Sounds to me like an every week Shabbat... Except for the No Power part...
But this should remind us how fragile our reliance on power is. Today we are nearly helpless without our gadgets and gizmos. I am also guilty of this... But we should think beyond our electronic toys and tools.
This may make me sound old but in the 80s when I told people I worked with 'home computers' everyone looked at me funny and asked why a person would want a computer at home...
Example of 1980s 'Home Computer'
I found it very hard to get prepared for work by candlelight.
We did not run the generator at night.
It is very noisy. The neighbors wouldn't have liked that.
I get prepared for work at 5 am. It's still very dark.
I wouldn't have cared so much, if I could have slept until there was natural light coming through the window.
Also, the generator was at my Mom's house not mine.
I also lost some food that was in my fridge and my stove is electric. Even boiling water was a chore.
What bothered me the most was I could not contact the people I love, to check on them, easily. I had no phone, cell or internet service. Thank goodness for my Mom's land line.
The TV and gadgets I could live with out. I like to read. You can do that by candle or flashlight.
I'm grateful that we only lost power for about 3 days. It could have been far worse.
I was really only teasing CJD.
He had a camp stove and lanterns.
Glad your power's back, Lisa.