So it has been over a fortnight since I have updated this blog and for that I sincerely apologize. I am posting now to greet you on this day, the Eve of Christmas, and wish you good tidings and luck for the remainder of this year and to the next. And happy Hanukkah, Kwanzaa and Eid for those who do not celebrate Christmas, but take rejoicing in the arms of a different religion.
As we prepare to celebrate the holidays that mark the end of 2008, I think that reflection on the events of the past year is more than necessary, considering the state of the world in which we make our current living.
Indeed, there is much to be worried about.
However, I express the sentiment of hope that better times will come. Perhaps not today, perhaps not tomorrow, but someday, someday soon. I am truly lucky to be where I am today, living in a house in suburban Nothern Virginia and going to college, but I often wonder about the circumstances of others different from me.
The families with members fighting wars abroad and on the home front in the far reaches of the world.
The families struggling to make ends meet in the sagging global economy.
The families across the world working to put food into their bowls and on the table.
I've taken to watching and reading the news more in recent times, and I realize this year that Santa Claus is not coming for many families. But what hope they had in Santa, they all have in each other.
That is all they need. Indeed, it is all we will ever need.