Family Magazine
We had a very lovely Easter, despite the cold and rainy weather. After teasing everyone with warm spring weather, Tashkent treated us to a late snowstorm Wednesday evening, followed by two nights of near-freezing temperatures. Now we have a week of rain, but hopefully that will be the last of cool, rainy days for the foreseeable future.
We started off our Easter celebrations with an egg hunt on Saturday. Our Community Liaison Office had already ordered supplies for the embassy Easter egg hunt, so they decided to personally distribute the treats with the help of a good-natured Easter bunny. Evidently the pair were a hit at all the police checkpoints around town.
The children were thrilled with their bags full of treats, and we managed to get the eggs hidden and found before more rain rolled in for the rest of the weekend. I have a reputation in my family for hiding Easter eggs and then forgetting their location when nobody can find all of my devious hiding places, so I declared the hunt a success this year when everyone found all their eggs.
Elizabeth had also received a goody bag, which Brandon and I took possession of. She will eventually get her share of the candy in the form of milk, which is better for her anyway, and the empty eggs proved to be exciting enough on their own.
Today we celebrated Easter itself with roast lamb, which everyone declared to be far inferior to ham. I guess we can drop that meal from the Easter traditions.
However, the egg coloring and following Easter egg roll/crack competition were successful, so I guess I'm still an okay mom. Our friends in Dushanbe introduced us to this tradition and we've adopted it for our own. It's really great to have such a big family for things like quarantine Easter egg roll competitions, because we can field enough competitors to make it fun. In the end, Kathleen took the victor's crown and we all celebrated by eating the eggs.
I think that this Easter was more profound than many past Easters have been. Being surrounded by the darkness of a pandemic has made the beacon of hope that is the gospel of Christ shine that much brighter. I am not afraid of the uncertainty of what will come proximately because I know what will come ultimately. It brings me unspeakable peace to know why I am here and that God is in charge of all things, including viruses.
Brandon's grandmother, the last of his living grandparents, died yesterday. She had lived a full life and was ready to go home to her Father and her husband. As we received updates over the past week of her rapid decline, we felt nothing but peace. The children were sad, as they enjoyed their visits with their great-grandmother, but they know the separation is only temporary. Because of this Easter Sunday, we will see Grandma Sherwood again, and she will be resurrected in her perfect form, with both joint and limb being restored their proper frame, and not a hair of her head being lost.
And so I am grateful for Easter. I'm grateful for the time I have to spend with my family and grateful that our time together is not limited to our lives on Earth. For, as the Pascal greeting says, "He is risen! Indeed, He is risen!"
We started off our Easter celebrations with an egg hunt on Saturday. Our Community Liaison Office had already ordered supplies for the embassy Easter egg hunt, so they decided to personally distribute the treats with the help of a good-natured Easter bunny. Evidently the pair were a hit at all the police checkpoints around town.
The children were thrilled with their bags full of treats, and we managed to get the eggs hidden and found before more rain rolled in for the rest of the weekend. I have a reputation in my family for hiding Easter eggs and then forgetting their location when nobody can find all of my devious hiding places, so I declared the hunt a success this year when everyone found all their eggs.
Elizabeth had also received a goody bag, which Brandon and I took possession of. She will eventually get her share of the candy in the form of milk, which is better for her anyway, and the empty eggs proved to be exciting enough on their own.
Today we celebrated Easter itself with roast lamb, which everyone declared to be far inferior to ham. I guess we can drop that meal from the Easter traditions.
However, the egg coloring and following Easter egg roll/crack competition were successful, so I guess I'm still an okay mom. Our friends in Dushanbe introduced us to this tradition and we've adopted it for our own. It's really great to have such a big family for things like quarantine Easter egg roll competitions, because we can field enough competitors to make it fun. In the end, Kathleen took the victor's crown and we all celebrated by eating the eggs.
I think that this Easter was more profound than many past Easters have been. Being surrounded by the darkness of a pandemic has made the beacon of hope that is the gospel of Christ shine that much brighter. I am not afraid of the uncertainty of what will come proximately because I know what will come ultimately. It brings me unspeakable peace to know why I am here and that God is in charge of all things, including viruses.
Brandon's grandmother, the last of his living grandparents, died yesterday. She had lived a full life and was ready to go home to her Father and her husband. As we received updates over the past week of her rapid decline, we felt nothing but peace. The children were sad, as they enjoyed their visits with their great-grandmother, but they know the separation is only temporary. Because of this Easter Sunday, we will see Grandma Sherwood again, and she will be resurrected in her perfect form, with both joint and limb being restored their proper frame, and not a hair of her head being lost.
And so I am grateful for Easter. I'm grateful for the time I have to spend with my family and grateful that our time together is not limited to our lives on Earth. For, as the Pascal greeting says, "He is risen! Indeed, He is risen!"