Wednesday, December 31, 2008

New Years Eve
(And National Bicarbonate of Soda Day)

While watching the last moments of ’08 slip by -
Tossing back cocktails, forlorn and cockeyed.
At the stroke of twelve, hugging all with delight -
Men in tuxedos, and leggy ladies in dresses skintight.

We find our way home, somewhat assembled – quasi,
After self-medicating from our host’s ample supply.
We crawl under the sheets, to avoid the daylight,
Recollecting the night’s actions with bleary hindsight.

But by making resolutions while a barfly,
We’re bound to set standards so high we can’t try.
So in future, make decisions in sober daylight.
Instead of dim-witted – they’ll be dynamite.

~Michael DeJong

Expectations get lowered, trousers get lowered, interest rates have been lowered, with meds our blood pressure and anxiety levels get lowered, the drinking age in some states has been lowered, and our pensions and 401Ks have also been lowered. But on New Year’s Eve - like clockwork - millions of people still insist on freezing in lowered temperatures huddled in massive crowds in New York City’s Times Square as they watch in amazement as the gigantic crystal ball - too - is lowered.

But it’s not just in the hustle and bustle of big cities that things get lowered in celebration of the New Year. Take for instance Bethlehem, Pennsylvanian’s 25-pound fiberglass illuminated Peep; or Easton, Maryland’s grotesquely enormous imitation of a steamed red crab; or Lebanon, Pennsylvania’s seven-and-a-half-foot “fit-to-be-eaten” bologna; or Mount Olive, North Carolina’s three-foot tall shimmering pickle; or New Orleans’ paper mache gumbo pot; or Plymouth, Wisconsin’s super huge, yet thankfully artificial, hunk-o-cheese; or Port Clinton, Ohio’s 20-foot 600-pound fiberglass walleye; or Raleigh, North Carolina’s 1,250-pound copper acorn; and let’s not forget Key West, Florida’s local Drag Queen in her glittering six-foot tall, red, high-heeled shoe. Everywhere, it seems, things get lowered to ring in the New Year.

Descending “stuff” aside, many people look to the New Year as an uplifting fresh start. But for most of us, what it really becomes is a fresh start to old habits. (You know how it goes - in one year and out the other?) This year, instead of New Years Eve being a fresh start to last year’s bad habits how about it becoming a fresh start to freshness?

As many of you already know - New Years Eve or not - baking soda sparkles like a freshly fallen first snow. (Somewhat appropriate considering that here in the eastern portion of the United States, it’s winter.) White, powdery and soft to the touch, odorless and inert upon inspection, baking soda most commonly loiters in the fridge behind leftovers, lunchmeat and lettuce. Not just great as a refrigerator deodorizer, it’s remarkably useful when sprinkled, scattered, spread, strewn, or kept in your closet, kitty litter, crisper or carport. (And you’re probably wondering to yourself “Hmmm? What’s this got to do with New Years Eve?”)

On New Year’s Eve, while the rest of the world is lowering wedges of cheese, copper acorns, blackened gumbo pots, illuminated Peeps, shimmering pickles, steaming crabs, super-sized bolognas, walleyes and - yes - even Drag Queens, many of us blindly lower our standards…especially while inebriated, and belly-ing up to the all-you-can-eat buffets oblivious to the affordable booze and cheap chow that we’re consuming.

On New Year’s morning – when you’re feeling anything but fresh - baking soda (bicarbonate of soda) works great for that “morning after” bellyache. Just mix one quarter teaspoon of baking soda into a quarter cup of water in your choice of a freshly rinsed highball, lowball, wine glass, champagne flute, martini glass, shot glass, brandy snifter, or beer mug. Give it a swirl, take a deep breath, toss back the swig, wait for that inevitable refreshing belch, and greet the spanking New Year with a smile.

Happy New Year!
(And yes…I really did write the poem.)

Michael De Jong, is the author of “CLEAN: The Humble Art of Zen-Cleansing,” (
www.zencleansing.com) produced by Joost Elffers Design and published in 2007 by Sterling Publishers. He lives in Jersey City with his partner, dog and three goldfish, all of which benefit from his natural cleaning techniques. He is currently writing a companion series of “CLEAN” books dealing with such topics as the body, first aid, organization, as well as posting weekly blogs on Hearst’s “The Daily Green” (http://www.thedailygreen.com/green-homes/blogs/nontoxic/) and the Huffington Post (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-dejong). De Jong is also “Ask Mr. Green” for NBC-Universal-Bravo’s eco-website www.GreenIsUniversal.com. (http://www.greenisuniversal.com/ask_mr_green.php) “CLEAN: The Humble Art of Zen-Cleansing” can be purchased at Barnes & Noble stores across the country or on-line at www.barnesandnoble.com or www.amazon.com. “CLEAN” is also an online course about “zen-cleansing” at Latitude U (www.LatitudeU.com).

Please consider the environment.

2 comments:

Deborah said...

I just bought your book and thus discovered your blog. Love them both! I am a Feng Shui consultant and have a blog too (Feng Shui Green). Do you ever allow links to your blog? I would love to recommend yours! Just seems we have alot in common - cleaning and Art.

Deborah said...

I just bought your book and thus discovered your blog. Love them both! I am a Feng Shui consultant and have a blog too (Feng Shui Green). Do you ever allow links to your blog? I would love to recommend yours. Just seems we have alot in common - cleaning and Art.