Heading into - it's a Canadian thing - the melancholy season when flowers die off, weeds take off, days shorten and we put the blanket back on the bed. And try not to think about ice and snow, runny noses and blue skin, and cars that go "Ar-r-r-rgh-rgh-rgh" in the morning. Global warming here means it will probably not go below -37C. Seniors don't walk in the winter, they do 'the Canadian Shuffle'. And is there not something obscene about the shops displaying Christmas cards and creches already?
On the bright side, it's not the Arctic. And we don't have floods or drought. So why am I complaining? Because it's good for the soul -
Friday, August 31, 2007
Sunday, August 26, 2007
quotations to nourish the soul ...
This is when blogs justify themselves - to be able to share with everyone, or no one, but to preserve for me, a particularly beautiful quotation. This, by Oliver Wendell Holmes:
"Poets are never young, their delicate ears hear the far-off whispers of eternity ..."
Maybe I should take a second look at poets and poetry ...... anything this beautiful should be understood to be fully appreciated.
My daughter would have the perfect photo to compliment these words -
"Poets are never young, their delicate ears hear the far-off whispers of eternity ..."
Maybe I should take a second look at poets and poetry ...... anything this beautiful should be understood to be fully appreciated.
My daughter would have the perfect photo to compliment these words -
Saturday, August 25, 2007
... going back. Way back.
I've been very good. All this time and I haven't mentioned the words "family tree" or "geneology" once. This is mainly because people's eyes tend to glaze over when I start because, on this subject, I seem unable to say anything in 10 words if 50 would do. We all, once we pass 70, tend to 'live in the past', to one degree or another. My tendency is just a little more focused, that's all - but hey, we certainly have a heckuva lot more past than we have future, right?
I have a snapshot of my mother at 104, in her wheelchair, sitting ramrod-straight, such an impressive figure that one doesn't even notice her wrinkled knee-hi's. I'd loaned her my aviation-type sunglasses against the glare. I captioned it "The Female Equivalent of the Godfather". A force always to have been reckoned with, my mom .....
Her ancestry was a formidable one, researched by my cousin, with lyrical-sounding names like Gordon, Herron, Scott and Moore, counties Cavin and Down. Her great-grandmother lived to an astonishing 97 in Ireland, when the living was not easy.
It's not a coincidence, I feel, that my daughter is so gifted with her many cameras, and her grandmother was the only one of her group with a camera, a Brownie box, that she used from 1911 on to such wonderful advantage, leaving a priceless legacy of clear images of "bathing costumes", Gibson-girl style, muffs(!!) and 1920's cars that people used to call "tin lizzies", early Ottawa and WWI laddies on their way to France.
See what I mean? I could go on for another 10 pages! And I haven't even Started on my paternal roots yet!
I have a snapshot of my mother at 104, in her wheelchair, sitting ramrod-straight, such an impressive figure that one doesn't even notice her wrinkled knee-hi's. I'd loaned her my aviation-type sunglasses against the glare. I captioned it "The Female Equivalent of the Godfather". A force always to have been reckoned with, my mom .....
Her ancestry was a formidable one, researched by my cousin, with lyrical-sounding names like Gordon, Herron, Scott and Moore, counties Cavin and Down. Her great-grandmother lived to an astonishing 97 in Ireland, when the living was not easy.
It's not a coincidence, I feel, that my daughter is so gifted with her many cameras, and her grandmother was the only one of her group with a camera, a Brownie box, that she used from 1911 on to such wonderful advantage, leaving a priceless legacy of clear images of "bathing costumes", Gibson-girl style, muffs(!!) and 1920's cars that people used to call "tin lizzies", early Ottawa and WWI laddies on their way to France.
See what I mean? I could go on for another 10 pages! And I haven't even Started on my paternal roots yet!
Friday, August 17, 2007
.... of bulls and bears
All the soothing platitudes of the pundits don't lessen the dread of a capricious "market correction" (read: nosedive). World economies, banking crunches, and now real estate? aside, it's still a crap-shoot out there! I wish I had the market-smarts of my son Stephen and nephew Paco in Spain with his MBA, though I don't think I would sleep any better knowing just HOW they are losing my money!
Thursday, August 16, 2007
on student exchanges
A good friend of mine here has just completed the final paper-work for asse Canada (International Student Exchange Programs), after agreeing to accept a high school student from Thailand for her school year. Having participated in a student exchange in the 1970's when we were host family to a student from Baden-Baden in Germany, I envy Bern. Our student, Barbel, was a delight and our lives were enriched by her year with us.There are still 2 Asian students waiting anxiously for host-homes to be found. Japanese, I believe. I have seen their applications, photos, scholastic records and profiles of their families and was totally captivated - their hobbies include calligraphy, tea ceremonies, music, skiing (her father is manager of a ski resort, the other one's father is a buddhist monk). What a learning experience it would be! I wish my situation was different, I would accept one myself. I have the Peterborough phone # of the asse Canada rep, if anyone is interested!! Hmmmmm?
blog etiquette and no-no's
My experience with blogs has been limited to my daughter Lynn's prolific contributions in Holland (also because it's one of the few ways I can keep track of what's going on in her young (never thought I'd see the day when I'd think 57 was young) life). Excuse this last convoluted thought.So that I will keep my faux pas to a minimum in my entries, I'm doing some browsing on bloggers (in the process of which I've discovered some rather - um - earthy blogs using the words "granny" and "renaissance" so I may seek the help of my new mentor Douglas in changing my title to something a tad more mundane! Maybe work in my maiden name of Pickthorne with "Pick-nique" or my present name "Shirell")I have delayed giving my blog address to anyone other than Douglas till I've boned up on this Art of Blogging!
Monday, August 13, 2007
Still grappling with The Wonderful World of Bloggers and the gazillion options available with each new screen. I am not a "quick study", obviously, vis a vis anything technical. But I shall persevere
A bright spot of humor on the weekend: Upon the visit to Washington of France's new president, George dubbya's response when a reporter asked him if he could speak French - a wry "I can hardly speak English". Now if he could just acknowledge a few other moral lapses .......!
My gratitude once again to Doug for taking on my "computer-challenged' intellect at his son-in-law's birthday party!
A bright spot of humor on the weekend: Upon the visit to Washington of France's new president, George dubbya's response when a reporter asked him if he could speak French - a wry "I can hardly speak English". Now if he could just acknowledge a few other moral lapses .......!
My gratitude once again to Doug for taking on my "computer-challenged' intellect at his son-in-law's birthday party!
Saturday, August 11, 2007
welcome to my blog!
My name is Shirley and hopefully, novice that I am, I will be able to share ideas, aspirations and opinions on all and sundry with some of you, especially as they concern travel, history, cultures and current affairs.
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