They say that on the 10 days of awe, between Rosh Hashanah and Yom kippur, everything connects to spiritual work and atonement. I’ll give you an example:
Mishka the Dog Says “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious” is the title of this video.
No, he doesn’t, of course he doesn’t, he’s a dog. But, as of September 9, 2013, You Tube users have checked out exactly 6,720,886 times what has to be this husky’s most epic failure in saying things his apparently mad owner forces on him.
I can easily see Mishka the dog letting a team of burglars into the house when his owner is gone, and leading them to the good stuff. There’s such an existential annoyance carved in the face of this beautiful dog, made to speak in Scoobidoo fashion, to earn his keep. I mean, he’s supposed to pull sleds in the Tundra, for heaven’s sake, not humiliate himself in front of millions.
I’m just saying.
The origins of the word Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious, composed over a period of two weeks by its authors, the brothers Richard and Robert Sherman, for the song by the same name in Disney’s Mary Poppins, are as follows: super- “above,” cali- “beauty,” fragilistic- “delicate,” expiali- “to atone,” and docious- “educable,” or, when put together: “Atoning for educability through delicate beauty.”
So, it’s about Yom Kippur after all.
May all your educabilities be forgiven.