As part of our Global Family Celebration series, we’ve been reflecting on how traditions bring families together in meaningful ways.
After our story about Korea’s Chuseok, we turned to another cherished holiday: the Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival.
Falling on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month, it is a time when the moon is at its brightest and fullest — a symbol of reunion and harmony.
Across China and around the world, families gather to share seasonal foods such as taro, pomelo, and roasted duck. At the center of the table are mooncakes, their round shape representing unity and completeness.
Crafting the Script
In approaching this story, we wanted to capture more than a holiday meal. This idea of the moon as both symbol and messenger inspired us.
The Mid-Autumn Festival is also a festival of words and feelings. For centuries, poets have looked to the moon to express longing, gratitude, and connection. Their verses, still recited today, tie the festival to China’s deep literary tradition.
We envisioned not just a table full of food, but one with an empty chair — a reminder that families are not always physically together. How, then, do they stay connected? The story grew from that question.
A Family Across Oceans
In our narrative, Wei, the eldest son, is studying overseas. His chair is empty but not forgotten. His mother sets aside a plate for him. His younger sister opens a video call so he can join the gathering in spirit.
The family greets him with smiles, lifting their mooncakes to the screen as if toasting the moon together.
Their grandfather begins to recite Quiet Night Thought by Li Bai, a poem cherished for generations:
Before my bed, the bright moonlight,
I wonder if it’s frost on the ground.
I lift my head and gaze at the bright moon,
I lower my head and think of home.
Far away, Wei looks out his window and sees the same glowing moon. For a moment, the distance fades, and the family feels whole again.
More Than a Harvest Celebration
The Mid-Autumn Festival reminds us that love travels farther than distance. Even when families are apart, the same moon rises above every home, soft and steady.
Wei lifts his cup to the screen, and across oceans, his family lifts theirs. Together, they toast to the same moon, their laughter and love traveling across generations and continents.
The silver light carries memory, joy, and longing, turning a simple gesture into a bridge of connection. Beneath the same endless sky, hearts meet, and we are reminded that no distance can dim the ties that bind us.
Where Stories Meet
As we continue our Global Family Celebration series, we look to the rituals that remind us of this truth: that connection is always within reach. A shared meal, a familiar poem, a gaze at the same moon — these simple acts transcend borders and time.
Every culture offers its own lantern of wisdom, illuminating the universal desire to gather, to give thanks, and to feel at home in the world.
When we celebrate each other’s traditions, we discover that our stories are not separate threads, but part of a greater tapestry — woven together beneath one sky.
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