Fenwick Island

I went to Fenwick Island on a mission. A few years ago we went to the Outer Banks with my dear friend Rosita and her family. One day Rosita took this picture of us:

Cliché thought it may be, I loved the white/khaki look. I loved that late afternoon light. I was determined to recreate the photo at Fenwick Island. I made sure to pack white and khaki outfits for everyone. The day before we were going to leave at the end of our vacation, I announced that it was time for our photo session. I made everyone get into their designated photo togs, some of them newly-bought just for the occasion. We wasted precious daylight as Teddy searched unsuccessfully for his khaki shorts.  (The following week my sister emailed me to say that they had mistakenly gotten mixed in with her boys’ shorts). I admit it: I was insufferable. I stormed around looking for the shorts and making my son look for the shorts and even seriously considered making him wear a pair of women’s khaki shorts until my sister ripped them out of my hands and said, “NO.”  I finally, huffily conceded that navy shorts would have to do. We went out onto the beach and my daughter immediately got a piece of sand in her eye. Through tears she insisted that she couldn’t open her eyes.  And because I am a horrible, horrible human being, I heard myself saying absolutely outrageous things like, “Try not to cry for just one second! Just open your eyes and pretend not to cry on the count of three!” Truly, I had become unhinged…and I totally got what I deserved:

I did manage to get some better ones throughout the week. Here are some of my favorites:

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Last days…

Our week at Corshill Cottage came to an end. We drove back to Edinburgh to catch our train back to Manchester, but first squeezed in a quick trip to the Camera Obscura. From the Outlook Tower at the top of the Royal Mile we got panoramic views of the city:

Inside the tower, we got another view of the city in the camera obscura, a darkened room in which mirrors and lenses are used to project a live image of the streets of Edinburgh onto a large horizontal screen. Our guide told us that when the apparatus, (the same one that is still in use today), first debuted in 1853, people would vomit and even pass out from the shock of seeing the live projection.

The rest of the Tower was devoted to optical illusions:

Finally, it was time to get back to Manchester for our last few days, and the pleasures of home life there:

My daughter spent many hours of the day boning up on Greek mythology with a new book from her aunt:

and with her dad’s Classical Studies notebook from grade school:

At night she dreamt about Greek mythology:

There were some serious ping pong matches:

Frolicking in the garden:

On the day we left, Granddad indulged the kids by taking them on a pilgrimage to see the home stadium of their favorite team:

And finally, it was time to bid a fond farewell to our family:

Should auld acquaintance be forgot,
And never brought to mind?
Should auld acquaintance be forgot,
And auld lang syne.

For auld lang syne, my dear,
For auld lang syne,
We’ll take a cup of kindness yet,
For auld lang syne.

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Scotland, Pt. 3 – My husband’s first home

My husband has always loved Scotland, where he was born and spent the first twelve years of his life.

He and his dad took a hike around Ben Ledi, the first hike they had done together when he was a little boy. When they first walked the trail decades ago, these trees had just been planted and were knee-high:

Although it’s a little grainy, I was so glad they were able to mark this occasion by taking this photo at the top:

That evening he humored me by taking me to this church we kept passing en route to the cottage, so I could get some photos:

Like the trees, the gravestones dramatically showed the passage of time. On some stones the elements had completely erased the engraving, which once marked the day someone who had been loved and cherished was born and the day they died:

The next day we took a day trip to Dollar. We parked our cars on the beautiful street bisected by a babbling burn, right next to the house where my husband first lived:

We walked to Mill Green and the kids played in the icy cold stream where my husband and his brother used to play as children:

We trekked up Dollar Glen to Castle Campbell, once known as Castle Gloom:

By the time we got there, the kids were exhausted:

They revived with a game of roly poly:

…which was fabulous, until Someone-Who-Shall-Remain-Unnamed rolled right into a pile of dog poop.

We continued our tour by stopping to see the church where my husband had been baptized as an infant:

And then it was back to the cottage, and to an early birthday celebration for both my husband and daughter:

We can only capture these fleeting moments of our “one wild and precious life” imperfectly in photos, in stone, in our memories…but by God we try.

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Runaways

My triplet nephews jointly wrote this masterpiece of a runaway letter full of reassurances to soften the blow of their departure:

 

Gotta love those boys!

Grand Old Time

It was a busy spring with kids’ soccer games, recitals, and many other weekend obligations. It was hard to find the time to make the trip to Arlington to visit my parents. We finally got the chance to go this weekend.

Time becomes mercurial when I’m at my parents’ house. I simultaneously regress and age. Time reverses as I reassume my place as my parents’ third child. I confide in them my troubles and joys. I ask for their advice. I eat my mother’s Korean food. She takes care of things like sewing Panda’s arm back on:

At the same time, I senesce as I fall into the gentle rhythm  of my parents’ household. I shuffle around in a borrowed cardigan and slippers. I fall asleep sitting in an armchair, my legs covered with a throw, my mouth undoubtedly hanging open. I putter around town, chauffeuring my mom and dad on leisurely errands and outings. We take walks around the garden and the neighborhood.

There was much to admire in my parents’ garden this weekend. The hydrangea my mother-in-law gave to my mother when she came from England for a visit is blooming in that typically extravagant way hydrangeas do:

A new hydrangea my mother’s sister brought her:

My dad’s beloved cacti:

You’d be mistaken if you thought he grew these for their spectacular flowers. Nope. This cactus is for eating!

There are food crops all around the house, and I really do mean all around the house. In the back there’s a small orchard of fruit trees. There are also rows of raspberry canes, corn, squash, and more exotic vegetables. There’s a lettuce bed on the side of the house:

And in the front of the house…YES, at the front of the house, nestled in amongst the more pedestrian rhododendron and euonymus are onions, pepper plants, and wild sesame:

My mother informed me in a bemused tone of voice that people seemed to want to use flowers as their foundation plants. As a nod to the prevailing neighborhood culture, she put some geraniums in pots…right next to the pepper plants.

After admiring their garden, I accompanied my parents on their daily crawl around the ‘hood. I adjusted my stride to match my mother’s snail pace. It’s good to be forced to walk slowly every now and then. It gives you a chance to observe and appreciate all the ordinary yet wondrous things that surround us every day, but that we don’t usually have the time or inclination to notice.

We saw chipmunks:

We stopped and communed with a bunny that stood her ground as we slowly filed past.

“She’s always there,” my mom commented, “She must have a nest nearby.”

To my, “How cute!” my mother countered in Korean, “‘Cute’ joah ha ne!” (Translation: “Psht!”)

We discovered this sweet memorial in one garden, and surmised that there must be a pet fish or perhaps a gerbil buried under the stone in the center…

This little mushroom prompted all sorts of recollections…

My dad recounted how in Korea, his family would gather poisonous mushrooms that would grow on the thatched roof of their house. They would crush and mix them into rice that would be placed around the house as a natural and very effective insecticide. He recalled how his mother would go into the pine forest on summer days after the rain to pick baskets of delicious, edible mushrooms. In turn, I told him about an astonishing confession I heard from a professor leading an expedition I was on in Russia. He told us that he had been showing off his knowledge of mushrooms to another group of  students. One of them picked a mushroom and asked him if it was safe to eat. Not wanting to lose face, the professor assured him that it was, though he was not in fact at all sure. The student popped it into his mouth and for the rest of the outing, the professor was gripped in a rictus of fear, wondering if the student would keel over dead! (Fortunately, the mushroom was not poisonous)!

We saw this overgrown patch of weeds:

“It’s an eyesore, but I don’t say anything,” my dad noted mildly.

“A tiger could have babies in there,” my mom muttered darkly.

We finished circling the block and walked back into the house. I spotted a photo I hadn’t seen before. It’s so new it doesn’t yet have a frame, and has been propped against a painting on the mantel. It’s a photo of my beautiful and talented niece performing at Carnegie Hall after winning a piano competition.

As I was admiring the photo, my mother said wistfully, “When I saw the picture, the first thing I thought of was my parents. I wish they were still living, so that I could brag about my granddaughter to them. I wish they could see how beautiful she is, and hear her play the piano. Isn’t that silly? I still miss them so much.”

Every day is a gift of staggering, incalculable value. There is truly nothing more precious than time.

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The Gateway Arch

The Gateway Arch, perched on the banks of the Missippi River, was designed by architect Eero Saarinen and structural engineer Hannskarl Bandel. At 630 feet, this stainless steel structure is the world’s largest catenary arch and the tallest monument in the U.S. During the Great Depression, the “Jefferson National Expansion Memorial” was conceived as a monument to Thomas Jefferson and his vision of westward expansion. City leaders saw it as a way of tapping into New Deal money in the hopes of stimulating the economy and creating jobs. Amid lawsuits and court cases, thirty-seven city blocks were cleared by condemning and demolishing almost all of the structures within the area, forcing out local people and businesses. It wasn’t until 1963 that building actually began. It once again became the focus of controversy when civil rights activists protested that there were no skilled African American  laborers being hired to work on the arch. The iconic arch was finally completed in 1965 and was opened to the public two years later. The arch itself is a soaring, gleaming marvel. There are broad expanses of lush green grass all around it, where I saw families sprawling and little girls turning cartwheels. To get there, I walked under a bridge where I could see homeless people curled up asleep on the concrete, their modest belongings stuffed into the makeshift lockers created by the structure.

I hadn’t realized that you can actually go into the arch. You have to crouch to fit into the creaky egg shaped tram capsules that take you to the top of the arch. There is a walkway at the top and tiny windows (larger ones would not withstand the pressure) from which you can observe the city for 30 miles around. Taken from the top of the arch:

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I’m a jerk.

My husband is accompanying our son to his Destination Imagination Global Finals in Knoxville, Tennessee this week. I’ve written before about my compulsion to chronicle everything in photographs. My sorrow that I can’t be the one to go with my son is matched only by my anxiety that there won’t be enough documentation of the event I’m missing. I pestered my husband by text all day to send photos. He finally obliged by emailing me this one:

…whereupon I immediately fired off the following:

Perhaps unsurprisingly, I didn’t get any more photo updates for a few hours, but he finally relented and sent me these:

And this:

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Weekend Snapshots 3

FRIDAY

Doctor’s appointments for the boys.

SATURDAY

Got a call from Colin, who was visiting Auschwitz on our anniversary. No comment.

Soccer games.

Bowling. 

SUNDAY

Violin recital.

And an extremely touching Mother’s Day serenade…(get out your hanky):

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Weekend Snapshots 2

FRIDAY

The SPCA. Helping Hands, the elementary school service group I co-lead, took a field trip to our local SPCA. Miraculously, we left with no more and no fewer than the bodies we came with, though one of our second graders piped up at the end to announce that he had money in his pocket and was ready to make a deal…

SATURDAY

Soccer Games. My girl kept a clean sheet as goalie in the first half, and then scored the only goal for the win in the second!

Fundraising. My son’s Destination Imagination team is going to Globals along with another winning team from his elementary school. Between my daughter’s and his own soccer games, we worked at a huge yard sale both teams held in the school gym to help offset the considerable cost of the trip. My daughter was wandering around the yard sale when she spotted something on one of the tables.

“Is that my jack-in-the-box?” she gasped in horror.

I squirmed as I said, “Ummm, well, yes, but that’s a toy for babies.”

I told her we would take it back if it didn’t sell, and fortunately, it is now back in our house, where it belongs. For the rest of the weekend she kept pointedly reminding me about how my sister had asked me for a pair of her baby sandals that had the perfect imprints of her tiny little feet and was furious when she found out I had thrown them away.

My beloved Janel” surprised us by sending a check to help with the fundraising. We haven’t been able to see each other in way too long. We had a phone conversation to hatch a plan to fix this!

Gardening. I made the rounds of some local garden centers and got my fingernails dirty in my own garden…

SUNDAY

Theological Debate. My oldest son and I had a hasty and somewhat tortured discussion in which we weighed the merits of atheism vs. agnosticism and discussed the importance of being reflective, keeping an open mind, and always asking questions. All this in the church parking lot, minutes before Sunday School was about to start, as I fervently prayed that he would stop asking questions for Christ’s sake! I broke into a sweat as I surreptitiously snuck glances at the clock, and mentally calculated how much time it would take to cut up the paper strips we would need for the purple “cloth weaving” we were going to do as part of the lesson I’d prepared on Lydia opening her heart to Jesus.

Wrestling. Back at home, having just partaken in Holy Communion, where they symbolically sought “reconciliation in every instance of conflict or division,” the boys decided to have a wrestling match. As always, it ended up in tears and bitter recriminations. For the next half hour, I made them practice for their piano recital, but Beethoven’s Rage Over a Lost Penny, kept derailing into Rage Over a Lost Wrestling Match. Finally, I was forced to bellow, “STOP TALKING TO EACH OTHER! YOU ARE NOT ALLOWED TO SPEAK TO EACH OTHER AT ALL! NOT. ONE. MORE. WORD!!”

Piano Recital. My husband headed off to Lynchburg for his own concert with his singing group. The rest of us dusted ourselves off and staggered to the boys’ last piano recital of the year…Rather than run the risk of more bickering, I made the oldest sit up front with me during the ride, instead of in his usual spot in the back of the minivan with his siblings. En route, he and I devised a post-recital game plan.

Obligatory Photo Op. As you can see, the boys worked it out, as they always eventually do.

The kids took turns taking pictures of their own.

Then they took a series of “artsy shots” and insisted I post them on the blog today. There you go, kids:

Dick’s Sporting Goods. After the photo session I announced that it was time to go to Dick’s Sporting Goods.

“Why are we going there?” my younger son asked.

His brother and I answered him simultaneously:

N: “To buy a punching bag.”

Me: “To save your relationship with your brother.”

When I went to check on the boys tonight, I realized that N. had set up a makeshift bed for himself on the floor of T’s bedroom. Peace in the valley. I’m heading to bed.

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