Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 09, 2020

My father, a German half-Jew, discussing similarities between Trump and Hitler (July, 2016)

 Look what I came upon as I reviewed video conversations I had with my father during the years before he died, when he was finally willing to talk about his experiences as a half-Jew (a "mischling") in WWII Germany. 

Dad wrote prolifically about his experiences, but he insisted that his books and stories be only for family, never for people he didn't know. I begged him to publish his memoir, stressing the importance of his first-person voice during a time when those voices were growing quieter and quieter, while another voice - that of Donald Trump - was becoming louder and louder," but he refused, saying only, "You can tell my story when I'm gone" - which is becoming my life's work.

This video conversation with Dad, shot at his house in Ashland, Oregon in July, 2016, four months before Trump was elected and seven months before he died (I swear, Trump's election killed him), is chilling, prescient, and terrifying. 

As much as I miss him, I'm glad he's not alive to witness what's happening in our country. He totally called it.



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Sunday, August 13, 2017

My father wrote this to his kids the day after Trump was elected. I had no idea…

“Hi, all of you. parents and descendants ---
Dad with pipe
NOW where are you going to emigrate to??
In 1938, ("Krystal Night", November 8) my (Jewish) father told us to keep the lights off, and windows closed, so nobody would bother us in the apparently empty  house.   The burning of the synagogue across the street, was officially the work of "Germans tired of the Jews.” It was done by "people disgusted with the Jews.”
The next day, a guy at school bragged that the night before, his big brother, an SS or SA man, was one of the people setting the synagogue on fire.  The burning of the synagogue was (to remain politically correct) “by the people people against the Jews.”  My dad told me to never ever tell anybody about what I had heard.
He wouldn't believe things could get worse. He knew he had done no wrong. He did not want to take us out of school or compromise promising careers in our future.  He would not leave his house or his language.
My entire life would have been different if he had made different decisions. 
But, of course, it IS a BIG decision, and my impression of our current situation might be totally different from how you or your kids feel.
I strongly hope I am wrong in my defensive attitude.  But I believe, now more than ever, that 2016 is now quite a bit like 1938 in Europe, when my Jewish uncles left their businesses in Berlin to go to America.
I personally could not survive moving any more – I’m getting very old now.  But I would feel bad if I failed to tell you about my own experiences and fears.  I MUST tell you, especially those of you who may have a Mexican-sounding name in their ancestry.
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Now I'll shut up.
Love --   Dad”
Dad died less than four months after Trump was elected. Thank god he doesn’t have to see this. It would kill him.

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Saturday, June 04, 2016

It took a Trump candidacy for my German-Jew father to finally break his silence

ThomasNYharbor
(My father as he arrived in New York from Germany, April, 1952.)
Long-time readers of my blog will remember my father from this post, in which he shared some of his experiences and documents from WWII with his grandchildren. He has always been extremely private and protective about his past, writing prolifically for family, but never willing to share beyond those he knows.
Until now.
He’s almost 88 now, but my father has finally broken his silence. This is what it took – this Trump candidacy for president of the United States -- for my father to agree to speak up publicly.
In what is a huge move for him, Dad agreed to send a letter to the editor of his small town newspaper. I was able to convince him to send his letter to newspapers with slightly higher readership – like the New York Times, the Washington Post, the San Francisco Chronicle, and the Chicago Tribune.
But here it is on my little blog as well, posted with his permission – FINALLY! I hope it has an impact.
Please share, share, share!

Editor:
Being a Holocaust survivor, I am one of only a few people who, as a teenager of 15, was old enough to have experienced Hitler’s coming to power.  Now, as an old man, I am witnessing our current US situation.   I was a German citizen then and there, I am a US citizen here and now.  I cannot be quiet any longer; I must recall my memories.
If you hear the speeches now, just mentally substitute “Mexicans” and “Muslims” with “Jews,” and there you have Hitler in the 1930’s -- the same gestures, the same shouting, the same continuous referrals to himself.
A year or so after getting "emergency power,”  Germany -  once a democratic country - was no longer recognizable as a democracy.  Yes, FDR got a similar authority, but he was no Hitler!
“Trust me!” Hitler had said, and the Germans did.  They loved him for verbalizing the already-existent anti-Semitism, not unlike the feelings and fears that many Americans  have now about Mexicans and Muslims.
Hitler did not rise to power because “it had been built into the German DNA" (per Jochen  Bittner, NY Times 5/31/'16, article entitled "The West's Weimar Moment").   Hitler told us exactly what he was planning to do.  Hitler, too, told Germans to trust him.  He, too, knew precisely how to convince people, and how to win.
One of the first things the Nazis did was to get control of the press.  Now, we see the press being slammed and an ABC News reporter being called “a sleaze.” Watch it.  This is well beyond normal election talk.
Yes, there are real differences, but identical circumstances are not a requirement for being doomed to repeat history when we have chosen to ignore it.
Yours truly,
Thomas Heumann

I am going to visit my father in early July and am hopeful that he will allow me to “interview” him and post snippets to my blog. I truly believe that his memories, his message, and his voice – right now -- can have an important impact that could, at the very least, prompt some who have not been listening to take note.
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(My father and me. April, 2015)

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Opa’s bequeathing “with warm hands”

My father recently sent this ring to Peter…
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…accompanied by this letter:
“Dear Peter,
I have decided to pass on to some of you grandchildren things that mean something to me, and that come with a story that must be told. As “Muttchen,” my pseudo-mother used to say: I want to do so “with warm hands.”
It was in March of 1945, just weeks before the end of the war.  I was 16.  My mother had already died.  I was put into a slave labor camp for “half-Jews,” as they called us.
Now Chemnitz, my home town, had just gotten the same kind of “terror attack,” as the Nazis called it, as Dresden had suffered weeks earlier.   My boss, where I had been assigned from the labor camp, was most understanding, if most secretive, about it.
“Go,” he said.  “Check out what happened.  Just be back by Tuesday at the latest.”  Of course there was no telephone, no other news, no transportation.  Only chaos everywhere.  One just had to make do, somehow.
Our house had been burned out, turned from a burned ruin into mostly rubble.  I found my father’s body in the boiler room, caught in the space between the floor and the furnace, one leg dangling, clearly broken.
My father’s body was the only one in the big ruin.  I was told later that when the house was on fire everyone got out, including him.  Then he had to crawl back into the basement to retrieve a small suitcase with Romanticist art that he was working on.  His whole life now had been his art collection; he just HAD to get those pieces.  In that moment an explosive bomb hit the house, ending his life, making the three of us orphans.
After escaping the Nazis for a dozen years, now, two short months before the final defeat of Nazi Germany, he was killed by an Allied bomb.  Just what the Nazis had always wanted.  But any war does that: produce tragic ironies like this, a thousand times over, everywhere.
My dad was wearing a suit, vest, and tie.  He was a very formal person and would not be seen in anything but “proper dress,” not even at night in the air raid shelter in his own basement.  When I found him, he still had his metal-rimmed glasses on, one side broken.  His fingers were apart, indicating that he had not suffered.
I knew there must be one thing he was forced by law to always have on him – his ID card, with the big letter “J” to identify him immediately as a Jew, with the forced name of “Israel” added.  I took it and I still have that infamous ID.
He was wearing his diamond tie pin so that his tie would be orderly and in place where it belonged.  I took it.  Years later, in Munich, in peace, I designed a ring for myself and had the diamond of my father’s tie pin mounted in it.
That ring is what I give to you today.  Today, when wearing it, I know that what had meaning to me was not my father’s dying as much as his death.  I knew then that his most romantic, often-quoted motto would somehow follow me: Goethe’s most utopian idea that “life, however it may be, is good.”  He, a Jew under the Nazis, persecuted, with two sons in Nazi slave labor camps, through all the chaos, kept this idealized faith.  And for years it gave me the strength I needed to shape the path of my own life, without parental guidance.
With love,  Opa”
I read the letter first because Peter happened to be in Munich, of all places, when the package arrived.  As I read the letter to Tom, tears welled in my eyes and a lump in my throat, and I couldn’t finish it, handing it to Tom to read the last paragraph for himself.  I could tell that when Peter read it upon his return from Germany, he was equally, though less overtly, touched by it.  Later Aleks said to Peter, “I think Opa gave you the diamond from his father’s tie because you’re someone Opa would have been really proud to introduce his father to.”  The lump returned to my throat when I heard that.
With the ring and the letter came some official documents for me, as the executor of my – perfectly healthy (for an 85-year-old) father’s will.  Maybe it’s his own very formal, very organized, very…well, German father coming through in him, but my father’s almost obsessive attention to “getting his affairs in order” have been somewhat annoying to me.  Once every few weeks he sends another document for me to read and file, many focusing on his adamant wish to be allowed to die without any heroics when it looks like the time is coming – and to let him go if the time comes suddenly.  “I have stared death in the face repeatedly as a young man,” he insists,”and I have no fear of it now. But I DO fear being kept alive by those damn doctors…”  I think some of that comes from watching my mom go through something like 28 separate chemo treatments and slowly wilting away in front of us.  He doesn’t want that for himself or for his family.  I’d be honored to be at his side for any length of time, just as I was for my mother.  But I only visited as my mom died slowly over four years while my father spent what he refers to as “a thousand sleepless nights” during those years, and he doesn’t want that for Lou, his adored new wife, or for us.  I respect that.  But please, Dad, don’t be so busy organizing and preparing for your death that you forget to live your life! 
(It feels good to write again.)

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Monday, May 16, 2011

The impact of Berkeley’s People’s Park riots on a 12-year-old

A group of well over 200 kids who grew up in the very tight-knit Claremont-Elmwood neighborhood in Berkeley during the 60’s have converged in the digital age and are having the most amazing and enjoyable dialog on Facebook!  It’s so immersive that quite a few of us are probably not dedicating our full attention to our jobs these days… and we’ve even seriously discussed meeting in person later this summer – possibly here, at the Claremont Hotel, where many of our shared neighborhood memories take place:

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In an effort to find memorabilia from those days, I ventured into our garage this morning, climbing over crates and digging deep into bins, where I finally found my diary from 6th grade.  There was plenty in there to make me giggle (my god, was I boy crazy at the young age of 12!), but THIS really gave me pause from a much more worldly perspective.  When I noticed the date of the entry, 42 years ago yesterday, I couldn’t help but let out a quiet gasp…

Peoples Park

It says:

“Thursday, May 15, 1969 (Very important): Dear Diary, About 2 months ago the hippies around Telegraph (Avenue) built a park for themself's (sic). They got some of the Universities (sic) land and started building swings sets, a pool, a fish pool, and a lawn. They were almost done about 2 weeks ago. A lot of people came a gave money for materials. They worked for their park. Then today the police came and put a fence around it 'cause it wasn't their property. There was a huge riot and more than 100 people were hurt. Even the National Gard (sic) came! I don't like Berkeley anymore. Carol"

I remember those tumultuous years in Berkeley so well and they absolutely shaped who I have become (even though we moved away by the next summer).  I had no idea in 1969 how unique the energy in Berkeley really was, thinking that the whole world did things like collectively observe a monthly moratorium in protest of the Vietnam War by basically shutting down an entire city.  How wrong I was!

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Friday, May 06, 2011

Aleks in a nutshell (or “My awesome son”)

I sent him this on Facebook because I knew he’d find it interesting, being well -- Aleks:

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His reply:

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I don’t really understand what he said, but I like that his thinking is always pretty out-of-the-box.  This is the same kid who threw a mild tantrum at the age of 8 because he couldn’t vote, insisting (correctly) that he “understands the issues better than most grown-ups!” 

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Saturday, September 11, 2010

A thought to ponder on 9/11

If the people of our country truly held by the important American principle of of freedom of religion for all (not just for the religion with which one identifies), it shouldn’t matter whether the building being considered two blocks from Ground Zero were a church, a synagogue, a mosque, or a “thought center” for atheists.

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Thursday, July 15, 2010

H8: The Mormon Proposition

I just finished watching The Mormon Proposition, which chronicles the Mormon’s huge financial contributions to and repugnant reactions against gay marriage.

Here’s what I don’t get: how can any group that preaches love be so blatantly hateful?  It’s truly as simple as that for me, and it makes no sense.  The reason they give over and over again is that if gays were allowed to marry, “there’d be no one left.”  No kidding!  A friend of mine from high school, a Hollywood producer who I strongly suspect is behind some of the slick Yes on 8 ads (and it sickens me to realize that), said that to me!

Seriously?  If the proposition didn’t pass, the fear was that gay people would go out and recruit straight people, and straight people would be easily recruited, until there’d be “no one left”?  That implies that I’m heterosexual because of some legal mandate and if that legal mandate were lifted, I’d instantly hightail my way to a gay relationship!

By extension, it implies that THEY would do the same!  Right?

Surely they must see the insanity behind that way of thinking?

I believe that the Mormon Church owes the gay community – especially their OWN gays (and there are plenty of them… though suicide steals far too many) – an apology, and I believe that Prop 8 should be repealed in California.  I know it’s perhaps naive and optimistic to believe that an institution full of hate like the Mormon Church could decide to embrace a community full of love like the gay community who want to marry, but can you imagine the impact it could have?  Can you imagine if they decided to teach love and acceptance instead of hate and bigotry?

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I know quite a few Mormons who would welcome such a change, and who have told me as much.  (Yes, I do have Mormon friends…)  They don’t want to be perceived as hateful bigots – and as individuals, they are not hateful – but their church mandates their actions and threatens to ostracize them unless they give of their money and their time to furthering the church’s hateful philosophies.

Order The Mormon Proposition from NetFlix (or anywhere), watch it, and let me know what YOU think!

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Thursday, June 17, 2010

Rachel Maddow for President!

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

(I am so proud to share an alma mater with this woman... I just wish I has one iota of her intelligence. Yes, I am in awe!)

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Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Does “under God” belong in the American Pledge of Allegiance?

A friend of mine just posted this on Facebook:

“On the recommendation of my best friend, I am happy to place this on Facebook and encourage others to follow suit. I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands: one Nation UNDER GOD, indivisible, with Liberty and Justice for all. OUR COUNTRY, OUR FLAG & GOD DESERVE RESPECT! Let's see how many Americans will ... GOD BLESS AMERICA!!!”

I replied:

“What God? One of the founding principles of America is freedom of religion... or freedom to not be religious at all. For that reason, I believe "under God" has NO place in the pledge of allegiance and should be removed.”

UnderGod01

I know my viewpoint is controversial, but I truly have no idea how America can have freedom of religion as one of its fundamental tenets and then have “under God” in it’s Pledge of Allegiance.  Whose god is referred to in the pledge?  Do you think the “committee” who made this decision (because this phrase was added in the 50’s by a committee!) was thinking Muslim or Jewish or… had any thought at all of atheism?  No – it’s a Christian god that’s referred to, as if America and a Christian god are one. 

This is NOT true… nor should it be true!

And while we’re at it, I have to say that I think atheism is not accepted at all in America.  In fact, I think it’s overtly despised.  If you say you’re an atheist, it’s almost seen as synonymous with being un-American. And worse, it seems to be OK in this country to be anti-atheist.  People are pretty careful to be accepting (or at least to act in a politically correct manner) toward gays and other religions, but if you’re an atheist… well then you are dirt in the eyes of many Americans!

How American, how Christian, how “under God” is that attitude?!

This stuff really pisses me off.

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Friday, May 14, 2010

Oklahoma, what (on earth) have you done?!

Oklahoma just enacted legislation (HB 2656) which allows a doctor to “withhold information, mislead or even blatantly lie to a pregnant woman and her partner about the health of their baby if the doctor so much as thinks that fetal test results would cause a woman to consider abortion.”

Seriously?

Read that again.  It says that a doctor can LIE to a pregnant woman about the health of her child.  The Oklahoma legislature deliberately discussed and passed a law, allowing this!  So in Oklahoma, if I’m pregnant and have a genetic test, and it indicates that my child has any variety of genetic diseases, some of which would cause his/her death immediately after birth or lead to life in a vegetative state or render my child unable to walk, talk, see, hear, or even think, my doctor is allowed (encouraged, even? otherwise, why even pass legislation?) to LIE to me about MY baby.

It’s sickening!

This is yet another indication to me that America is moving backwards.  My parents immigrated to this country from Europe in the early 1950s because America was progressive, open-minded, and filled with opportunity.  Their grandson, my son, is now considering relocating to Europe after he graduates from college in two years.  It's things like THIS that make that seem like a good option to me, and if I were 20, I'd seriously consider bringing the family back to its European roots too. 

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The rest of the world is progressing now while America reverts to closed-mind, fanatical fundamentalism.  This is no longer the country my parents immigrated to almost 60 years ago and, in spite of a progressive, open-minded, smart president (who I still adore and support), it no longer feels like my country.  And I’m sure it no longer feels to my dad like the country he immigrated to as a German Jew who dared to hope for a better life for his family when he immigrated here in the early 50’s.

America, where have you gone?  America, please start THINKING (with reason and compassion) again! 

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Monday, May 10, 2010

In honor of Aleks’ trip to Berlin this week (from his “home” in Prague)

Yes, he LOVES living in Prague.  Yes, he loves everything about being abroad. 

Yes, I’m begging him to write a guest blog post.  (Maybe he’ll listen to you?!)

Yes, I do wonder if he’ll just come home just long enough to finish college (majoring in – what else? – international relations and political science) and then return to Europe to be… oh, a diplomat or an ambassador.

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Prost, Aleks! 

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Saturday, April 03, 2010

Oh, to be 20 and full of choices

This from the grandson of European immigrants (my parents) who came to America in search of a better life:

[7:39:15 AM] Aleks: im really happy here. im not the slightest bit home sick or burnt out or anything, its really strange. i love it here so much right now and the ease in which i assimilate around europe i still just want to stay.

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And that grandfather’s response when I told him how much Aleks likes living in Prague:

I'm so glad he feels the way he does.  Encourage it.  He's lapping up the whole newness of things.  Prague was at the crossroads of Europe centuries before Columbus was born, he's feeling that in his bones, and it's too exciting to feel homesick.  So great that he's even learning the language.  I have the feeling this trip will be very instrumental in the direction  his life will take.  Try not to talk him into being homesick just to please you.

What Aleks needs is fall in love with a girl who keeps him in Europe for a while. (Just kidding!!)

My parents immigrated to America from Germany in 1953.  At that time America had such promise and Germany was reeling from a lost war and lost identity.  Because of their bold choice to leave everything they knew behind, their children were raised in prosperous country during a time when opportunities were endless and hope and optimism permeated absolutely everyone and everything.  (Hell, we grew up in Berkeley in the 60’s, so hope and optimism lived in our bones!)

But things are different in America now. Instead of the land of opportunity, we live in what seems to be the land of dashed dreams and gridlocked politics.  Without getting all political on you, I’ll just say that I am appalled that it took us so long to pass legislation that takes care of ALL Americans and I’m floored that anyone (anyone!) would vote against a bill that gives every Americans what seems to me to be a simple and fundamental right: health care.  We’ve become greedy and egotistical and grouchy and I think that if we continue down this road (in spite of having a great president who wants to bring about positive change for all but is constantly road-blocked for the sole sake of road-blocking), the glory years for America will be very, very short-lived in historical terms, barely half a century. 

So when Aleks talks of returning to his roots in Europe, he tugs hard on my heart strings because I’d be so sad if he moved so far away -- but at the same time I know that he must feel some of the same feelings that my dad felt in 1953 – the country of my birth is confused and weak; maybe there’s a better future for me somewhere else

Call me unpatriotic (though you’d be wrong), but quite honestly if I were twenty right now, I might very well be thinking the exact same thing.

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Thursday, September 17, 2009

Christians making Christians look bad: “The Insanity & Racism of the Religious Right”

I rarely get political on this blog, but some of the recent crap going on in this country is just pissing me off. I won’t post the photo because I refuse to post such vile stuff here, but anyone who would hold a sign of Obama dressed as a tribal witch doctor just infuriates me. How jaded, racist, and stupid can one BE?

I think Jimmy Carter is right when he says that there’s a huge amount of racism going on in this country, aimed directly at our elected president.

I have a former friend from college who became a fundamentalist Christian over the past 20 years and believes all the vitriol she hears from these uneducated, fanatically right-winged, closed-minded groups about President Obama. How embarrassing and disappointing that Americans – any American – would hold such disgusting and destructive views! It really scares me.

Rachel Maddow and Frank Schaeffer are right on in this piece:

And now, back to posting about family and pets and the weather. I just had to say that!

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Tuesday, June 09, 2009

My personal connection to the passing of Prop 8 (Dammit.)

Remember this?  I had discovered that a friend of mine from high school was probably instrumental in the passing of Prop 8 in California – or at least hoped he was instrumental and, as a Mormon, went out of his way to do what he could (like produce commercials) to assist in efforts to pass the proposition.

Yesterday I received an announcement that my friend’s son is heading out on his mission:

“L is excited to go serve the Lord in Mexico.  Thank you for your sweet influence in his life, which is more than you are probably aware.  He will enjoy sharing his testimony, especially if you could be there to hear it.  We know that distance will keep many from being able to travel, but we wanted to a least make sure you knew about his departure.  (He enters the Mission Training Center on June 17, 2009.)

We would love to see you at church if you can make it.”

I responded:

“Congratulations to L!  May he encounter situations that bring him comfort as well as situations that challenge what he believes to be true, and his Truth -- because no matter who you are or what you believe, it is those moments that make us stronger.  May he encounter love -- from and among those who are like him and those who are very different from him.


May other people teach him as much about open-mindedness and tolerance as he seeks to teach them about his ideals and his beliefs.

May he find a way to do his small part to break the barriers of intolerance and may he play a role in opening the minds of his mission brothers as much as they seek to open the minds of the communities in Mexico.

The future truly is in the hands of our children.  I hope we can teach them that windows really do allow us to see the world and walls really do confine us to our own small reality.  May L find and learn to accept all different kinds of love... and yes, the acceptance of the many different forms that love and life-commitment can take.  In Mexico, around the world, and at home.

Best, Carol

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Thursday, May 07, 2009

I finally found something President Obama sucks at!

Love the man, but he really sucked at reading Where the Wild Things Are to a group of children!

He should have sat on the ground with the kids and read with much more intonation, inflection and personality. 

“His mother called him ‘WILD THING’… and Max said, ‘I’LL EAT YOU UP!’  So he was sent to bed without eating anything.”

Is it because I read this book to kids a million times, both as a pre-school teacher and as a parent, that I apparently have really high expectations? 

Because really, I don’t even think this guy did such a great job:

This dad, however, has the right idea, dontcha think?

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Wednesday, May 06, 2009

How my broken (but slowly mending) ankle is like our broken (but slowly mending) economy

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  1. Both were incredibly painful at the moment of the snap -- and still ache now.
  2. Both caused trauma and shock.
  3. Both are still fragile and can’t withstand any sudden, unexpected impact.
  4. In both cases, the recovery is much slower than most people realize.
  5. In both cases, we’re very tentatively back on our feet, but just barely limping along.  Baby steps.
  6. If we get cocky, believing we’re good to go, and try to race along as if nothing happened, we’ll be right back to square one.
  7. Even on the first anniversary of the fall, it’ll be best to move with caution.
  8. It’s hard to get out of the “fear that it will happen again” mind-set.
  9. Support from friends and family have made both more bearable.
  10. In both cases, we got screwed (screws).

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Thursday, March 12, 2009

Change has come to the White House!

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Sorry, couldn't resist.

(With thanks to my dear friend at Kingfisher Cove!)

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Tuesday, January 20, 2009

My duet with Aretha

I've had a lump in my throat all day today, as I've been watching the inauguration of PRESIDENT Barack Obama, and when Aretha Franklin began singing My Country T'is of Thee, I couldn't help but belt out the tune myself. (Fortunately, no one else is home.)



What an amazing day! I'm brimming with pride and with hope.

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Friday, January 16, 2009

Tara and Bella: An Inspirational Tale (er... Tail?)

Pay special attention to the last sentence of this video:



"Take a good look, America. Take a good look, world! If they can do it, what's our excuse?"

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