The Fourth of July, Independence Day, has always been a fun
celebration for me. For the record, it’s
also one of those holidays that I believe should require that everything shuts
down. I can sort of understand not
agreeing on closing businesses on other holidays. We don’t all have the same religious beliefs
or really like certain presidents.
However, if we as a country cannot close our store doors to celebrate
the day of our freedom, what is there really to celebrate at any other time? It is a day to be with family and friends
celebrating life and liberty.
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Zac & the 8-year old lighting up the sky |
It was on this day, July 4th, in 1776 that the Continental
Congress approved the Declaration of Independence, paving the way for parades,
fireworks, and backyard barbecues. Okay,
it opened the door for quite a bit more than that, but that seems to be what
most Americans remember. The 13
colonies, on their way to being a sovereign nation, held 2.5 million people on
that first July Fourth. Today the United
States has roughly 316.2 million. We
have definitely grown as a country and have gone from fighting for our own
freedom to going to war to bring freedom to other nations.
A year after independence was had, Philadelphia held the
first celebration, even while the war was still going on. The following year, George Washington
celebrated the event by giving double rations of rum to his soldiers. Now, that’s my kind of commander. Three years after that, in 1781,
Massachusetts was the first state to make an official holiday of July Fourth, still
several months from our victory in Yorktown.
However, it wasn’t until 1941 that Independence Day became a federal
holiday allowing the politicians and bank employees another paid holiday while
the rest of us worked our bums off to pay for it.
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Chris is ready for some fireworks |
When I was younger, the place to be on July 4th was the Eau
Gallie Public Library on the northwest corner of the Eau Gallie Causeway. The city had put together an all day family
festival that would end with fireworks being blasted into the air over the
Indian River. There were games for kids,
a fish fry, and music throughout the day.
Many years found us running around the place, full of excitement as we
won prizes and stuffed ourselves silly.
As I grew older, the celebration was moved from the Eau
Gallie Causeway to the Melbourne Causeway.
We would pack a picnic lunch, grab some fishing poles and some lawn
chairs and back our cars up along the river to enjoy the evening before the fireworks
would be set off. At that point, we
would curl up in blankets, couples would wrap arms around each other and we
would get lost in the spectacular light show that exploded above us. When a certain firework became a favorite, my
sister and I would name it after a cartoon character in an attempt to remember
it year after year. Of course, there
were those sudden white explosions that sounded like cannon fire and rattled
your eardrums. We hated those.
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The girls & I at a friend's |
There’s something romantic about watching fireworks with
your significant other. The two of you sitting on the ground, wrapped in a
blanket or perhaps laying on the back of a car or in the bed of a truck, heads
together, fingers intertwined as colored lights explode in loud bursts
overhead. It’s easy to get lost in the atmosphere
of each other, even when surrounded by hundreds of people. It’s the perfect date every year.
When our children started arriving, we took up the same
tradition and friends and family gathered at the river’s edge with coolers and
games, canopies and chairs, and made an afternoon of it. While buckets of chicken and cans of soda sat
beside us, we played cards as the Brevard Symphony Orchestra played in the
background. The football was tossed and the
Frisbee thrown. We even walked the pier
and watched the sailboats drift by.
After the fireworks ended, we’d play with sparklers while the crowd
thinned out, giving traffic a chance not to be annoying.
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Enjoying the pool |
As the children grew older, they began to wander off to their
own celebrations. They had their own
parties, their own friends. It’s the
Circle of Life, but that’s okay. We had
our friends, too, and we began to have our own barbecues and set off our own
fireworks. We won’t sit by the river,
but instead float around a pool or relax in a hot tub. As with all other holidays, this one will
require a new tradition. Yet, it doesn’t
matter where we celebrate or even how.
It only matters that we do,
because regardless of how much we may grumble about politicians and their greed
induced stupidity, we are still free.
Free to pursue our dreams. Free
to live our life as we should. We’re
even free to complain about the things we don’t like. This country isn’t perfect, but it’s still
one of the best.
Make this day about celebration. Gather your family and friends and raise a
glass to freedom and to life. Then
cuddle up, watch the fireworks, and twirl some sparklers. The girls and I will be doing just that
tomorrow. We need these breaks to remind
us that things aren’t as bad as they could be.
So do yourself a favor and take it.
I’ll see you in the pool!
* * * * *
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Thanks for visiting The Mess!
Again, let us face the fact that writing essay for me is really not an easy task. So what would be the first and next thing you should do?
ReplyDeleteWhat are you trying to write?
DeleteI'm glad to see that you know that the declaration was ratified today. Too many people think that we declared independence today.
ReplyDeleteI love fireworks too. Just got off my roof where I was watching the fireworks display in my neighborhood. Hope you had a good fourth.
We left a friend's house last night and drove down the interstate and we could see rows of fireworks being set off. Almost felt like I was being honored in a parade lol.
DeleteThanks for visiting and commenting, Peter!