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01-14-2025 07:29 PM
If you haven't seen a friend yet this year, I guess it's acceptable but getting old.
From what I hear on the evening news, so far the new year has been anything but "happy". I don't have great expectations.
01-14-2025 08:34 PM
01-14-2025 09:20 PM
I find myself shocked that there are people who think "they alone" deserve happiness...
01-14-2025 09:44 PM
I am the one that started this thread. I think people misconstrued my idea. Of course it is nice and kind to wish someone "happy". But I am just saying New Years is over. Look at it this way: On July 18th (which is 14 days past the 4th of July) at you still going around saying "Happy Independence Day"? In my own opinion when a holiday is over it is completely over. Move on to the next new thing. My opinon only.
01-14-2025 09:46 PM
I think people exchanged New Year's greetings throughout the month of January. I'm still saying it to people I have seen since before the holidays. I don't think there's anything wrong with saying into February.
01-14-2025 09:52 PM
@mormel20 wrote:I am the one that started this thread. I think people misconstrued my idea. Of course it is nice and kind to wish someone "happy". But I am just saying New Years is over. Look at it this way: On July 18th (which is 14 days past the 4th of July) at you still going around saying "Happy Independence Day"? In my own opinion when a holiday is over it is completely over. Move on to the next new thing. My opinon only.
Most people don't take it as seriously as you seem too. And most people don't think of the New Year as a single day. It's not a one and done type of thing like July 4th. Happy New Year means I'm wishing you a good things for the entire New Year so saying it throughout January makes sense is how I think about it.
01-14-2025 11:07 PM
@mormel20 wrote:I am the one that started this thread. I think people misconstrued my idea. Of course it is nice and kind to wish someone "happy". But I am just saying New Years is over. Look at it this way: On July 18th (which is 14 days past the 4th of July) at you still going around saying "Happy Independence Day"? In my own opinion when a holiday is over it is completely over. Move on to the next new thing. My opinon only.
@mormel20. The thing is Independence Day is one 24 hour period whereas New Years has no time limit so technically one could wish a happy new year 365 days. Heaven help us!
01-15-2025 12:06 AM
@mormel20 wrote:I am the one that started this thread. I think people misconstrued my idea. Of course it is nice and kind to wish someone "happy". But I am just saying New Years is over. Look at it this way: On July 18th (which is 14 days past the 4th of July) at you still going around saying "Happy Independence Day"? In my own opinion when a holiday is over it is completely over. Move on to the next new thing. My opinon only.
I don't think that is a valid comparison. Its the new year all year, totally different situation.
01-15-2025 02:02 AM
If I haven't seen someone in a few weeks .. or months ... of course Happy New Year would be appropriate.
At this point, I think it's now based on who you are greeting, not the day of the month.
01-15-2025 07:56 AM - edited 01-15-2025 09:38 AM
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