Fresh today Β· Monday, 29 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

Hanukkah is here β€” and so are the banners, the candles, the cousins, and the smell of frying oil.

May the words you string up this week β€” sameach, shalom, simcha β€” also string themselves through your days.

Eight nights, one banner, countless small acts of faith β€” wishing you all of them this Hanukkah.

Wishing you a chag bright enough that the banner barely needs the lights to be readable.

May your Hanukkah banner survive eight nights of latke grease and still hang straight on the ninth morning.

Hung high or hung low β€” may the message of your banner travel further than the wall it's pinned to.

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

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Wishing you a festival declared loudly enough for the street and felt quietly enough for the soul.

May the banner above your door be answered by warmth on the other side of it.

Chag sameach β€” and may your decorations be as joyful as the holiday they're trying to describe.

Eight letters spell Hanukkah, but a thousand wouldn't spell what it means to your family.

Wishing you a Hanukkah where the banners are bright, the brisket is browned, and the blessings are unhurried.

May the festival's flags and banners be the first sign of many that light has returned to your home.

Hung with care, blessed with intention β€” may your Hanukkah banner mark a sacred address on an ordinary street.

Wishing you eight nights worthy of the banner you spent twenty minutes straightening this morning.

May your Hanukkah greetings be loud where they need to be and tender where the banner can't reach.

Eight days of light, one beautiful banner β€” and a year ahead full of reasons to hang another.

Chag urim sameach β€” may the words you write above your door write themselves into your year.

Wishing you a Hanukkah whose banner lives on long after the candles, in stories told to grandchildren.

Shabbat Shalom and Chag Sameach β€” may the two blessings meet at your table this Friday night with extra grace.

When Shabbat falls during Hanukkah, light the Hanukkah candles first β€” then welcome the queen with her own flame.

Wishing you a Friday where the menorah and the Shabbat candles share the same windowsill and the same prayer.

May Shabbat Hanukkah bring the deepest rest of the year β€” eight days of light folded into one holy evening.

Two sets of candles, one peaceful home β€” Shabbat Shalom, Chag Urim Sameach.

May the Shabbat that falls during Hanukkah feel doubly blessed β€” twice the candles, twice the songs, twice the rest.

Wishing you the rare beauty of Shabbat Hanukkah β€” when light meets light and the table holds them both.