Fresh today Β· Thursday, 25 June

New Wishes

A handful of wishes pulled from the cabinet this morning. Pick one up β€” copy, save it to your pinboard, or send it on.

Drawn at dawn
Wishes in the library
92,976

Here's to good wishes returned doubled β€” every blessing you give this week finding its way back through someone else's door.

May your Hanukkah be good the way bread is good β€” basic, daily, blessed, and somehow always exactly enough.

Wishing you the kind of Hanukkah that becomes a yardstick β€” every future December measured gently against this one.

May the light you tend this week tend you right back β€” and may that mutual tending feel, plainly, good.

Here's to good Hanukkah β€” nothing fancy promised, everything important delivered, candles lit and people loved.

Happy Hanukkah to my brother and his wife β€” may your first menorah together set the tone for every winter ahead.

↑ pick one up
Browse by occasion

What are we writing today?

Cabinets sorted by occasion. Open one β€” pages are arranged by warmth, not algorithm.

More from today

Wishing you both eight nights of laughter, fried food, and that quiet contentment that comes from sharing a tradition.

May your home, brother and sister-in-law, glow brighter this year than any other on the street β€” and stay that way.

Here's to my brother and his beautiful wife β€” may your blessings double the way candles do, night after night.

Chag Sameach to a couple I'd choose as family even if I hadn't been handed you β€” light your candles slowly, love each other louder.

May the two of you find in Hanukkah what every couple needs: shared rituals, full plates, and a reason to keep showing up.

Wishing my brother and his wife a season heavy on latkes, light on dishwashing, and rich in the kind of memories that last.

May your menorah witness a year of growth β€” not just of family, but of patience, humor, and the small daily mercies.

Happy Hanukkah, you two. May the love between you outshine every flame and warm everyone lucky enough to visit.

Here's to my brother and his wife β€” partners in latke-flipping, dreidel-spinning, and the slower art of building a home.

May the blessings whispered over your candles this year find both of you held, healthy, and entirely on the same page.

Wishing you both a Hanukkah where the only argument is over the last sufganiyah β€” and even that ends in laughter.

May your eight nights be peaceful, brother β€” may your wife find rest, your home find warmth, your faith find roots.

Here's to a couple I'm proud to share Hanukkah with β€” may your traditions deepen, your love season, your gelt jar overflow.

Chag Sameach to my brother and the woman who makes him brighter β€” may your menorah witness many more years like this.

May the Festival of Lights remind you both why you chose each other, and why everyone else still cheers about it.

Wishing my brother and his wife the rare joy of a Hanukkah unhurried β€” coffee long, candles slow, conversations longer.

May your home this season feel like the safest place in the world β€” to each other, to family, to faith itself.

Here's to my brother's house glowing eight nights running β€” and my sister-in-law somehow making it look effortless.

May this Hanukkah find you both healthier, kinder, and a little more in love than you were last December.