Sunday, March 17, 2019

Thankful Sunday, March 17, 2019


I am thankful that we're all different.

Happy St. Patrick's Day

Today is a celebration of our Irish heritage. According to DNA analysis, Ward and I are both 20% Irish.  I look the part with red hair and freckles, but Ward doesn't with black hair and olive skin.  That's what is so interesting about genetics and our varied backgrounds. You're never sure what the almost infinite combination of genes is going to come up with. When I was younger and would lament to my mother I wanted be like one of my older sisters, my mother would always say how boring the world would be if we were all alike. She was right. So for the uniqueness of each and every person, I am thankful.

Now to add a little more about St. Patrick's day, I'm running an updated version of a post from three years ago.

  St. Patrick's Day This and That

Irish dancers in St. Patrick's Day Parade, Washington, D. C.

I usually don't do a lot to observe St. Patrick's Day except wear green--a habit that started in elementary school days to avoid being pinched. If you didn't wear green, you were fair game. I wondered how that crazy tradition got started and found out that, most likely, it was started by Irish immigrants in this country a couple hundred years ago. Supposedly, wearing green made you invisible to mischievous leprechauns who would pinch you if they could see you. A pinch from someone reminded you to be aware that a leprechaun could sneak up on you at any time.

However, it wasn't until last year that I learned about wearing orange on St. Patrick's Day. Apparently, you wear green if you are Catholic and orange if you are Protestant. A friend, whose mother is Irish, said that she was always insistent that they wear orange instead of green on St. Patrick's Day. I think that detail was lost on most of us in this country or at least me.

Shamrocks (white clover)
I learned another new thing this St. Patrick's Day--what a shamrock is. Sarah, my special buddy, gave me a shamrock plant for St. Patrick's Day. It was in a green pot from a store and labeled as a shamrock. However, it looked just like white clover to me and was not at all like my image of a shamrock. But I was surprised when I looked into it. While there is disagreement among the Irish about which variety of clover is a shamrock, it is a clover plant. Yellow clover is what most agreed on with white clover coming in second. I have a white clover plant. I'm not sure if I'm going to let it join the rest of the clover in my yard or bring it inside. I may make it a house plant.

St. Paddy's day in New Orleans ( Photo source)
And while I usually don't do a lot on St. Patrick's Day (not green beer drinker or corned beef eater), I have been to a few parades. This was especially a big event when we lived in New Orleans. The fun part about a St. Patrick's Day parade was they threw vegetables from the floats to make an Irish stew. That means that along with the beads, they threw cabbages, carrots, potatoes and onions. We usually took them home and did just that--made a stew.

We've been to one parade here and while it was enjoyable, it didn't quite live up to the vegetable throwing in New Orleans.

So as I go and figure out what green thing I'm going to wear today, I hope you have a Happy St. Patrick's Day however big or small you chose to celebrate it.




10 comments:

  1. I think it would be interesting to do DNA testing although I did recently hear that each company focuses on different things so you could possibly get different results with testing from different companies. I think genetics and the endless combinations of traits are fascinating.

    My dad loved listening to a wide variety of musical genres, so I grew up listening to Irish music. One of his favorite songs was "The Orange and the Green" (find the lyrics here: https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=the+orange+and+the+green+lyrics and dad explained the Catholic/Protestant color differences to me.

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    1. I just listened to the Irish Rovers sing "Orange and Green". What a fun song.

      As for DNA testing, it's a general thing unless, of course, you find a long lost relative like I did. What bother's me is when people are very specific with their percentages of ethnic make up without taking the error bars into account. It may say someone is 48% Irish, but that number could range from 35-61% (made up numbers) when considering the range of accuracy. So I'm not surprised that people get different numbers from different services, but I would guess that the generalities would be the same.

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  2. Happy St. Patrick's Day to you! I am not Irish and I had never heard of wearing green until I came to this country!

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    1. Wearing green was something I learned as a school child. I had no idea that there was any religious or leprechaun connection to it. I just knew that you got pinched if you weren't wearing green.

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  3. I always prepare cornbeef and sauerkrat on rye sandwiches with potato soup on St. Patty's Day. As well, I make sure to wear my 'Everybody loves an Irish Girl' t-shirt. There's no drinking green beer because we're not beer drinkers, but we do have Rootbeer. That's not only tastier but that's what Snoopy drinks on St. Patrick's Day. :) Thanks for dropping by to check on my A2Z Challenge theme reveal today. I'm looking forward to sharing in the fun with you. Have a great week!

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    1. I don't drink beer either, but I should have had root beer. Great idea. If it's good enough for Snoopy, it's good enough for me. :)

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  4. My daughter and I also took ancestry DNA. I don’t have any Irish, but my daughter has 4% Irish from her father. It also confirmed with 100% accuracy that I’m her mother! That’s really good confirmation aside from the fact that I remember giving birth!

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    1. It's a complicated story, but when my mother did her DNA did not only she find out she had a large percentage of Irish, she had a different father than the one on the birth certificate. That certainly was an interesting turn of events, but explained a lot of things.

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  5. I don't know if I have any Irish in me. I probably have Welsh I'm told. We even are related to the first black slave in America, my brother said, because a cousin on my mother's side is into genealogy. I think we have a bit of everything, two different American Indian tribes, Welsh, German, African....what a mongrel! Love it. You are right, how boring it would be if we all looked the same or dressed the same or believed the same or thought the same. I cannot imagine and don't want to. Luck of the Irish be with ya now.

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    1. I think most of us are a pretty good mix.
      And the luck of the Welsh, African, German, and American Indian be with you.

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What do you think?