Wishing you and yours the very best this Easter…
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Seasons Greetings!
Anguished Repose
It is, after all…
Just what he does on his off days.
So?
Make sure you never run into him on his off days.
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Why is he so mad?
Well, if you had to poop out as many eggs as he did, and all to bring holiday ‘joy’?
Yeah, think about it…
You’d be pretty ticked off too wouldn’t you?
Something to consider.
Mixing religion, mythology and physics? *gasp* Should I?
Oh…
But I should:
Easter falls in the spring, the yearly time of renewal, when the earth renews itself after a long, cold winter. The word Easter comes to us from the Norsemen’s Eostur, Eastar, Ostara, andOstar, and the pagan goddess Eostre, all of which involve theseason of the growing sun and new birth. The Easter Bunny arose originally as a symbol of fertility, due to the rapid reproduction habits of the hare and rabbit.The ancient Egyptians, Persians, Phoenicians, and Hindus all believed the world began with an enormous egg, thus the egg as a symbol of new life has been around for eons. The particulars may vary, but most cultures around the world use the egg as a symbol of new life and rebirth. A notation in the household accounts of Edward I of England showed an expenditure of eighteen pence for 450 eggs to be gold-leafed and colored for Easter gifts. The first book to mention Easter eggs by name was written five hundred years ago. Yet, a North African tribe that had become Christian much earlier in time had a custom of coloring eggs at Easter. Long hard winters often meant little food, and a fresh egg for Easter was quite a prize. Later, Christians abstained from eating meat during the Lenten season prior to Easter. Easter was the first chance to enjoy eggs and meat after the long abstinence.
Some European children go from house to house begging for Easter eggs, much like Halloween trick-or-treaters. Called pace-egging, it comes from the old word for Easter,Pasch. Many old cultures also attributed the egg with great healing powers. It is interesting to note that eggs play almost no part in the Easter celebrations of Mexico, South America, and Native American Indian cultures. Egg-rolling contests are a symbolic re-enactment of the rolling away of the stone from Christ’s tomb. The decoration of small leaf-barren branches as Easter egg trees has become a popular custom in the United States since the 1990s. [Read More]
O Easter Tree! O Easter Tree!
Thy eggs are so changing;
O Easter Tree! O Easter Tree!
Thy eggs are so changing;
Died blue, green and yellow,
And red, pick and orange with Jell-O.
O Easter Tree! O Easter Tree!
Thy eggs are so changing!
O Easter Tree! O Easter Tree!
Much pleasure Peeps can’st give me;
O Easter Tree! O Easter Tree!
Much pleasure Peeps can’st give me;
How often has the Easter tree
Afforded me the greatest glee with it’s purdy!
O Easter Tree! O Easter Tree!
Much pleasure Peeps can’st give me.
O Easter Tree! O Easter Tree!
Thy eggs colored so brightly!
O Easter Tree! O Easter Tree!
Thy eggs colored so brightly!
From base to summit, gay and bright,
There’s only splendor for the sight.
O Easter Tree! O Easter Tree!
Thy eggs colored so brightly!
O Easter Tree! O Easter Tree!
How richly God has decked thee!
O Easter Tree! O Easter Tree!
How richly God has decked thee!
Thou bidst us true and faithful be,
And trust in God unchangingly.
O Easter Tree! O Easter Tree!
How richly God has decked thee! !”
SAALFELD, Germany – Volker Kraft’s apple sapling sported just 18 eggs when he first decorated it for Easter. Decades later, the sturdy tree is festooned with 9,800 eggs, artfully decorated with everything from beads to sea shells.
Decking trees with hollowed-out, painted eggs for Easter is popular in Germany, but the 75-year-old retiree’s creation has become something special. Last year, it drew 13,000 visitors.
Kraft needs two weeks and countless trips up and down his ladder to hang the eggs.
The task has become a little heavier each year since Kraft began his decorations in 1965. He started with plastic eggs, and later switched to real eggs painted by his three children.
These days Kraft’s wife, Christa, designs many of the most exotic decorations – knitting egg wrappings on long winter evenings. [Read More]
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