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  • Mother’s Day

    Mother’s Day

    What I need is someone who will make me do what I can.
    — Ralph Waldo Emerson

    Happy Mother’s Day to every woman out there who fills that role, in any capacity. Who opens her arms and her heart to nurture another life.

    I wrote the following tribute to my own mother a few years ago, and I publish it again today to remind everyone to really remember to listen to your parent’s stories, if you’re lucky enough to still have them here with you; and to rectify any grievances before that chance is gone.

    Mother’s Day and Father’s Day are difficult, when your parents are gone, a million times more so when you are filled with “if only…”

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    Happy Mother’s Day, Mom

    This was my mother, sometime in the early 1970s, in her native Vietnam. She was about 36 years old- she was always sketchy about her age, but also proud of being “so old” (and not looking it).

    They don’t celebrate birthdays, apparently, in Vietnam as we do here; nor is age such an important part of one’s identity. Simply put, there are the young and the old; the young are to be envied, and the old to be respected.

    Marriage, in Vietnam at that time, was also not as we find it here in the US of A. If a man showed his preference for you, and you lived together, you were considered married. Marriage was not a legal state, as it is here.

    My mother found herself married at a reasonably young age and bore three children. Her only daughter died young, of cancer.

    Her husband left her. I do not know the reason. I do know that this left her in a state of disgrace in her village, a mother without a husband. She was shamed into leaving her children with her sister, who was respectably married, so that they would grow up in a proper family. She was told to go and work in the city, to pay for the upbringing of these two remaining children, my half-brothers.

    Somewhere around this point on the timeline, my mother met my father, stationed in Saigon. I know nothing of their courtship. I know that my mother thought my father was “so handsome.” I remember my father saying that when he first saw my mother, she was wielding a machete. The place? The year? The circumstance?

    I don’t know. It is so frustrating.

    I know that my father pledged that he would bring her to this country and they would be married here. What was that like for her, the waiting? Did she trust in his word? Did she continually hope? I would have guessed that she would have little trust in men, or their promises.

    My father returned to this country to find all his belongings gone, sold, and no room for him in his mother’s and stepfather’s house. Somehow he found a place to stay, a job. He saved money for some amount of time— again, the anger of not knowing how long— and secured the papers needed to bring my mother here. She boarded a plane, missed her connection in Los Angeles— what happened then? What was that like, to be in such an alien place, speaking virtually none of the language? How did she get to the East Coast?

    Somehow, she did.

    Somehow, this woman survived in a culture of fear, of violence, of war. She saw things, as a child, that no one should ever have to see. Never. I really don’t even like to think about it. But the images are horrific and vivid; they skitter on the periphery of my memory, along with the strange, blank tone of voice that she would use when speaking of them.

    She was so proud of her third-grade education; no other girl in her village made it so far in school. She was the smart one.

    When there was nothing to eat, she swam across the river and stole two fish from the village there, swimming back with the fish balanced precariously on her head. She was brave and wild.

    She put her faith and trust in a young American— barely more than a boy, more than a decade younger than herself— and traveled here, alone, to a land of peace and freedom, half a world away.

    I don’t know that she found freedom or peace here. Where she was once imprisoned by violence and gender bias, she now found herself shunned for her ethnicity, her lack of education, her heavy accent.

    She had not understood how far America was, had not known just how big the world was, had not realized that she would not be able to ever see her family, her children that she had left behind. She lived in a constant state of guilt and worry.

    My father worked long hours at multiple jobs. She had few friends. She was often alone.

    Then I was born, and nearly seven years later, my brother. We misunderstood her, were embarassed by her. We did not see how fortunate we were, in comparison to her other children. I think she was often angered by that.

    She was not perfect. Growing up where she did, when she did, a culture and a time so vastly different to my own, she had issues and neuroses I can’t even begin to tease out or understand. She had a hot temper. She was prone to violent outbursts. She was incredibly fearful and overprotective. She understood our problems and issues and hopes as little as we understood hers.

    Guess what— turns out I am not perfect either. Hopefully this is a fatal flaw that my children will overlook in me.

    “Endeavor to be patient in bearing the defects and infirmities of others,
    of what sort soever they be;

    for thou thyself also hast many failings
    which must be borne with by others.”

    -Thomas A Kempis

    I wish that I had asked more questions.

    I wish that I had said some things, and left other things unsaid.

    I wish you could be here, that my children could remember you, that you could see how special they are.

    So much of who I am, I am because of you. The good and the bad.

    Happy Mother’s Day, Mom. I miss you.

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    Every year I share my mom’s story with my kids and my internet family on Mother’s Day, to keep it alive. Each year it hurts a little less. One day I’ll be ready to tell more of it.

    However, when I migrated from my old blog to this one I lost all my old comments. If my mom’s story touched you, will you please let me know? It would mean a lot.

  • Seven for Saturday: News You Can Use 5/7

    Seven for Saturday: News You Can Use 5/7

    pink flowers

     
    There was actually a whole lot out there this week, once you waded through all the Royal Wedding & Bin Laden headlines. I’ve held some in reserve to flesh out into full posts because I had stuff to say about them, but here are 7 of my favorite links from the past 7 days:

    1. Food Politics: At last FTC releases principles of food marketing to kids.

    Proposed principles on what is allowed to be marketed to your kids are open to comment until May 24, but not scheduled to go into effect until 2016. Principle A states that child-targeted marketing must be applied to foods that contribute to a healthy diet, and contain at least one of specified food groups. On the flip side, Principle B states that the food can not contain more than specified amount of unhealthy elements (trans fats, sugars, etc).

    The problem is this: “The proposed voluntary principles are designed to encourage stronger and more meaningful self-regulation by the food industry and to support parents’ efforts to get their kids to eat healthier foods.”

    Voluntary, self-regulated, and the blame still quietly rests entirely on parents’ shoulders. When are we really going to hold companies accountable for messing with our kids’ heads?

    2. Do video games make kids eat more?

    A (very small) study found that boys consumed more calories over the course of the day (163 on average) when they played video games for an hour rather than just laying around for an hour. Since there was no reported increase in hunger, the theory is that video games may cause a “mental-stress effect” and the food acts to self-soothe.

    163 doesn’t seem like a lot, until you take into account that most kids spend more than an hour interacting with a screen, often snacking at the same time.

    3. How Do We Prepare Kids for Jobs We Can’t Imagine Yet? Teach Imagination

    This is my big thing about traditional schooling: it doesn’t teach you to love learning, or how to learn on your own. Those who went on to think out of the box and become wildly creative & successful, did so in spite of their education, not because of it.

    “When you were a kid, could you, your teachers, or your parents imagine your current job? Plenty of us go to work every day in careers that didn’t exist when we were in grade school. How can schools set the next generation up for success when we don’t have a clear picture of what the jobs of the future will be? The growing consensus is that we need to shift schools toward to fostering creativity and conceptual thinking abilities…

    The question is, how?

    Related topic: a few weeks back I highlighted The Creativity Crisis, which mentioned that NASA and Boeing now look for ideal candidates who have education or experience in “hands-on” fields such music, sculpture, or auto mechanics. The problem, they say, is that “recent graduates can technically render in two dimensions but can no longer think in three.”

    4. Botox: Paralyzing More than Just Your Face

    I’ve seen this discussed before, and I think it’s fascinating. Your brain knows you are happy when you smile broadly, and smiling/happiness is something that is universally recognized across cultures. We also reflexively mirror other people’s smiles when we see them. When you’ve paralyzed your face muscles with toxins, your face can’t perform these actions and therefore your brain neither recognizes other people’s happiness nor registers your own.

    Are happiness and empathy something worth giving up just to erase a few years from your face (only to have them, depressingly, return after it wears off)? I hope I don’t know anyone who answers that question yes.

    5. Your Heart Can Sync With a Loved One’s

    All those love songs are on to something: two hearts can beat as one. Watching a relative or friend walk over hot coals at a fire walking ritual, spectator’s hearts followed similar patterns as the firewalker. This phenomenon did not occur with audience members who were strangers.

    “Anthropologists have long appreciated that ritual binds people together, but it is unclear how this bonding is achieved,” said Sosis, an anthropologist at the University of Connecticut…The discovery that people’s hearts can harmonize solely on visual or auditory information reinforces a law of nature.

    This strikes me as so beautiful for reasons I cannot quite articulate.

    6. Jaguar to Build C-X75 Hybrid Supercar

    • jaguar electric carMixes internal combustion power with electric motors to achieve supercar performance and less than 99g/km CO2 emissions
    • 0-60mph in less than 3 seconds
    • 0-100mph in less than 6 seconds
    • Top speed in excess of 200mph
    • All-electric running range in excess of 50km
    • only 250 will be built
    • will cost between 700,000- 900,00 British pounds, which is a kind way of saying over a million American dollars
    • undeniably, toe-curlingly sexy. Makes my old object of vehicular lust— the Fiskar Karma— seem like sloppy seconds and surprisingly affordable at a mere 80K.

    jaguar electric hybrid

    7. Bill Murray As FDR: Star Signs On For ‘Hyde Park On The Hudson’

    I love Bill Murray. I love FDR. That is all.

     

    VIDEO:

    Thinking about seeing the movie Thor? Better watch this first:
     

     

    Your turn! What good stuff did you read this week?

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  • Local Family Fun This Weekend: 5/6- 5/8

    Local Family Fun This Weekend: 5/6- 5/8

    girl-sitting-on-flower

    The world is big and I want to have a good look at it before it gets dark.
    — John Muir

     

    There’s TONS of good stuff happening this weekend, on top of the obvious Mother’s Day festivities. My top picks:

    National Public Gardens Day

    TODAY, May 6th FREE admission to participating area gardens, but to be honest, I suspect they will be quite crowded as a result.  By all means print out the coupon and get a free preview (allows for up to 10 in your party), but go back and dilly-dally to your heart’s content some other day! Public gardens are good for the soul and need your (monetary) support!

    • Morris Arboretum at UPenn
    • Scott Arboretum at Swarthmore
    • Shofuso Japanese House & Garden (Philly)
    • Bartram’s Garden (Philly)
    • Tyler Arbortetum (Media) Wilmington Flower Market at Rockford Park

    Wilmington Flower Market

    Today and Saturday May 7th 10:00am- 7:00pm each day The Flower Market is in its 91st year! In addition to the carnival rides and food, there are crafts, vendor booths, entertainment, and plants & flowers for last-minutes Mother’s Day gifts. On Saturday the Wilmington School of Hard Rock performs at 10am, and undersung Eagles kicker David Akers will be signing autographs from 11:30-12:30. If Facebook is to be believed, this year you can climb the Rockford Tower steps as well (I’ve always wanted to do this). The Flower Market benefits over 50 children’s charities in DE.

    Dover Days 78th Anniversary

    May 6, 7 & 8 on The Green & Legislative Mall “Get a glimpse of Delaware’s enriching history, through huge parades, traditional Maypole dancing with children in Colonial attire, walking tours, major Civil War Encampment, free admission to numerous museums, and more. Immerse yourself in the ages through costumed reenactments of the Renaissance, the Civil War and WWII. You can see the Governor’s mansion first-hand. And enjoy all the excitement of the festival, with more than 200 arts and crafts vendors, delicious foods, live entertainment, children’s activities, a hot classic car show, and more.” There’s a whole mess of stuff going on- you’ll want to check out the full schedule here. Admission is FREE.

    Free Museum Admission for Bank of America cardholders

    First Saturday & Sunday of every month The way this works is that the B of A cardholder gets free admission. If you and your spouse both have your own cards (I believe debit counts too) you both get in free, but you still gotta pony up for the kids. Got it? Area participating museums:

    • Delaware Art Museum (site says No Sundays, but as far as I know Sundays are ALWAYS free!)
    • Delaware Museum of Natural History
    • Winterthur
    • Phila Museum of Art
    • National Constitution Center
    • PA Academy of the Fine Arts
    • Please Touch Museum
    • Phila African American Museum
    • Garden State Discovery Museum (Cherry Hill NJ)

    National Train Day at 30th Street Station in Philly

    Saturday May 7th 11:00am- 4:00pm Railroad exhibits, high-speed rail display, model train displays, exhibitor booths, train equipment tours, culinary demos, K-9 safety unit performances, entertainment by Radio Disney and more. You can reserve times  to tour the Amtrak equipment, freight and commuter trains, and “notable private railroad cars” online; I would probably suggest you do so. I’ve never made it to this event but I bet it gets busy. Did I mention it’s FREE?

    Spring Greening at the Phila Zoo: $7 admission

    Saturday May 7th 1:00- 5:00pm Cradles to Crayons’ 1st Annual Spring Greening Fundraiser for local kids & the planet. Bring new and/or gently used kids’ items to sort & pack for distribution to needy kids in the area. Zoo admission with donation is $7, includes snacks, beverages, & entry to energy fair. Entry fee is donated to “Return the Call of the Wild” program: the Phila Zoo Docent Council’s effort to raise awareness of the environmental effects of cell phone & to offer a solution. If you’ve got old cell phones lying around bring those to recycle too!

    See full event flyer and reserve tickets here.

    NBC 10 Day at the Adventure Aquarium

    Sunday May 8th 9:30am- 5:00pm $10 admission all day at the aquarium! This is a good deal, admission generally runs $22.95 for adults and $17.95 for kids. All moms receive a complimentary flower courtesy of Blossoms of Cherry Hill (while supplies last), and the NBC 10 news team will be greeting visitors & signing autographs from 10-2. The first 500 to say “I tune to 10” will receive a free family photo.

    Ride the Ducks: Moms ride free on Mother’s Day (with coupon).

    First tour leaves at 10:00am, last one at 6:00pm. Explore Philly’s historic streets and splashdown into the Delaware River for a great view of the city, the Battleship New Jersey and more. Mom rides for free with the purchase of one child or adult regular priced ticket ($27 savings), but you need to print out this coupon first.

    This isn’t actually until next week, but:


    Kristin van Ogtrop at the Delaware Children’s Museum

    Wednesday May 11th 6:00-8:00pm The editor of Real Simple magazine and author of Just Let Me Lie Down: Necessary Terms for the Half-Insane Working Mom gives a talk and reading as part of the DCM’s Mom’s Night Out Speaker Series. I love Real Simple and I rather enjoyed the book; I may try to make it out to hear the secrets to “keeping my cool & sense of humor” as a working parent. But mostly just to get out for a night 🙂

    Tickets are $15 for members and $20 for non-members and can be purchased online.

    And what’s happening in your neck of the woods? Let me know!

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