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Motivation 2020: For Mother’s Day #mothersday

05/05/2020

“Grown don’t mean nothing to a mother. A child is a child. They get bigger, older, but grown. In my heart, it don’t mean a thing.” Toni Morrison

Motivation 2020: For Mother's Day #mothersday

Motivation 2020: For Mother’s Day #mothersday

 


10 Fun Facts About Mother’s Day Around the World

We are born of love; Love is our mother. Rumi
Most mothers are instinctive philosophers. Harriet Beecher Stowe
Life doesn’t come with a manual, it comes with a mother. Unknown
It may be possible to gild pure gold, but who can make his mother more beautiful? Mahatma Gandhi
He didn’t realize that love as powerful as your mother’s for you leaves its own mark. J.K. Rowling
When you look into your mother’s eyes, you know that is the purest love you can find on this earth. Mitch Albom
Youth fades; love droops; the leaves of friendship fall; A mother’s secret hope outlives them all. Oliver Wendell Holmes
I believe the choice to become a mother is the choice to become one of the greatest spiritual teachers there is. Oprah
If I have done anything in life worth attention, I feel sure that I inherited the disposition of my mother. Booker T. Washington

Happy Mother’s Day Week: While Mother’s Day is celebrated on a wide range of days and months globally, in the USA, it is celebrated on the second Sunday of May. Some might argue that, like Valentine’s Day, the love of mothers and motherhood should be an everyday affair. I concur, however, designating a special day to honor important events in life is ubiquitous and gives us all a chance to wax poetic about loved ones and catch up on gift-giving. This year, Mother’s Day will hold a unique memory in our hearts because it will be the first time in decades that we get to honor Mom while sheltered-in-place. The Covid19 pandemic has curtailed any attempts to go out or gather in large groups for this special occasion. Yet, it can be a time of great joy because our celebrations will come with added meaning and a recognition of the precariousness of life. Being cooped up in close quarters with loved ones, limited resources, and even limited reasons to leave for one expedition or the other means that we get to spend this special day truly engaged in our version of loving Mom. We will honor and celebrate her with what my Pastor Buddy at Northway Church calls “Defiant Joy. ”

Honoring Mom with Defiant Joy: As many of you know, my Mom passed away last August. She had suffered a massive stroke that kept her partially paralyzed for over 30 years yet, being the fighter she always was, she managed to find dignity in her daily struggles to speak, move, and welcome her many grandchildren. It is with the same defiant joy that I will celebrate and honor her life this Mother’s Day. How do we maintain Defiant Joy with loved ones in these challenging times?
1. Master Your Mornings – set the tone with a positive routine. Make a commitment to enjoy the day – Start TODAY
2. Turn off the JOY Robbers – Consume less news and related media
3 Take a dose of laughter every day with loved ones – Read Proverbs 17:22
4. Laugh at yourself; humor requires humility.
5. Don’t make anyone else responsible for your joy.
6. Enjoy the SIMPLE things.
7. Look younger with Joy – Yes, happy, joyful people age better.
8. Relationships that laugh together, stay together.
9. Do something for someone else. Be a blessing to someone today.
10. Strengthen your gratitude. Instead of finding fault, find and praise the good in your Mom and others; we are all flawed. Be grateful.
READ:- Motivation Mondays: For Our Mothers #mothersday
Motivation Mondays: Why Mother’s Day Matters
Motivation Mondays: Celebrate Mother’s Day! #mothersday
Motivation Mondays: Mother’s Day

 

Mother, A Cradle to Hold Me By Maya Angelou
It is true
I was created in you.
It is also true
That you were created for me.
I owned your voice.
It was shaped and tuned to soothe me.
Your arms were molded
Into a cradle to hold me, to rock me.
The scent of your body was the air
Perfumed for me to breathe.
Mother, during those early, dearest days I did not dream that you had
A large life which included me,
For I had a life
Which was only you.

Time passed steadily and drew us apart.
I was unwilling.
I feared if I let you go
You would leave me eternally.
You smiled at my fears, saying
I could not stay in your lap forever.
That one day you would have to stand
And where would I be?
You smiled again.
I did not.
Without warning, you left me,
But you returned immediately.
You left again and returned,
I admit, quickly,
But relief did not rest with me easily.
You left again but again returned.
You left again but again returned.
Each time you reentered my world
You brought assurance.
Slowly I gained confidence.

You thought you know me,
But I did know you,
You thought you were watching me,
But I did hold you securely in my sight,
Recording every moment,
Memorizing your smiles, tracing your frowns.
In your absence
I rehearsed you,
The way you had of singing
On a breeze,
While a sob lay
At the root of your song.

The way you posed your head
So that the light could caress your face
When you put your fingers on my hand
And your hand on my arm,
I was blessed with a sense of health,
Of strength and very good fortune.

You were always
the heart of happiness to me,
Bringing nougats of glee,
Sweets of open laughter.

I loved you even during the years
When you knew nothing
And I knew everything, I loved you still. Condescendingly of course,
From my high perch
Of teenage wisdom.
I spoke sharply of you, often
Because you were slow to understand.
I grew older and
Was stunned to find
How much knowledge you had gleaned.
And so quickly.

Mother, I have learned enough now
To know I have learned nearly nothing.
On this day
When mothers are being honored,
Let me thank you
That my selfishness, ignorance, and mockery
Did not bring you to
Discard me like a broken doll
Which had lost its favor?
I thank you that
You still find something in me
To cherish, to admire and to love.

I thank you, Mother.
I love you.

 

[Motherhood is] the biggest gamble in the world. It is the glorious life force. It’s huge and scary, it’s an act of infinite optimism. Gilda Radner

Motivation 2020: For Mother's Day #mothersday

Motivation 2020: For Mother’s Day #mothersday

 


History of Mother’s Day | History

Life began with waking up and loving my mother’s face. George Eliot
All that I am, or hope to be, I owe to my angel mother. Abraham Lincoln
Mother’s love is peace. It need not be acquired, it need not be deserved. Erich Fromm
Mother is the name for God in the lips and hearts of little children. William Makepeace Thackeray
The most important thing a father can do for his children is to love their mother. Theodore Hesburgh
Mama was my greatest teacher, a teacher of compassion, love, and fearlessness. If love is sweet as a flower, then my mother is that sweet flower of love. Stevie Wonder
A mother’s love for her child is like nothing else in the world. It knows no law, no pity. It dares all things and crushes down remorselessly all that stands in its path. Agatha Christie

A Brief History of Mother’s Day (US): While Mother’s Day celebrations go back as far as early Greek and Roman festivals, the impetus for our current Mother’s Day celebrations can be traced to Mothering Sunday, a Christian event that many enjoyed in Europe on the fourth Sunday in Lent. That evolved over time to what we now know as Mother’s Day, a US invention, that can be attributed to Ann Reeves Jarvis, Julia Ward Howe, and Anna Jarvis. In the mid 19th century, Ann Reeves Jarvis, mother of Anna Jarvis, started a campaign to get mothers involved in learning how to care for their children and engage in activism efforts in the US. She started her Mothers’ Day Work Club and by 1868 organized a Mothers’ Friendship Day to unite moms with former Union and Confederate soldiers and promote reconciliation. Julia Ward Howe, a women’s rights activist, wrote a Mother’s Day proclamation to promote peace in 1870 and, by 1873, campaigned to have a designated “Mother’s Peace Day” as a way to bring women together to stand for peace around the world.

Anna Jarvis is credited with creating the modern version of Mother’s Day because she not only proposed it as a way of honoring the sacrifices mothers make, after her mother died in 1905, but also because she spent her life’s work and earnings battling to keep the original premise pure and free of commercialization. From her first church celebration of Mother’s Day in May 1908 to her many efforts to get it recognized as a national holiday, which President Woodrow Wilson did in 1914 when he signed a measure to establish the second Sunday in May as Mother’s Day, Anna fought to maintain the integrity of the holiday and died in 1948 exhausting her fortune and health in her battle to keep Mother’s day sacrosanct. Did you know this?

According to a National Geographic article, there are 7 things we might not know about Mother’s Day, we learn that: 1. Mother’s Day started as an anti-war movement. Julia Ward Howe is the earliest to be attributed to starting a Mother’s Day campaign to promote peace and activism in 1872. She and others of her ilk saw a political connection to this important day. 2. A former football coach promoted an early version of Mother’s Day — and was accused of “kidnapping” the holiday. Frank Hering, coach at Univ of Notre Dame proposed a Mothering day celebration in 1904 but Anna Jarvis accused him of kidnapping the holiday. 3. FDR designed a Mother’s Day stamp. Or at least he tried. While Woodrow Wilson’s stamp was a success, FDR’s didn’t sit well with Jarvis so it was canned. 4. Mother’s Day’s founder hated those who fundraised off the holiday. Anna Jarvis didn’t approve of organizations profiteering from the holiday. 5. The mother of Mother’s Day lost everything in her fight to protect her holiday. Anna Jarvis said: “To have Mother’s Day the burdensome, wasteful, expensive gift day that Christmas and other special days have become, is not our pleasure.” She spent her life suing and battling others to protect the sanctity of the holiday to no avail. It remains a highly commercialized day even as we celebrate the basic premise conveyed on this special day – Mom is love. Honor her. 6. Courts Heard “Custody Battles” Over Mother’s Day. Anna Jarvis sued many over this holiday. She was determined to keep it a sacred day free of retail exploitation. 7. Flowers are an original tradition that endures (sort of). The white carnation was Jarvis’ choice flower because its petals hold steady as they wither instead of dropping. Today, your flower choice is entirely yours.
READ:- History of Mother’s Day
7 Things You Don’t Know About Mother’s Day’s Dark History
Motivation Mondays: APPRECIATION
Reflections: Happy Mother’s Day
Musings: In My Mother’s Garden…

 

MY MOTHER By Ann Taylor
Who sat and watched my infant head
When sleeping on my cradle bed,
And tears of sweet affection shed?
My Mother.

When pain and sickness made me cry,
Who gazed upon my heavy eye,
And wept for fear that I should die?
My Mother.

Who taught my infant lips to pray
And love God’s holy book and day,
And walk in wisdom’s pleasant way?
My Mother.

And can I ever cease to be
Affectionate and kind to thee,
Who wast so very kind to me,
My Mother?

Ah, no! the thought I cannot bear,
And if God please my life to spare
I hope I shall reward thy care,
My Mother.

When thou art feeble, old and grey,
My healthy arm shall be thy stay,
And I will soothe thy pains away,
My Mother. via poemhunter

 

To My Mother by Edgar Allan Poe
Because I feel that, in the Heavens above,
The angels, whispering to one another,
Can find, among their burning terms of love,
None so devotional as that of “Mother,”
Therefore by that dear name, I long have called you-
You who are more than mother unto me,
And fill my heart of hearts, where Death installed you
In setting my Virginia’s spirit free.
My mother- my own mother, who died early,
Was but the mother of myself; but you
Are mother to the one I loved so dearly,
And thus are dearer than the mother I knew
By that infinity with which my wife
Was dearer to my soul than its soul-life. via famouspoemsandpoets

 

The details for Motivation Mondays are below. Join in! The themes for APR – MAY 2020 are:

APR

04/01 – 01 April Fool’s Day, Autism Awareness Month
04/05 – 05 Palm Sunday, 06 Int’l. Day of Sport for Devel. & Peace, 09 Holy Thursday/ Start of Passover, 10 Good Friday
04/12 – 12 Easter Sunday, 15 Jackie Robinson Day, 16 Passover (End), Nat’l. High Five Day, 17 Nat’l. Haiku Poetry Day
04/19 – 19 Bicycle Day, 21 Holocaust Remembrance of Slavery, 22 Earth Day, 24 Start of Ramadan/Arbor Day, 25 DNA Day/ World Malaria Day
04/26 – 26 World Intellectual Property Day, 28 World Day for Safety and Health at Work, 29 Duke Ellington Day/Int’l. Dance Day

MAY
05/01 – 01 May Day,
05/03 – 03 World Laughter Day/ Press Freedom Day, 05 Cinco De Mayo/ National Teacher Day/World Asthma Day, 06 National Nurses Day, 07 National Day of Prayer
05/10 – 10 Mother’s Day (US), 15 International Day of Families, 16 Armed Forces Day/International Day of Light
05/17 – 17 World Telecommunication and Information Day, 20 World Bee Day, 21 World Day for Cultural Diversity for Dialogue and Development, 23 Eid al Fitr Starts/Ramadan Ends/International Day to End Obstetric Fistula/World Turtle Day
05/24 – 24 National Brother Day, 25 Memorial Day, 28 Shavuot Starts, 29 International Day of UN Peacekeepers, 30 World MS Day/Shavuot ends, 31 World NO Tobacco Day

Are You Looking for Ways to Stay Creative in 2019?

 

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Motivation 2020: Earth Day Poems & Climate Action

22/04/2020

“If we are ever to halt climate change and conserve land, water, and other resources, not to mention reduce animal suffering, we must celebrate Earth Day every day – at every meal.” Ingrid Newkirk

Motivation 2020: Earth Day Poems & Climate Action

Motivation 2020: Earth Day Poems & Climate Action


Earth Day Network: 50 Voices for the Planet: Anthem Video

The world is changed by your example, not by your opinion. Paulo Coelho
Earth Day should encourage us to reflect on what we are doing to make our planet a more sustainable and livable place. Scott Peters
I have become convinced that climate change is the biggest threat to human rights in the 21st century. Mary Robinson
The time is past when humankind thought it could selfishly draw on exhaustible resources. We know now that the world is not a commodity. Francois Hollande
The ultimate test of man’s conscience may be his willingness to sacrifice something today for future generations whose words of thanks will not be heard. Gaylord Nelson
Saving our planet, lifting people out of poverty, advancing economic growth… these are one and the same fight. We must connect the dots between climate change, water scarcity, energy shortages, global health, food security, and women’s empowerment. Solutions to one problem must be solutions for all. Ban Ki-moon

Earth Day 2020 What is Earth Day50 years ago, a highly motivated movement launched the Earth Day Network as an urgent call to action to address the many environmental issues that were and still are slowly, but surely, decimating our planet. Climate Change is a critical area of concern. While there are natural events that impact our climate, the human impact has been devastating; the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions we generate through our carbon footprint, by burning of fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas for electricity, heat, and transportation, by deforestation, fertilizer use, livestock production and even methods we use for agriculture and road construction add to the exponential increases in emissions that impact our climate. Over the years, we have made some progress in battling the negative human impact on our planet, but there is still much work to do.

Ironically, the unprecedented Coronavirus pandemic and our shelter-in-place efforts have had a climatic impact, and given Mother Earth a much-needed respite from the daily waste from our carbon footprint, toxicity, and air pollution. But by becoming more conscientious about our individual roles,  we can do more. This year, our Earth Day 2020 theme is Climate Action and the goal is to get each of us to take deliberate action to help save our planet.  Every positive action we take that eliminates waste and that sustains our planet can help the environment by combating pollutants and reversing/reducing climate change. Is it feasible? Sure. If we all do our part, anything can be achieved.  On Wednesday, April 22, we will gather at different venues around the world to celebrate Earth Day and remember that, for our collective survival on the planet, it is imperative that we protect and nurture our earth by reducing our carbon footprint and increasing plant life that purifies our atmosphere.  When we participate in taking actions that sustain our planet and remind our friends and family to be a bit more sensitive to how they use our natural resources, we are performing a powerful act.

READ: Motivation Mondays: Protect Our Earth
Motivation Mondays: Earth Day for Environmental & Climate Literacy
A crash course on climate change, 50 years after the first Earth Day
Motivation Mondays: Peace with Our Past

 

Earth Day BY JANE YOLEN
I am the Earth
And the Earth is me.
Each blade of grass,
Each honey tree,
Each bit of mud,
And stick and stone
Is blood and muscle,
Skin and bone.

And just as I
Need every bit
Of me to make
My body fit,
So Earth needs
Grass and stone and tree
And things that grow here
Naturally.

That’s why we
Celebrate this day.
That’s why across
The world we say:
As long as life,
As dear, as free,
I am the Earth
And the Earth is me.

Earth, You Have Returned to Me BY ELAINE EQUI
Can you imagine waking up
every morning on a different planet,
each with its own gravity?

Slogging, wobbling,
wavering. Atilt
and out-of-sync
with all that moves
and doesn’t.

Through years of trial
and mostly error
did I study this unsteady way —

changing pills, adjusting the dosage,
never settling.

A long time we were separate,
O Earth,
but now you have returned to me.

 

 

“You cannot get through a single day without having an impact on the world around you. What you do makes a difference and you have to decide what kind of a difference you want to make.” Jane Goodall

Motivation 2020: Earth Day Poems & Climate Action

Motivation 2020: Earth Day Poems & Climate Action

Climate change is no longer some far-off problem; it is happening here, it is happening now. Barack Obama
Climate change is sometimes misunderstood as being about changes in the weather. In reality, it is about changes in our very way of life. Paul Polman
Only when the last tree has died and the last river been poisoned and the last fish been caught will we realize we cannot eat money. Cree Indian Proverb
A nation that destroys its soils destroys itself. Forests are the lungs of our land, purifying the air and giving fresh strength to our people. Franklin D. Roosevelt
I have long understood that climate change is not only an environmental issue – it is a humanitarian, economic, health, and justice issue as well. Frances Beinecke
We are all living together on a single planet, which is threatened by our own actions. And if you don’t have some kind of global cooperation, nationalism is just not on the right level to tackle the problems, whether it’s climate change or whether it’s technological disruption. Yuval Noah Harari

What is driving this action? Our planet is in grave danger from the overuse and abuse of our natural resources and the climatic impact is devastating. You can make a difference even by taking a small action with reducing our carbon footprint, food and other products waste control, and a reduction in air pollution. Did you know that 20 million people responded to that first call to action in 1970? Did you know that the effort bore fruit because it led to the passage of the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Endangered Species Act, and other shapeshifting environmental laws? So, don’t believe the naysayers who think the actions of a few can’t effect change. It can because when our hearts and minds agree that our actions can make a difference, we can move mountains. When we spread the word, we are reminding ourselves and others that we are beneficiaries of Mother Earth’s largess and that maintaining both a sustainable planet and a pollution-free environment is a crucial legacy to leave to our children. Making sure our planet is thriving is vital to our survival too. I don’t want my children to inherit a futuristic, toxic world with no trees, no bees, and little animal life. However, if we continue to abuse our earth, we will soon find ourselves living in a gas-filled world with masks and steel as our daily companions. Come back for more!

Did You Know These 7 Facts? 1. Atmospheric CO2 concentrations are at a record high: greater than 400 ppm. 2. We dump 19.4 billion pounds of plastic into the ocean every year. 3. An estimated 18 million acres of forest are lost each year. 4. Earth is facing a 40% shortfall in water supply by 2030. 5. Climate change-related extreme events, plus population growth, could increase hunger by up to 20% by 2050. 6. September Arctic sea ice extent is declining at a rate of 13.3% per decade. 7. Earth is at its warmest start on record. Sources: NOAA, NASA, Science Mag study, WFP, UNESCO, FAO, Live Science We must take massive action to save our planet.

READ: The Causes of Climate Change
Photo Challenge: #EARTHDAY
Motivation Mondays: Earth Hour #Connect2Earth
Weekly Photo Challenge: Mother Earth

 

Morning Poem by Mary Oliver

Every morning
the world
is created.
Under the orange

sticks of the sun
the heaped
ashes of the night
turn into leaves again

and fasten themselves to the high branches —
and the ponds appear
like black cloth
on which are painted islands

of summer lilies.
If it is your nature
to be happy
you will swim away along the soft trails

for hours, your imagination
alighting everywhere.
And if your spirit
carries within it

the thorn
that is heavier than lead —
if it’s all you can do
to keep on trudging —

there is still
somewhere deep within you
a beast shouting that the earth
is exactly what it wanted —

each pond with its blazing lilies
is a prayer heard and answered
lavishly,
every morning,

whether or not
you have ever dared to be happy,
whether or not
you have ever dared to pray.
from Dream Work (1986) by Mary Oliver

 

 

 

 

The details for Motivation Mondays are below. Join in! The themes for MAR – APR 2020 are:

MAR

03/01 – 01 Zero Discrimination Day
03/08 – 08 International Women’s Day, 13 World Sleep Day, 14 Pi Day
03/15 – 15 Consumer Rights Day, 17 St Patrick’s Day, 19 Start of Spring, 20 International Day of Happiness, 21 World Poetry Day
03/22 – 22 World Water Day, 25 Day of Remembrance of Slavery, 28 Earth Hour
03/29 – 29 Veterans Day

APR

04/01 – 01 April Fool’s Day, Autism Awareness Month
04/05 – 05 Palm Sunday,  06 Int’l. Day of Sport for Devel. & Peace, 09 Holy Thursday/ Start of Passover, 10 Good Friday
04/12 – 12 Easter Sunday, 15 Jackie Robinson Day, 16 Passover (End), Nat’l. High Five Day, 17 Nat’l. Haiku Poetry Day

04/19 – 19 Bicycle Day, 21 Holocaust Remembrance of Slavery, 22 Earth Day,  24 Start of Ramadan/Arbor Day, 25 DNA Day/ World Malaria Day
04/26 – 26 World Intellectual Property Day, 28 World Day for Safety and Health at Work, 29 Duke Ellington Day/Int’l. Dance Day

Are You Looking for Ways to Stay Creative in 2019?

 

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Motivation 2020: Easter & Passover

10/04/2020

“Let us be “protectors” of creation, protectors of God’s plan inscribed in nature, protectors of one another and of the environment. Let us not allow omens of destruction and death to accompany the advance of this world.” Pope Francis

Motivation 2020: Easter & Passover

Motivation 2020: Easter & Passover

Passover and Easter are the only Jewish and Christian holidays that move in sync… Marvin Olasky
Jews have God’s promise and if we Christians have it, too, then it is only as those chosen with them, as guests in their house, that we are new wood grafted onto their tree. Karl Barth


Happy Easter & Passover: How are you planning to celebrate Easter and Passover this year?
With the ongoing global battle to contain the Covid19 virus, Easter and Passover gatherings will be celebrated differently. There will be no church or temple services as most of us are sheltered-in-place. There will be online services and, for families that live together, the celebrations will be made up of just immediate family with no invited guests. While this might seem severe or isolating, it is a time for reflection, communication, and gratitude for what we do have … LIFE. This year, Passover began on April 9 and will end on April 16. Easter, on the other hand, is on April 12, with some important celebrations leading up to it including; Palm Sunday and Good Friday. If like me, you come from a multi-faith home, you’d know that celebrating both traditions brings unity and understanding across cultures and beliefs. This season is a great motivator in that it brings us together to appreciate our differences while celebrating our common bonds.  Raising kids in a multi-faith household taught me that the best lessons learned are not only of religious tolerance but of the recognition that we are all on a spiritual journey and that with love, respect, and consideration, we can see that all roads meet and lead to something greater than ourselves. When we factor in the current global challenges, this must also be a time to remember families that are struggling and consider how we can help others with our contributions.

Growing up, Easter was central to my religious celebrations and I looked forward to all the fun events, colorful eggs, and great food. We attended Easter Sunday services and enjoyed a special meal with the usual bunny rabbit chocolate eggs as treats. When I got married, we added Passover to our celebrations and had Seder at my in-laws. My first Seder was a beautiful celebration of prayer, food, and song. Family members took turns reading from the Haggadah and the serious tone of the readings was balanced by humor, a sip of wine and good food. The sharing of a meal and readings created a bond between those present and a reminder that gratitude to the creator and community effort is key.  When I think about my Easter and Passover experiences, I am reminded that we are all children of one Creator and that faith, family, and communion matter because they pull us together. Celebrating both traditions affirmed and continues to affirm my love and respect for all religious and spiritual paths; after all, we are on a spiritual journey to ourselves. This year, in the spirit of Easter and Passover, let’s pray for global healing and an end to the current scourge. Let’s extend blessings of peace and goodwill to each other and keep hope alive. We can all do our part. I plan to attend a few online services and bathe in the word of God. I will enjoy meals with loved ones at home and contribute so other families can be fed.
Support: America’s Food Fund
READ: Reflections: Memories Of Easter & Passover…
Motivation Mondays: Reflections On Easter & Passover

 

“We need to find God, and he cannot be found in noise and restlessness. God is the friend of silence. See how nature – trees, flowers, grass- grows in silence; see the stars, the moon, and the sun, how they move in silence… We need silence to be able to touch souls.” Mother Teresa

Motivation 2020: Easter & Passover

Motivation 2020: Easter & Passover

The message of Passover remains as powerful as ever. Freedom is won not on the battlefield but in the classroom and the home. Teach your children the history of freedom if you want them never to lose it. Jonathan Sacks
The great gift of Easter is hope – Christian hope which makes us have that confidence in God, in his ultimate triumph, and in his goodness and love, which nothing can shake. Basil Hume

What does Easter & Passover Mean to You? One of the special gifts we receive at Easter is a spirit of renewal; it is a time of rebirth and an opportunity to start afresh again. With Passover, we are reminded of the importance of religious and personal freedom and sacrifice.  I have always loved the idea of being resurrected/renewed and liberated to accomplish all the things we put aside. Yet, there is more we could learn about both traditions because shedding more light on them gives others a better understanding of why it matters to us and it gives us a refresher course on why it should matter.

What Do You Know About Easter? Easter celebrates the resurrection of Jesus on the third day after his death by crucifixion.
Easter Day covers the fifty-day season from Easter Sunday through Pentecost.
Easter has a special flower, the white lily, which symbolizes the resurrection.
Painted Easter eggs were originally called Pysanka, and they were painted bright colors to represent the sunlight of spring.
Easter is a moveable feast which means that it is not on a set day every year but falls between March 22nd and April 25th.

As for the Easter bunny and egg, the bunny was first mentioned by Georg Franck von Frankenau’s De Ovis Paschalibus (Easter Bunny Eggs) in the 17th Century. Stories of rabbits laying Easter eggs were shared in Pennsylvania in the 19th century and the German legend of Osterhas told of good children receiving brightly colored eggs for Easter.  The festive air, spirited church services, brightly colored new dresses, and chocolate eggs made Easter one of my favorites.

What Do You Know About Passover? Passover holiday is called Pesach in Hebrew.
Passover Seder is a festive family meal that is shared on either the first or second night of Passover
Passover references the passing over of the firstborn Jewish males when the death plague hit Egypt.
The Haggadah is a Jewish text that tells the story of the Passover and portions are read during the Seder.
Passover holiday has three names: Pesach – literally meaning the Passover sacrifice; Hag Hamatzot – Feast of Unleavened Bread; and Zeman Heirutenu – the Season of Our Freedom
Traditionally, four cups of wines are consumed at the festive meal of Passover night and Matzoh, unleavened bread, is eaten for seven or all eight days of Passover.
Dayeynu is the popular, traditional Hebrew song performed during Passover.
READ: Motivation Mondays: RESURRECTION
Motivation Mondays: REBIRTH

 

The details for Motivation Mondays are below. Join in! The themes for MAR – APR 2020 are:

MAR

03/01 – 01 Zero Discrimination Day
03/08 – 08 International Women’s Day, 13 World Sleep Day, 14 Pi Day
03/15 – 15 Consumer Rights Day, 17 St Patrick’s Day, 19 Start of Spring, 20 International Day of Happiness, 21 World Poetry Day
03/22 – 22 World Water Day, 25 Day of Remembrance of Slavery, 28 Earth Hour
03/29 – 29 Veterans Day

APR

04/01 – 01 April Fool’s Day, Autism Awareness Month
04/05 – 05 Palm Sunday,  06 Int’l. Day of Sport for Devel. & Peace, 09 Holy Thursday/ Start of Passover, 10 Good Friday
04/12 – 12 Easter Sunday, 15 Jackie Robinson Day, 16 Passover (End), Nat’l. High Five Day, 17 Nat’l. Haiku Poetry Day

04/19 – 19 Bicycle Day, 21 Holocaust Remembrance of Slavery, 22 Earth Day,  24 Start of Ramadan/Arbor Day, 25 DNA Day/ World Malaria Day
04/26 – 26 World Intellectual Property Day, 28 World Day for Safety and Health at Work, 29 Duke Ellington Day/Int’l. Dance Day

Are You Looking for Ways to Stay Creative in 2019?

 

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