This Sunday, 29 October, is National Hermit Day. (I have no idea which nation declared this. The day commemorates an Irish saint, so I'd guess Ireland must at least be in. And since most of the websites about it are American, I'd guess they're in, too. Really, it seems more like International Hermit Day, unless, like Labour Day, various countries are feuding over what date it's observed.)
Anyway.
Judging by Internet sources, lots of people are writing about this, but not many are researching it.
This page, for example, manages to get just about everything wrong.
• The 29th is not St. Colman's Feast. (That would be the 27th.)
• A group of hermits is not called an "observance"; it's a skete. But at least the person who made that up knew what we are; he or she might have gone with a "grumpy" or a "Kaczynski" or some other synonym for antisocial.
• No mention of spiritual practice – the fundamental definition of a hermit.
This one does a better job, at least mentioning the religious nature of non-metaphorical hermits, but only after it says:
Honourable mention to this site, which not only gets St. Colman's feast day right, but leans heavily on the religious origins of the word, going so far as to list two actual hermits (50% of the total) on their list of famous hermits.
Anyway.
I'm not sure what we should do on (Inter)National Hermit Day. A hermit parade on the high road would be pretty paltry, unless you happen to live near the Zhongnan Mountains. Pinching people not wearing sandals would involve a lot of people, and spread the most irritating of all the asinine North American St. Patrick's Day customs.
So bump that.
We might take a page from Bodhisattva Day and don some meaningful garment… if the whole thing about hermits weren't that we serve in civilian clothes, without exclusive robes or regalia.
So how about this: prepare a nice sesshin meal. While enjoying it, contemplate the worthiness of devoting your life to pursuing fundamental, extra-human truth. Recall that it's your right, neither alienable nor certifiable.
Rice and beans or a hearty ramen soup, maybe. A good cup of tea and a nice flavour plate on the side.
Eat in gratitude and appreciation for how delicious and filling it is, whether the dish earns others' praise or not.
It feeds and rehinges.
And that's a blessing worth celebrating.
(Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons and a generous photographer.)
Anyway.
Judging by Internet sources, lots of people are writing about this, but not many are researching it.
This page, for example, manages to get just about everything wrong.
• The 29th is not St. Colman's Feast. (That would be the 27th.)
• A group of hermits is not called an "observance"; it's a skete. But at least the person who made that up knew what we are; he or she might have gone with a "grumpy" or a "Kaczynski" or some other synonym for antisocial.
• No mention of spiritual practice – the fundamental definition of a hermit.
This one does a better job, at least mentioning the religious nature of non-metaphorical hermits, but only after it says:
Hermits, by definition, are people who prefer seclusion to socialization.Uh, no. Our actual motivation can be contemplated here.
Honourable mention to this site, which not only gets St. Colman's feast day right, but leans heavily on the religious origins of the word, going so far as to list two actual hermits (50% of the total) on their list of famous hermits.
Anyway.
I'm not sure what we should do on (Inter)National Hermit Day. A hermit parade on the high road would be pretty paltry, unless you happen to live near the Zhongnan Mountains. Pinching people not wearing sandals would involve a lot of people, and spread the most irritating of all the asinine North American St. Patrick's Day customs.
So bump that.
We might take a page from Bodhisattva Day and don some meaningful garment… if the whole thing about hermits weren't that we serve in civilian clothes, without exclusive robes or regalia.
So how about this: prepare a nice sesshin meal. While enjoying it, contemplate the worthiness of devoting your life to pursuing fundamental, extra-human truth. Recall that it's your right, neither alienable nor certifiable.
Rice and beans or a hearty ramen soup, maybe. A good cup of tea and a nice flavour plate on the side.
Eat in gratitude and appreciation for how delicious and filling it is, whether the dish earns others' praise or not.
It feeds and rehinges.
And that's a blessing worth celebrating.
(Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons and a generous photographer.)
Interesting post. I use Holiday Insights dot com to learn about strange holidays. They don't have an origin for the Hermit Day.
ReplyDeleteFor religious folks, I think recluse is the name they are called when they go hermit.
Happy Hermit Day!
Other way 'round. A hermit is religious, a recluse is just antisocial. The term "hermit" has been used metaphorically for so long, during which organised religion cemented its monopoly on spiritual endeavour, that few people remember what the word really means.
ReplyDeleteEither way, I would be interested to know who decided to declare a formal hermit holiday. And if they knew what the word means. (Sounds like they must have, since it was inspired by St. Colman. Though it's not, for some reason, on his feast. Whole thing is a bit mysterious.)
Thanks for the comment!
There's a guy named "Rusty Ring." https://www.linkedin.com/in/rusty-ring-4218a46/
ReplyDeleteYeah, I think I encountered that fact somewhere once.
Deletehttps://crabstreetjournal.org/blog/2023/10/29/protecting-our-tiny-friends-national-hermit-crab-day/
ReplyDeleteThat's an incredible coïncidence. I gotta say, I can get behind this observance more than the one I wrote about. I've been a huge fan of hermit crabs since I was little. I've often kept them as pets, though always the marine version, not the ones that crawl on land. Even so, they're easy to care for, and we have millions in every size and colour here.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link!