MFRW 52-week Blog Challenge Participants #MFRWAuthor 

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nAs stated in previous blog posts, I don’t make New Year’s resolutions. There’s something inherently wrong about revolving to do something in the dead of winter when all I want to do is hibernate. I’m certainly not in any mood to promise to do something (or not do something).
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nFor those who don’t know, January is derived from Janus, the Roman god of entrances and exits. He’s considered a two-faced god. In fact, it was Julius Caesar–yes, that Roman emperor–who decreed January 1 as the start of the new calendar year. Of course, January 1 in central and southern Italy isn’t quite as dismal as it is in snow country. New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day combine to bid goodbye to (exit) the old year and welcome (enter) the new one. We look both forward and backward, toward future and past, in our own version of being two-faced.
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nPerhaps the two-faced nature of making New Year’s resolutions translates into promising oneself to do (or not do) something and then breaking those promises. New Year’s resolutions highlight one of the more common and less attractive aspects of humanity.
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nI don’t make New Year’s resolutions. Some years I make “spring resolutions.” Spring makes more sense to me, because lengthening days and warming weather transform a dismal, brown and gray landscape into one growing green with life and promise.
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nHappy New Year!n

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