Hello,
Happy Thursday, its Dan and my 24th
day of hunkering down. Here in Virginia
the wind is howling, but feels great with our sliding glass door open. Dan is out on the porch rocking on his chair
reading Become A Better You, while the breeze is passing over him. Music from the chimes with birds chirping, thankful
for the little things.
Notice with amazement and gratitude, the
countless blessings that surrounds you.
Take time today to go out on your porch, open a window, go out in your
back yard, or if you can go for a walk down your road and listen to the sounds
that we take for granted. The joy that mother earth provides us continues to
amaze me.
I have been reminiscing the time that we
have spent living in Mexico. This holy
week is celebrated big time and we loved participating with the culture. Easter
is one of the most important Christian festivals, celebrated all over the world
wherever people following Christianity reside. It is considered to be one of
the most auspicious days of the Christian calendar as this is the day of the
resurrection of Jesus Christ after crucifixion. On this occasion, the followers
of Christianity pray in church and also, celebrate the day as a day of merry
making and joyous festivities. Though major rituals and traditions of Easter
remain the same throughout the world, you can observe a little variation as per
the local traditions. Read this article to know about the Easter celebrations
in Mexico.
Easter celebration in Mexico is a fusion
of Christian rituals and native Indian traditions. In the days of imperialism,
the Christian missionaries as a part of their effort to convert non- Christian
Indians to Christianity, allowed indigenous people to blend their customs with
Easter rites, and many of these customs appear in passion plays. But in the
face of a cultural onslaught from American media vehicles, many of Mexico's
age-old traditions are falling out of favor in large cities such as
Guadalajara.
Easter in Mexico is a little different
from the rest of the world. In Mexico, it is a combination of Semana Santa
(Holy Week - Palm Sunday to Easter Saturday) and Pascua (Resurrection Sunday
until the following Saturday). On Palm Sunday people use elaborately woven
palms. Weavers ply their craft outside churches, and worshipers follow the
priest into church with the woven fronds. Later, those palms are traditionally
hung on the doors of Mexican homes to ward off evil.
In many communities across Mexico, locals
stage Passion Plays depicting Biblical events such as the Last Supper, the
Betrayal, and the Procession of the 12 Stations of the Cross, the Crucifixion
and the Resurrection. The enactments are often spectacularly staged, costumed
and acted, with volunteers preparing for their roles for nearly the full year
leading up to Semana Santa. In many communities, flagellation along with real
crucifixion is included. The performances are often wondrously dramatic,
costumed and enacted, with contestants planning for their roles for about a
year leading up to Semana Santa.
The most spectacular of Easter traditions
in Mexico is the burning of a Judas effigy filled with firecrackers. This
custom, which takes place Holy Saturday, was outlawed in Guadalajara in the 1960s
when several people died from a massive explosion, but it still continues in
rural areas. Judas effigy is now a popular way to express anguish over some
contemporary person, frequently an unpopular politician. So, every year it
becomes interesting to see who gets burnt in effigy this seasons’ ‘Sábado de
Gloria’.
TO ALL MY FRIENDS, FOLLOWERS AND RELATIVES
WHEREVER YOU ARE, I HOPE YOU ARE OKAY.
A while back I posted an article around
Easter, that I thought would be worth posting.
What is Easter without Easter eggs.
I remember when I was growing up and even when our daughter was growing
up, the Easter egg hunts. Dan would go
out to the back yard and hide eggs for Danielle to find.
MONDAY, APRIL 18, 2011
DYE EASTER EGGS NATURALLY WITH BEETS,
ONIONS AND BLUEBERRIES
4/15/2011 3:28:36 PM
By Robyn Griggs Lawrence
Tags: naturally dyed Easter eggs,
chemical-free Easter eggs, natural dyes, Herb Companion, Robyn Griggs Lawrence
Robyn Griggs Lawrence - When I was a kid,
in the chemical-intensive 1960s and 1970s, we thought nothing of using
artificial food coloring and those little dye tablets to give our Easter eggs
festive hues. Back then, we didn’t know that chemical dyes could cause ADHD,
harm development, ignite hyperactivity, compromise immune systems and cause
sterility. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention even found links
between food coloring and asthma, allergic reactions and lead poisoning,
Brianne DiSylvester reports in Organic Authority. I’m not taking the risk,
especially when dying eggs with herbs and food is so much more fun.
Herbal dye plants, used traditionally to
color fibers, give hard-boiled eggs an earthier tone than never-from-nature
candy-colored synthetics. Just follow these simple instructions from the
experts at Herb Companion for gorgeous, nontoxic, festive Easter eggs.
Hard boil eggs.
Bring each dye ingredient (listed below)
to a boil with 2 cups of water; strain the dyes into cups and allow to cool.
Add 2 tablespoons of vinegar to each cup
of dye.
Dip the eggs into the cups, submerging
each egg completely until it reaches an appealing color. Leave eggs in the dye
longer for deeper colors. If one color doesn’t darken as you’d like, set the
cup with the dye and the egg in the refrigerator for a few hours. Try using two
different dyes on one egg to create different colors, or dye half of each egg
in a different color.
Natural Color
Gold: Handful of yellow onion skins
Yellow: 2 tablespoons turmeric, 1/2 cup
dried marigolds, goldenrod or cosmos, or a handful of carrot tops
Green: Handful of coltsfoots
Blue: Handful of wood or 2 cups chopped
red cabbage*
Pink: 2 cups chopped beets
Purple: 1 cup frozen blueberries
Brown: 2 tablespoons coffee grounds or 4
black tea bags
* For best results with this color, add botanical to the water while cooking eggs.
I read this book around the time that I
was diagnosed with cancer that had this saying which helped me get by through
my cancer and wanted to share. If you
are going through hard times during this time of uncertainty, remember you are
not alone.
MY
FLESH IS THE MANIFESTATION OF THE SPIRIT IN MY BODY.
IT
IS KEPT PERFECT THROUGH THE LAW OF GOD.
IN
MY FLESH SHALL I SEE GOD.
THE
MANTLE OF FLESH IS PERFECT AND COMPLETE HERE AND NOW.
IT
IS ONE WITH THE BODY OF GOD, AND CANNOT BE SICK, NOR SUFFER.
MY
FLESH IS PERFECT.
Until tomorrow, have a peaceful holy week.
LAUGH OF THE DAY
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