I
think we should have an Easter-style long weekend at least once a month. People
just look happier when they know they're getting extra time off work, and it makes
the world a better place. And I think it's ok to make plans to change the
layout of Easter, and make it more regular. The whole occasion is a bit
ridiculous anyway - it moves around the calendar like a Roomba moving around an
office - so why not celebrate it every four weeks instead of (roughly) every
year? I don't think the church would mind. It would keep them at the forefront
of people's minds, and the power of repetitive behaviour may also see more
people turn themselves towards religion. If you're hearing words like 'Easter',
'crucifixion' and 'resurrection' often enough, you may end up taking an
interest in them and joining a congregation somewhere.
I'm
trying to remember what the official wording is for the designation of Easter,
and why it falls on a different date each year, but it's so weird and seemingly
arbitrary that you could almost make up any old shite and it would make more
sense than the actual explanation. (which I think I'll do as a blog later this
week, actually!)
But my point is that everyone is nicer when they're
working less. The lockdowns proved that, I think. And wasn't there going to be
a big post-pandemic push for 4-day weeks, and less stress, and better
conditions for all? I guess that fell by the wayside like all the other
positive impacts we were hoping to see after we left the shadow of the Covid
cloud.
I overheard one of those 'painful parenting' moments that we all face; where
your children hit you with a question that is almost unanswerable, and you find
yourself floundering as you flap about trying to find a suitable answer. During
our egg-painting fun and games onsite on Saturday, a particularly
sunnily-disposed cherub turned to her dad and asked, "Why do we call it Good
Friday? It doesn't sound like anything good happened to Jesus that day..."
I'm guessing by the looks on all the faces, none of us in the room knew the
answer, but none of us had been asked, so the rest of us got to smile and enjoy
the embarrassed expression on dad's face as he desperately tried to remember
his R.E. lessons from school.
I hope this isn't insensitive to say, and I type it with all due respect, but
you have to admire the gumption of Pope Francis to steal away the limelight
from Jesus by dying on Easter Monday.
And I bet the producers of 'Conclave' are gutted that this didn't happen last
year. Imagine how many extra bums on cinema seats they would have had if an
actual conclave was happening at the same time that the film was showing? If I
was them, I'd be thinking of rereleasing it.
RC 22-4-25
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