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| Ade's First Communion |
Saturday, April 30, 2011
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Easter Sunday 2011
While Easter Sunday did not start off propitiously, by 11:00 I saw a patch of blue sky in the West and thanked God for the promise of sun and dryer weather. So it was that the day was marvelous. It was great to host my second Easter luncheon and Easter egg hunt at my home.
| Sara's Easter Egg Hunt reaction |
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| Jane and mommy Susan. |
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| Jane in her Easter Sunday best. |
| Jane, Sara, Kalin, Meri, Alex and Ryan |
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| Yuki in cascarones confetti |
© 2011 Hector V. Lee
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Fumi Kimura 1970-2011
Good Friday’s pall extended until Saturday when I went to the Alemany Farmers Market and found a memorial for Fumi. She died on April 19th after a long battle with cancer. People were there to grieve and remember this wonderful human being.
I came to know Fumi several years ago because she was so friendly and engaging. She was more interested in you than selling flowers. Her selection of flowers was never extensive. She had here lilies, chrysanthemums, sunflowers, Gerber daisies and, when in season, narcissus and marigolds, which would last two weeks at home since they were cut the day before. Through her I met Dale, and Angela (who gave me updates on Fumi’s condition), Anges and Brenda, who all donated time so the business could continue. Fumi had battled cancer before. She joked that the treatment had given her curly hair. As if she had come to the brink of death, she lived as witness to embrace life fully: live in the present and love those around you. But now cancer had come back with a vengeance and her body could not withstand the ravages of the disease and the effects of chemotherapy. But her spirit lives on in the people she impacted.
Now I when I go to the Farmer’s Market, I will think of Fumi as I pass her stall. I don’t know from whom I will purchase flowers, but when I do I will associate her with flowers and remember the beauty she brought others.
© 2011 Hector V. Lee
Friday, April 22, 2011
Way of the Cross on Haight
Jesus’ passion took place as a public spectacle in a public space. Targeted by those envious of him, the authorities had him condemned to death, a victim of capital punishment. Objectively, he was probably seen by those in his time as a poor soul who failed to conform to the norms of his society. He was alone except for the women who followed him his crucifixion. So it was that St. Agnes had its Stations of the Cross in the Haight. The procession was a witness to the Passion Jesus suffered and continues to suffer in his fellow humanity. Some people stared, some remembered, some were indifferent--no one was disrespectful. But the transcendent message of the Pascal Mystery takes place in the secular time of the market place.
© 2011 Hector V. Lee
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
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