Awesome for the couple, awesome for the rest of us, imagining their moment. Hope they have a great time, and one day tell their kids about this!
Tonight is the first night of Passover, and Jewish people all over the world gather to observe the holiday with a Seder, which tells the story of the exodus from Egypt and the flight toward freedom. The ritual of the Seder answers this question: Why is this night different from all other nights?
Can’t you just picture the answers tonight, from every place in the world where a Seder is being held. LOL!
There is a Yiddish term, sh’vach, which means something like “good enough”. Tonight, my Seder is a sh’vach seder. No tables put together to seat 24, no silver polished or linen pressed, no help in the kitchen, no cooking and baking for a week, no joy as the youngest haltingly shows off her or his reading skills by asking the Four Questions. Just FaceTiming, and a lot of laughs as we’ll chime in with “Why This Night is Different From All Other Nights”!
And for the record, this isn’t the first time a crudely drawn shank bone has appeared on this Seder plate.
Happy Passover!
If you didn’t get to the beach today, here’s a moment of glistening wavelets. In person, it looked like spun gold.
The pilot whale that washed up on Little Island in West Falmouth is being left in place to decompose. I was surprised there were no buzzards, gulls, coyotes, having a go at it. It was eerily quiet. A time to reflect.
Enjoy a moment of watching a swan glide around, looking for food, at Little Harbor in West Falmouth.