I certainly don’t think people who don’t like video calls should do anything like this.
(fwiw, I find most group video calls awkward, but found Seder not-awkward and meaningful, because it gave a sense of direction to get everyone warmed up for chatting.)
I do think it’s quite plausible that people who do like videocalls but don’t want to reflect on Covid should probably just focus on connection. (For comparison: Christmas has a set of stories and traditions focused on Jesus, and a set of traditions about presents and Santa Clause. This creates a natural opportunity for people who actually care about Jesus to focus on the former, and people who mostly want an excuse for the latter to just do that. I’m expecting a similar thing here.)
I certainly don’t think people who don’t like video calls should do anything like this.
(fwiw, I find most group video calls awkward, but found Seder not-awkward and meaningful, because it gave a sense of direction to get everyone warmed up for chatting.)
I do think it’s quite plausible that people who do like videocalls but don’t want to reflect on Covid should probably just focus on connection. (For comparison: Christmas has a set of stories and traditions focused on Jesus, and a set of traditions about presents and Santa Clause. This creates a natural opportunity for people who actually care about Jesus to focus on the former, and people who mostly want an excuse for the latter to just do that. I’m expecting a similar thing here.)