Anonymous wrote:OP, if you go to church occasionally, I can’t imagine why you wouldn’t pick Easter as one of those days? It is a religious holiday after all. Why celebrate at all at this point?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We still do an egg hunt with friends. Kids are 11. Aside from that we go to Church and have lunch with my in laws. If Church isn’t your thing I’m not sure why you are celebrating Easter.
Because Easter, like Christmas, has evolved into a cultural celebration. Not just a religious one.
And posts like yours are an example of why we are no longer practicing. Geez. That last comment was not necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We still do an egg hunt with friends. Kids are 11. Aside from that we go to Church and have lunch with my in laws. If Church isn’t your thing I’m not sure why you are celebrating Easter.
Because Easter, like Christmas, has evolved into a cultural celebration. Not just a religious one.
And posts like yours are an example of why we are no longer practicing. Geez. That last comment was not necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Oh easter eggs just have different things in them. Everyone likes a treasure hunt, OP!
One year I hid hundreds of eggs, each with a handful of lego pieces in them. They had to find all the eggs and build Harry Potter's castle together.
One year each egg had a $1 in it. They were VERY motivated that year.
We don't celebrate religion. I see it as the equivalent of St. Patrick's Day or Valentine's Day. A few minutes of fun and then a normal day.
Anonymous wrote:Will be flying to visit my parents. My 17yo teen plans to create an egg hunt for her grandparents. Eggs will be the plastic ones & our plan is to put wildflower seed bombs or corny, Easter-themed jokes inside.
My mom is diabetic and has lots of mobility & diet issues, so chocolate/candy is out. My dad is always up for games. Teen asked to stop having Easter baskets herself two years ago, and doesn't have any younger relatives to organize this for. So, we thought this would be a fun way for her to engage with her grandparents and encourage them to move a bit when we visit.
We're also bringing brunch & flowers.
Anonymous wrote:We still do an egg hunt with friends. Kids are 11. Aside from that we go to Church and have lunch with my in laws. If Church isn’t your thing I’m not sure why you are celebrating Easter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do families celebrate Easter with tweens and teens? Once the easter bunny is over - and they have outgrown easter egg hunts -- how do families celebrate? We are more secular although we go to church occasionally. I don't think a church-focused celebration would be a great fit for a family but not sure how else to celebrate this holiday....
We still hide easter eggs, give easter baskets, and have brunch/lunch. And then enjoy a quiet day.
Anonymous wrote:How do families celebrate Easter with tweens and teens? Once the easter bunny is over - and they have outgrown easter egg hunts -- how do families celebrate? We are more secular although we go to church occasionally. I don't think a church-focused celebration would be a great fit for a family but not sure how else to celebrate this holiday....