that women can propose marriage. Let’s set aside the fact that a non-leap year has never stopped anyone from proposing. Nevertheless, ladies, if you are proposing to your boyfriends today, you have a 16th century pope to thank for it!

On February 24, 1582 Pope Gregory XIII issued a papal bull named Inter gravissimas that instituted a new calendar that better aligned with the lunar calendar in order to celebrate Easter at the right time. Because the actual length of a year is a little bit longer that 365 days but not 366 days, that little piece of a day, over time, creates a shift in the systems used to measure years.

Different cultures in different time periods have accounted for the shift in various ways, sometimes adding extra days to a month, like we do today, or introducing a special month to account for the “lost” time. I’m amazed to learn that in the adoptions, countries switching to the new calendar lost as many as 10 days on their old calendar. Imagine going to bed on March 12th and waking up on March 22nd. If that happened today, I’d be pretty concerned about when I pay the mortgage.

In a nutshell, the introduction of the Gregorian calendar 434 years ago put the Roman Catholic Church in different countries in sync in order to celebrate Easter on the same day.  But not everyone made the switch to this new calendar. At first it was only the predominantly Catholic European countries, most adopting it in the 16th shortly after the bull, but the rest of the world trickled along in a process that took about 300 years, more if you consider that countries such as Greece and Turkey didn’t adopt it until the 1920s. There was a great deal of opposition to the calendar – fears that it was a plot by the Church to take over the world. In the end, the adoption was probably driven by economics — everybody needed to be on the same page, so to speak.

Today many people don’t know the Catholic origins of this calendar that is widely adopted across the world, but there you have it.

in the mist

lent

I’m having the Lent of my life. I don’t know what that means, exactly, except that I started off with what I thought were clear goals and a plan for some new spiritual exercises.

Instead, I got some heavy fog. The dense kind that makes it difficult to navigate and even more difficult to move quickly. It messed with my state of mind and I had to regroup, feel my way around a little bit.

I can see the light through the trees and fog now, and it settles me, but it’s daily work. I admit I didn’t know what was in store for me that Wednesday morning when I prayed for the Holy Spirit to fill me this season, but here I am, still trudging along, still praying this prayer:

Eternal God, in whom mercy is endless and the treasury of compassion inexhaustible, look kindly upon us and increase Your mercy in us, that in difficult moments we might not despair nor become despondent, but with great confidence submit ourselves to Your holy will, which is Love and Mercy itself.

Happy Valentine’s Day

My Honey gave me beautiful yellow roses, my favorite, so I played around using the Dreamscope app.

So naturally, I tried all the crazy possibilities. Well. Not all, but the ones I liked.

Click on the first picture to scroll through the gallery. My favorite is #6.

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