PTIJ: Why can't I sing about soda on certain days?Parashat PekudeiPurim and Shushan PurimIm l'eit kazot...
Where is this quote about overcoming the impossible said in "Interstellar"?
Practical reasons to have both a large police force and bounty hunting network?
Called into a meeting and told we are being made redundant (laid off) and "not to share outside". Can I tell my partner?
Is there a way to find out the age of climbing ropes?
Deal the cards to the players
Why doesn't "adolescent" take any articles in "listen to adolescent agonising"?
Are all UTXOs locked by an address spent in a transaction?
How can neutral atoms have exactly zero electric field when there is a difference in the positions of the charges?
“I had a flat in the centre of town, but I didn’t like living there, so …”
Caulking a corner instead of taping with joint compound?
Is there a limit on the maximum number of future jobs queued in an org?
Understanding the template
Can the Shape Water Cantrip be used to manipulate blood?
Is there a frame of reference in which I was born before I was conceived?
Wardrobe above a wall with fuse boxes
When do _WA_Sys_ statistics Get Updated?
Sometimes a banana is just a banana
Difference between 'stomach' and 'uterus'
Make me a metasequence
If there are any 3nion, 5nion, 7nion, 9nion, 10nion, etc.
How to disable or uninstall iTunes under High Sierra without disabling SIP
Was it really inappropriate to write a pull request for the company I interviewed with?
How to fix my table, centering of columns
Formatting a table to look nice
PTIJ: Why can't I sing about soda on certain days?
Parashat PekudeiPurim and Shushan PurimIm l'eit kazot higa'at lamalchut - mi yodeya?Why do we read VaYechal on Taanis Esther?Being Machmir in “Matanot Laevyonim”Is fasting like getting drunk?What's wrong with being a “Ka'eyleh Jew”?Irrational Numbers - Mi YodeyaPTIJ - Raui Leachilas MeraglimPTIJ: Can't find the fifth chelek of shulchan aruchPTIJ: Fibonacci Numbers - Mi Yodeya?PTIJ: Why does Esther complain about Haman's slender enemy?
Part of the weekday Shachrit includes Psalm 100, which is מזמור לתודה - a song for soda.
We don't sing about soda on Shabbat, Yom Tov, Erev Pesach, Hol Hamo'ed Pesach and Erev Yom Kippur.
Many people like soda. Some people sing whenever they eat or drink, and bubbly water is refreshing and gladdens the spirit and the esophagus. It's something to sing about. And, I know we're allowed to drink soda on all these days except Yom Kippur. (OK, I can understand, then, why it's eliminated then.)
So what's special about all the other days when we can't sing about soda?
This question is Purim Torah and is not intended to be taken completely seriously. See the Purim Torah policy.
purim-torah-in-jest
add a comment |
Part of the weekday Shachrit includes Psalm 100, which is מזמור לתודה - a song for soda.
We don't sing about soda on Shabbat, Yom Tov, Erev Pesach, Hol Hamo'ed Pesach and Erev Yom Kippur.
Many people like soda. Some people sing whenever they eat or drink, and bubbly water is refreshing and gladdens the spirit and the esophagus. It's something to sing about. And, I know we're allowed to drink soda on all these days except Yom Kippur. (OK, I can understand, then, why it's eliminated then.)
So what's special about all the other days when we can't sing about soda?
This question is Purim Torah and is not intended to be taken completely seriously. See the Purim Torah policy.
purim-torah-in-jest
add a comment |
Part of the weekday Shachrit includes Psalm 100, which is מזמור לתודה - a song for soda.
We don't sing about soda on Shabbat, Yom Tov, Erev Pesach, Hol Hamo'ed Pesach and Erev Yom Kippur.
Many people like soda. Some people sing whenever they eat or drink, and bubbly water is refreshing and gladdens the spirit and the esophagus. It's something to sing about. And, I know we're allowed to drink soda on all these days except Yom Kippur. (OK, I can understand, then, why it's eliminated then.)
So what's special about all the other days when we can't sing about soda?
This question is Purim Torah and is not intended to be taken completely seriously. See the Purim Torah policy.
purim-torah-in-jest
Part of the weekday Shachrit includes Psalm 100, which is מזמור לתודה - a song for soda.
We don't sing about soda on Shabbat, Yom Tov, Erev Pesach, Hol Hamo'ed Pesach and Erev Yom Kippur.
Many people like soda. Some people sing whenever they eat or drink, and bubbly water is refreshing and gladdens the spirit and the esophagus. It's something to sing about. And, I know we're allowed to drink soda on all these days except Yom Kippur. (OK, I can understand, then, why it's eliminated then.)
So what's special about all the other days when we can't sing about soda?
This question is Purim Torah and is not intended to be taken completely seriously. See the Purim Torah policy.
purim-torah-in-jest
purim-torah-in-jest
asked 2 hours ago
DanFDanF
33.8k527124
33.8k527124
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
It's obvious. You should be drinking wine on those days - not soda. As for Erev Yom Kippur, you should be drinking wine then too in order to make the transition from drinking to fasting harder and therefore intensifying the "inui" affliction.
add a comment |
It's because תודה reminds us of סודה, which reminds us of the founding of Mitzrayim, which is a sad time and not a happy time. If Mitzrayim had never been founded then an evil Paro would not have arisen to enslave us all, and we would not have been driven down so far that we fell into Mitzrayim's idolatrous ways mere weeks after receiving the torah. Mitzrayim brought us sorrow and woe, and we do not want to be sad on festive days! And even on Yom Kippur, we should be reflecting on our own deeds, not Mitzrayim's.
So why is it permitted to sing of soda on other days? On other days we hear of sadness and evil all the time (at least if we are within range of any news source). Singing that reminds us of Mitzrayim cannot possibly make things worse on those days; in fact, a little singing about Mountain Dew might distract us and singing of Red Bull might even elevate us. But don't sing of Sprites, though; that way lies trouble.
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
It's obvious. You should be drinking wine on those days - not soda. As for Erev Yom Kippur, you should be drinking wine then too in order to make the transition from drinking to fasting harder and therefore intensifying the "inui" affliction.
add a comment |
It's obvious. You should be drinking wine on those days - not soda. As for Erev Yom Kippur, you should be drinking wine then too in order to make the transition from drinking to fasting harder and therefore intensifying the "inui" affliction.
add a comment |
It's obvious. You should be drinking wine on those days - not soda. As for Erev Yom Kippur, you should be drinking wine then too in order to make the transition from drinking to fasting harder and therefore intensifying the "inui" affliction.
It's obvious. You should be drinking wine on those days - not soda. As for Erev Yom Kippur, you should be drinking wine then too in order to make the transition from drinking to fasting harder and therefore intensifying the "inui" affliction.
answered 2 hours ago
Avrohom YitzchokAvrohom Yitzchok
31k632100
31k632100
add a comment |
add a comment |
It's because תודה reminds us of סודה, which reminds us of the founding of Mitzrayim, which is a sad time and not a happy time. If Mitzrayim had never been founded then an evil Paro would not have arisen to enslave us all, and we would not have been driven down so far that we fell into Mitzrayim's idolatrous ways mere weeks after receiving the torah. Mitzrayim brought us sorrow and woe, and we do not want to be sad on festive days! And even on Yom Kippur, we should be reflecting on our own deeds, not Mitzrayim's.
So why is it permitted to sing of soda on other days? On other days we hear of sadness and evil all the time (at least if we are within range of any news source). Singing that reminds us of Mitzrayim cannot possibly make things worse on those days; in fact, a little singing about Mountain Dew might distract us and singing of Red Bull might even elevate us. But don't sing of Sprites, though; that way lies trouble.
add a comment |
It's because תודה reminds us of סודה, which reminds us of the founding of Mitzrayim, which is a sad time and not a happy time. If Mitzrayim had never been founded then an evil Paro would not have arisen to enslave us all, and we would not have been driven down so far that we fell into Mitzrayim's idolatrous ways mere weeks after receiving the torah. Mitzrayim brought us sorrow and woe, and we do not want to be sad on festive days! And even on Yom Kippur, we should be reflecting on our own deeds, not Mitzrayim's.
So why is it permitted to sing of soda on other days? On other days we hear of sadness and evil all the time (at least if we are within range of any news source). Singing that reminds us of Mitzrayim cannot possibly make things worse on those days; in fact, a little singing about Mountain Dew might distract us and singing of Red Bull might even elevate us. But don't sing of Sprites, though; that way lies trouble.
add a comment |
It's because תודה reminds us of סודה, which reminds us of the founding of Mitzrayim, which is a sad time and not a happy time. If Mitzrayim had never been founded then an evil Paro would not have arisen to enslave us all, and we would not have been driven down so far that we fell into Mitzrayim's idolatrous ways mere weeks after receiving the torah. Mitzrayim brought us sorrow and woe, and we do not want to be sad on festive days! And even on Yom Kippur, we should be reflecting on our own deeds, not Mitzrayim's.
So why is it permitted to sing of soda on other days? On other days we hear of sadness and evil all the time (at least if we are within range of any news source). Singing that reminds us of Mitzrayim cannot possibly make things worse on those days; in fact, a little singing about Mountain Dew might distract us and singing of Red Bull might even elevate us. But don't sing of Sprites, though; that way lies trouble.
It's because תודה reminds us of סודה, which reminds us of the founding of Mitzrayim, which is a sad time and not a happy time. If Mitzrayim had never been founded then an evil Paro would not have arisen to enslave us all, and we would not have been driven down so far that we fell into Mitzrayim's idolatrous ways mere weeks after receiving the torah. Mitzrayim brought us sorrow and woe, and we do not want to be sad on festive days! And even on Yom Kippur, we should be reflecting on our own deeds, not Mitzrayim's.
So why is it permitted to sing of soda on other days? On other days we hear of sadness and evil all the time (at least if we are within range of any news source). Singing that reminds us of Mitzrayim cannot possibly make things worse on those days; in fact, a little singing about Mountain Dew might distract us and singing of Red Bull might even elevate us. But don't sing of Sprites, though; that way lies trouble.
answered 23 mins ago
Monica Cellio♦Monica Cellio
37.3k580260
37.3k580260
add a comment |
add a comment |