
Happy Easter Monday 🌤️ Today’s issue is about the kind of wonder that gently brings people closer whether it’s through music created in the moment or traditions we’ve grown up seeing every Easter season. Sometimes joy comes from a huge shared experience. Sometimes it comes from finally understanding the little symbols we’ve always known. This edition is for that soft kind of curiosity. The kind that makes the world feel a little richer, warmer, and more alive.

Jacob Collier’s live performance with the Audience Symphony Orchestra in San Francisco feels like a reminder that beauty doesn’t always have to be polished or planned to move us. In clips and related official posts, the performance is described as Collier creating music live with an audience-built orchestra, turning a concert into something shared, playful, and deeply human. It’s the kind of story that makes you remember how powerful it is when people listen to each other and make something together.
Watch here
Easter is full of images we instantly recognize. Bunnies, eggs, candy, lilies, spring color. But many of these traditions have layered histories behind them. HISTORY notes that while Easter celebrates the resurrection of Jesus for Christians, many familiar customs developed over time and are not directly from the Bible. The Easter bunny is commonly linked to German immigrant traditions, while eggs have long symbolized new life and springtime renewal.
Read here
Maybe that’s what this season teaches us. Some things do not need to be explained perfectly to be felt deeply. A song. A symbol. A tradition passed down through the years. A moment of wonder you did not expect. Easter Monday can be a small invitation to notice what still brings meaning to your life and to hold it close.