An unofficial holiday with surprisingly serious roots
Every year on November 20th, a loosely observed but genuinely felt holiday invites people to set aside the ordinary logic of their days and make room for the illogical, the unexpected, and the frankly nonsensical. National Absurdity Day is unofficial, unsponsored, and uncomplicated — which is rather the point.
The word absurd derives from the Latin absurdus, meaning “out of tune” — a definition that captures the spirit of the day more precisely than any modern interpretation might. It is not about chaos or meaninglessness, but about that particular quality of being slightly misaligned with the usual order of things. A note played in the wrong key. A hat worn at the wrong angle. A conversation that cheerfully declines to arrive anywhere.
Who celebrates it
In practice, anyone who feels the occasional need to step outside their routine. Celebrations tend toward the small and personal rather than the public and organised: mismatched socks, impromptu games with invented rules, conversations that follow their own logic rather than anyone else’s. The common thread is a willingness to let the day be slightly different from the one before it, without requiring a reason.
Why it matters
Absurdism has a longer and more considered history than a holiday built around silly hats might suggest. As a philosophical tradition — shaped most recognisably by Albert Camus — it grapples with the tension between the human need for meaning and a universe that offers none on demand. The conclusion it tends to reach is not despair but a kind of defiant lightness: if meaning is not given, it can at least be made, or played at, or laughed about.
There is also the more immediate matter of stress. Research consistently supports what most people already know intuitively: humour, play, and creative expression reduce anxiety and improve cognitive flexibility. A day with a formal excuse to be ridiculous is, in that sense, less frivolous than it appears.
National Absurdity Day asks very little — only that, for one day in November, life be permitted to make slightly less sense than usual. Given how often it manages that without any encouragement at all, this seems a reasonable request.