Today is the Tanabata star festival. It is traditionally on the seventh day of the seventh lunar month, but July 7 is the date used here in Japan’s Kanto region. For the week or so, businesses and public buildings have sported decorated bamboo boughs on which people may hang their wishes written on strips of colored paper.
Writing wishes is a fun activity for English class. Most students haven't done it since elementary school, and never in English. Their wishes range from "I hope I can find a boyfriend this summer" "I hope I can pass a lot of classes" "I hope I can lose 5 kilograms" "I hope I am going to get my driver's license" to "I hope the world is going to be peaceful."
And every year, there are a few that stand out for their generosity, poignancy, or the untold stories that lie behind them: "I hope I can make my girlfriend happy," "I hope I can stop wasting money," "Before I die I want to meet my family."
The day after Tanabata, the bamboo, decorations, and wishes are fed to a small fire. The smoke rises into the air, carrying the expressions of yearning, hope and optimism to the realm of the gods.
What's your Tanabata wish for this year? I'll settle for world peace, an end to Covid, and losing 7 kilograms.
In the bamboo grove

I cut a bough strong enough
To bear hopes and dreams
