Category Archives: Family

Carnival southwestern Germany style!

Germany 2012 comes to a close . . .

Bringing Things Full Circle

Part of the impetus of this trip was to explore the tiny town of Krefeld, Germany with my Mother.

Why Krefeld?

In 1684, Paul Kuster, an ancestor on my maternal grandfather’s side, left that area of Germany (near the Rhine river) for the “free world.” One of thirteen families, the Kusters were part of the original emigrants to Pennsylviana, best known as Pennsylvania Dutch. Why Pennsylvania Dutch and not Pennsylvania German? Not sure. I googled it and found a site with a l o n g explanation of all the why and what-fores. All I DO know is that my grandfather fought for the United States in World War I and did not want to be associated with Germans at all!

How would he feel about his youngest granddaughter becoming enamored with the German language? No idea. He died when I was 6-months old.

My hostess during this final phase of my solo-trip found me through homeexchange.com. She wanted to visit Kauai and accessed the site through her girlfriend in Freiburg who was a member (and who btw has this lovely family you’ll see in the pix below : ).

“Krefeld?” my new friend thought, “Who wants to visit Krefeld????”

Incredulous that someone wanted to visit this tiny town near the border of the Netherlands, she contacted me anyway. One thing led to another, and in December 2011, my mother, husband, and I found ourselves in her COOL apartment in the Median district of Düsseldorf.

If you want to experience the Mother Chronicles, visit: the next couple of posts. : )))

So . . . at the end of my solo-trip, I found myself staying with and getting to know this incredible woman who I met through exchanging homes!!!  A woman who shared her apartment in Düsseldorf, just minutes away from our ancestors old stomping grounds, making it possible for my Mom to have an 80th birthday celebration full of dreams fulfilled.  Lucky us!

Thanks Christiane for your generosity and hospitality!!!

German Lessons Via Skype

Sj with her Mother making dreams come true. : )

Valentine's Day 2012 . . . went to vist a dear friend who lives in Italy. No, we're just good friends.

After visiting Henry & CERN, I flew to Italy!

Girlfriend time!

After devoting MOST of my time to increasing my German vocabulary, I found I needed a girlfriend fix. Women, you know what I mean. Nothing like girl-girl time to laugh, eat, and just plain enjoy each other’s company.

Thanks so much Glenn for sharing your home and hearth!!!Without further ado, fav photos from this part of my trip:

le creuset orange

Cern, I got to go to CERN !!!

Years ago, a young Jewish man left Yugoslavia just in time.

It was 1943, and in the words of Henry, the then almost 16-year old boy, “I just made it.”

A Quaker group was helping children (up to 15-years old) escape Eastern Europe. Once they arrived in the United States; it was up to other organizations to take over. Luckily for Henry, he was introduced to Joachim Prinz, an infamous rabbi who had stood up to the Nazis in Berlin. Now living in New Jersey, Rabbi Prinz introduced young Henry to the Michael Stavitsky family. Soon Henry was living with the Stavitskys and continuing his education.

Fast forward to February 2012. Henry, now in his 80s and a Professor of Physics at NYC, invited this lucky traveler for a visit to his home outside Geneva. One of the scientists working on the ISOLDE project, Henry periodically spends time at CERN.

How in the heck did this Southern-born and Southern-Baptist-raised woman receive this invitation?

Marriage. Purely a connection by marriage. I just happened to marry one of Michael & Evie Stavitsky’s two grandsons.In 1986, Henry generously flew to Tennessee for our wedding. Towing a heavy flaming-orange Le Creuset cooking pot, he and his wife Norma gave us one of our all-time favorite wedding gifts. (We’ve used it almost EVERY day of our over 20-year marriage!)

Though I saw Henry only once after our wedding, we maintained contact. Being a good Southern gal, as well as a proper Kappa Kappa Gamma, I made sure to include our distant aunt and uncle in our annual holiday missives. Good thing! Because this trip to CERN and my visit with Henry will remain one of my absolute solo-travel HIGHLIGHTS!

Thanks Henry for your generosity, good company, and yummy-yummy meals!

Throughout the city are information placards which accompany actual segments of DIE Mauer, the wall. Germans speak of THE wall as opposed to the wall or a wall.

Berlin 2012 Photo Recap

Has It Been TWO Years Already???

Two years ago, I had the honor of spending some solo travel time in Germany. It was awesome. I was there to improve my German (i.e. increase my vocabulary).

But looking back now, I realize it was also about continuing to learn how to live in the present.

The NOW.

THIS moment.

I made Lightroom galleries before of my fav pictures from difference portions of my trip, but now I have access to a groovy plug-in that let’s me do it here. In my Blog Glob. Yahoo! I LOVE some plug-ins!

So, without further ado, the Berlin part of my trip. : )

grumpy cat

Ever Felt Grumpy?

And no matter what you did, the Grump just stayed?

Grumpy old man and boyWe all have. We’re human.

And sometimes the Grump just likes to come and sit a spell.

Make itself comfortable as it casts its gloomy shadow and sucks us in.

Taking over.

Setting up camp in our hearts.

“I’m here to stay!” the Grump boldly announces.

Grumpy ManWhether for a season.

Or a day.

Or even an hour.

It  f e e l s  like an  e t e r n i t y  when we’re a Grump.

Ah humbug.

 Poor pitiful me.

 EVERY-one has it better than ME!

That was MEAN what he said.

She said.

They said.

We said.

Mean.

If only this.

If only that.

It’s his fault.

Her fault.

Everyone else’s fault but our own.

Oh, it’s getting me down.

There’s no end in sight.

For the Grump creates an endless circle of fright.

Round and round it goes.

Where it stops, nobody knows.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

“Okay, Sj, I admit it. I’ve been a puddle of gloom and doom before.

A lump of Grump which vowed to show the world just how bad it was so that everyone could see.

It’s so very, very bad.

Can’t you see?”

Yes, I can see.

WE can see.

The gloom.

The doom.

The pool of drool that drips,

drips,

drips.

The lump of Grump which pushes all else aside until we believe there is no hope.

No way out.

Sigh.

Powerless.

We sit and stew.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

What to DO when the Grump arrives?

What do YOU do when you’re a Grump? After it’s landed on your head and oozed down into your heart making a mess of the joy that was there just moments before?

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Grumpy man in wheelchairFive-years ago, a case of the Grumps landed on my Dad. Sitting in a wheelchair unable to walk (just a few weeks after he’d won a 3-hour match in a national tennis tournament), my Dad was thinking, “What the?”

Slumped over in his chair, he brewed.

And stewed.

A Grump.

Feeling sorry for himself.

Seeing no way out.

And then, something c h a n g e d.

I saw it with my own four-eyes.

Somewhere within himself he found the strength to sit-up.

To cast out one kind word.

And then another.

And another.

Soon a fountain of encouragement sprang forth from his personal spring of goodness.

“You can do it!”

“Try again!”

“That’s it!”

Encouraging words flew across the rec hall landing first on a middle-aged woman who’d been paralyzed in a car accident.

Next, they found root in a young man who’d broken his neck in a fall.

One-by-one, I saw the change.

One-by-one, I saw the effects of my father’s words.

“Way to go!”

“That was a solid hit!”

“Good job!”

As this group of spinal cord injured people played volleyball, magic began to happen.

M A G I C.

Sj with her father, November 2008

Sj with her father, November 2008

And it started with my Dad.

The Grump.

Somehow he’d found something to grab onto.

A something that he could stand on.

A something that took him to the other side.

A bridge of sorts manifested itself when he looked within.

When he thought of others.

When he took his eyes off his own sorrow and reached out a helping hand,

in the form of encouraging words.

“You can do it!”

“Try again!”

“That’s it!”

From the depths of despair and self-pity, my Dad found a bridge to the other side.

Dad home on leave in the Smokies

Dad home on leave visiting the Great Smokey Mountains.

How fitting that a man, who built bridges during World War II to replace those that the Germans blew up, would find a bridge WITHIN himself. A man who served his nation as a Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

In his final days, my Dad built a bridge to the other side. A bridge that enabled him to help others even as he helped himself.

A different sort of mettle appeared right when he needed it most.

Patricia Neal visited her eponymous rehabilitation center Fall 2008

Patricia Neal visited her eponymous rehabilitation center Fall 2008

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

What do YOU do when you’re a Grump?

Stew and brew?

Or sit-up.

Look.

And cast kind words to those around you.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Sj’s Pep Talk #5: Give Thanks looks at the Grump from another perspective.

I invite you to take a short break and click either on the link above or on the box below.

Afterward, please COMMENT and let me know what YOU do to bid the Grump adieu.

Regardless, I wish you well. I wish you Godspeed in your dance with the Grump.

Though the groove is round, there IS a side track which will open when we call it forth.

When we take the time to look, listen, and act.

• • • • •

This post is dedicated to my niece on whose birthday my Dad rallied in order to be able to come home for the last time.

Happy Birthday Katie!

Mahalo for the use of your Grumpy Cat!