It was because of this demonstration of love to Hashem that Hashem also went beyond what was necessary

The Mishkan that Bnei Yisrael built in the Desert was never destroyed. It was concealed in its entirety (Succah 45b). In fact, the Sfas Emes says that the Ner Maaravi of the Menorah is still lit in the place where it is concealed. In contrast, the two Batei Hamikdash were destroyed and lay in ruins. Why did the Mishkan merit to be preserved even after it was no longer in use? (Rav Shmuel Brazil)
I don’t make a big deal out of birthdays. For one thing, when you have a large family kein ayin hara, you end up having birthday parties every Montig un Donershtig.
Plus, birthdays have a nasty habit of coming back every year. So each year you have the pressure of making something bigger and better than the one before. (Think Purim themes and Chol Hamoed trips. You get my point.)
So when my oldest was one month old, I made a conscious decision that we were not going to celebrate these myriads of milestones in any major fashion. A simple happy birthday song and cake would do. Then Yitzi came of age.
My Yitzi likes nothing more than making people happy. And party planning is perfectly up his alley. So at the tender age of seven, Yitzi was quietly counting his meager savings so he could plan a birthday party for me. Then he went on to party projects. One year he reprinted a whole album of old pictures for me to enjoy. Another time it was a slideshow. Then he expanded to his siblings as well. Balloons, cakes, streamers, confetti… (we kept finding stray pieces for months afterward!)… Yitzi was in his element. And who was I to deny him such pleasure?
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