<Flashback Friday…someone used a phrase the other day that I’d heard very often throughout my thirty years as a military spouse, but rarely hear in the civilian world. And when I heard it, I tried to remember what it meant. No luck. (This getting older thing is no joke!) Thank goodness I wrote this blog a decade ago that I could quickly refresh my memory. And I thought maybe some of my blog visitors would be interested to have their memories refreshed, or maybe learn something new. So here is a repeat post from April 2, 2012.>>
Wishing someone “Fair
Winds and Following Seas” is a nautical phrase of good luck, a
blessing as it were, as a person, group or thing (i.e. a commissioning ship)
departs on a new voyage in life.
But what exactly
does it mean?
According
to some sources, the full expression offers the departing person “Fair winds,
following seas and long may your big jib draw.” It references ideal
sailing conditions.
But for those of
us who aren’t bilingual in sailor-speak, let’s break that down into ideas we
can understand.
“Fair winds”
offers the sailor a wind that will take you to the places you want to go at a
safe speed.
A “following
sea” will ensure the most comfortable passage on your journey by having a
current be behind you to push you along. (From personal experience I
will tell you that sailing against a choppy current can result in seasickness,
so a following sea is indeed a blessing!)
“Long may your
big jib draw” refers to the jib sail (the one that catches the most wind thus
pushing the vessel faster) remaining full with wind and not, for lack of a good
stiff breeze, flapping like flounder in a catch cooler.
These sentiments
are often expressed to a departing sailor. Granted, no navy ships
rely on wind anymore, but it remains a poetic way to wish them well in the next
chapter of their navy lives.
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