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Last year, as Anna Cairone admired her mother’s prom dress through snaps of the past, the soon-to-be graduate understood how timeless the event and reflecting fondly on it truly is.
“A lot of people look back on their prom years and years afterward, and show their kids, and their kids go on to show their kids,” said Anna, 18, who who now a senior at as Council Rock High School North and serves as class president.
“I feel like having the ability to make those memories and take those pictures and have that in your memories is really important,” she said.
Do you believe in coincidence?
You know what I mean. You think of someone out of your past and strangely, you hear from them or chance to meet them unexpectedly. Just a coincidence, you say.
Or, you have been working on a problem that has been elusive for days, but suddenly something completely unrelated makes it all clear. Just a coincidence.
I won’t say it has been often, but there have been times when I have had those experiences and chalked it up to “coincidence.” On the other hand, I often wonder, is there more to it?
For example, I am sure that From a Faith Perspective column coordinator Sister Eileen White had no idea when she made our most recent assignments that when she scheduled me for April 11, it was my birthday. My first reaction was, “Isn t that coincidental?” Then I thought, “No, it is a trigger to remind me of my mortality.”
Behind the controls of a hulking John Deere excavator, Nicholas Esposito clutched the lever, navigated the bucket claw into a mountain of dirt, and emptied it into a dump truck.
And he did it like a boss, which was exactly the role the 4-year-old assumed Friday afternoon at EDA Contractors in Bensalem.
Wearing a hard hat, orange vest and a fully stocked tool belt around his tiny waist, Nicholas was the big guy on the job.
Or, as owner of EDA Contractors Ed DeAngelis called him, the CEO.
Clearing a tear from beneath her eye and leaning into her husband s shoulder, Dana Esposito soaked in a moment that her son dreamed about his entire young life, but especially in the last two years as he battled a neuroblastoma, a rare form of cancer that took away his ability to walk for a while and nearly ended his life.