Saturday, December 31, 2022

Out with the Old, In with the New

 

It’s been a long year that flew by in the blink of an eye. There was a lot of wicked stuff over the years that caused me to rename my offline journal What The Actual Fuck (WTAF) 2022. Instead of rehashing all the awful stuff that’s happened over the year, I’d like to pick out an article that focuses on some actual good news from 2022. This article is from Nice News, and I have been getting it daily to preserve my sanity. The article is called WhatWent Right This Year.

We, as humans, seem to focus more on the negative things that happen. I find that definitely to be a fact for me.  I need to be reminded that along with the bad, there is always good. I happened to read a really informative article about why we do that and, having read it through, it’s one of the reasons I’m looking back at the nicer stories from 2022.

I have no idea what the New Year will bring. When I was a senior in high school, graduating 50 years ago this June, we used to say to each other: “We’ll be free in ’73!” We were so excited about that. Our whole futures lay ahead. I am hoping we’ll be free in ’23 too: free of 45, tRumpists and tRumpers, traitors, liars in Congress, Putin, Clarence Thomas, and other causes of agita. But, if we’re not, I’ll look for some brightness every day.

Oh. It’s not only New Year’s Eve, it’s also Caturday! How about some happy feline family news? It’s “if it fits, I sits” day at our house.


 




Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Still Celebrating

 The pre-Christmas Day season was weird. Christmas Eve night, even though we had our heat up to 70F, it felt as if it was 30 degrees colder in the house. That's because we need to have our drafty windows replaced and because of the wicked winds that came with the horrendous storm that hammered the country.  On Christmas Eve night, my hubby TB and I were bundled up like a couple of Eskimos.

I wanted to post this awesome story about a signing Santa Claus. This article really made me choke up, thinking back to stories my parents told me about their growing up years and how they'd spend Christmases. As I've written before, my parents were both Deaf and grew up during the Depression/World War II years. In those days and even up to today, Deaf children are often excluded from family holiday activities because of a lack of adequate communication. In the last 20 years or so, inclusion has been ever so much better. I am so happy to see that this Deaf Santa brings such joy to the children who visit him.

That article appeared on Friday, and my attention was diverted by what the storm did to a tree in our back yard.

I was wrapping Christmas presents for TB when I heard a ripping sound above me. I thought for sure the fierce winds were pulling shingles or even part of our roof off the house. In actuality, the ferocious winds tore our tree right out of the ground. Half of it is on our side of the fence and the other half is in our neighbor's yard. Gulp.

Luckily, it didn't damage the house but it did mess with the pool. TB and our grandson are going next door tomorrow to start cutting the tree up. We thought our insurance would cover the damage to our neighbor's pool...but NO. They don't. Our neighbor is very laid back about the whole thing. We've been neighbors for over 20 years and he knows we'll make it right. TB is very skilled with sheet metal and other crafts and plans to fix the pool too. This way, our neighbor won't have to pay a deductible to his insurance companies. Third party carriers are vultures.

Now it's Christmas Day and we had a surprise visit from our 18 year old grandson, the same little boy we went hiking with for years. He's all grown up, got himself a full-time job and a big old truck to drive around. We are so proud of him. I'd share a picture but was so surprised at the visit I forgot where I put my phone.

Other happy moments from Christmas Day:







It took all of Monday to recover from all the fun, and even now I'm not quite ready to get back into the busy swing of things.  All our Christmas decorations and ugly sweaters will stay up and be worn until TB's birthday, January 6th a.k.a. All Kings' Day




Saturday, December 24, 2022

This holiday season has been weird

It didn’t feel like Christmas this year, and not only because I couldn’t totally ignore the news.

My schedule was off. Normally after Thanksgiving, I watch a Christmas movie or two right up until the 25th.  Our usual schedule is this:

Christmas Vacation

Home Alone

Die Hard 1

Muppet Christmas Carol

The Grinch Who Stole Christmas

Die Hard 2

A Christmas Carol (Alastair Sim version)

March of the Wooden Soldiers

Miracle on 34th Street

A Christmas Story

It’s A Wonderful Life

Tonight, Christmas Eve, I watched my first movie of the season: Miracle on 34th Street.

I was already listening to my Christmas music long before Thanksgiving weekend. Most of our Christmas decorations are packed away and our little tree’s lights burned out. My Christmas village is on top of the TV but totally a-jumble. We haven’t remembered to pick up a new strand of lights and I just haven’t had time to set up the village.

I started training to be a customer service representative with Holland America Line, learning how to book and rebook cruises. Classes began on November 28 and will end on December 29th. There is so much to learn about how to make a booking. You’d think it would be a simple thing, but it isn’t. There are a thousand details to remember and two different platforms to use. Not only that but there was also a great deal of out-of-classwork that had to be accomplished.

There were a couple of glitches. I was supposed to go live on the phones December 12th and start earning but for one reason and another, that hasn’t happened yet. If all works out at this point, it’ll be the New Year before I start earning income. We’ve been having a rough time the last two months because of how prices have skyrocketed. We don’t really have enough fixed income to manage comfortably and that’s why I was looking forward to pre-Christmas income.

There’s another hitch. For some reason, I’m having connection issues with the platforms that Holland America uses and if I can’t get it all straightened out, I won’t be able to continue with them. We are trying a stronger ethernet cable to see if that will help. I’m kind of nervous about it because the cable I have now works just fine with every other website and platform, except for Holland America.

Even though I haven’t been writing about the garbage going on around us, that doesn’t mean I haven’t read about it and had strong feelings about it.   When I find myself feeling discouraged, I turn my music up higher.

The most recent doesn’t-seem-like-Christmas event was yesterday. I was busy with classwork and TB wrapped all the gifts except for the ones from me to him. We were having that bomb cyclone storm ("but there's no climate change!"), mostly heavy rain, and very strong winds. I took a break from classwork to wrap his gifts in the back of the house where it was secluded. As I was wrapping the gifts, I heard a ripping sound that seemed to come from above. I thought the wind might be ripping off shingles or even a part of the roof. I went to the front of the house to tell TB and our neighbor from across the street ran over to tell us the tree in our backyard had been torn from the ground.

 




This was a huge tree.  We went to look, and I took these pictures, completely stunned and appalled. There was no damage to us; however, the top of the tree damaged our neighbor’s fence and above ground pool. I learned that our homeowners’ insurance does NOT cover damage to our neighbor’s property. They allow $500 for tree removal, but we have a $500 deductible.

Ho ho ho. Not.

Even though the holiday season this year has been weird for us, we are going to fake it until we make it tomorrow and have a wonderful day with family. We will celebrate the birth of Jesus and enjoy our day despite everything.  We’ll watch It’s A Wonderful Life and realize how blessed we really are.

 

 

Monday, December 19, 2022

Another turn around the sun!

 Today I have been blessed to have made 68 rotations around the sun today.

We celebrated my birthday on Saturday because my daughters are working today. Sadly, my son was unable to join us because he's battling a cold and didn't want to expose my mother-in-law. She is very immunosuppressed and we are very careful to avoid contact if we have the sniffles. I brought home a dinner for Bill.

This is my new favorite restaurant! They were very busy and understaffed but our waitress was just awesome. The food was delicious and we all enjoyed our meals.

Afterwards, we headed back to Mom's house for cake and presents. I loved my prime rib dinner, my carefully created (by Mom) birthday cake, and all the lovely presents.  Most of all, I loved being with my family.

I am truly blessed.







Sunday, December 18, 2022

Just Ask

 

I am seeing all the news about the threat christian nationalists are to our democracy. They are still actively and incorrectly trying to meld America with what their definition of Christianity is, and they are wrong. They are anti-Christian. The House Select Committee regarding what happened January 6th are meeting tomorrow, and I will be watching. I see that it’s being televised.

But I’m not going to go into all that. I mean to do my deep breathing and take a break from venting my feelings about all this garbage around us.

When I was a child, I spent a lot of time with my grandma. She would tell me stories of her childhood, and I loved to listen to her. She loved her brother and sister, who were very much older than she was and had already passed away by the time I was born. My great grandfather was a lighthouse keeper. That especially intrigued me, and I would pester her with questions about that. Unfortunately, she didn’t know much about it other than the fact he was away from home for long periods of time. Although times were different, it sounded like she had an ideal childhood.


 

She didn’t tell me everything. She didn’t tell me anything about how she met and married my grandfather, a stern and seemingly distant man who’d immigrated from Norway.  I didn’t know about the hard times of the Depression.  The only story she told me about my uncles was that one by one they enlisted in the Navy during World War II—except for Uncle Bjorn, who was disqualified because one of his eyes was artificial. How had that happened? I wanted to know. Grandma said he was changing a tire and the jack slipped.

After my grandma passed away, my mother and I stayed in her cottage for a week, packing up her belongings. I found her diary and found a place where I could read it privately. Her diary covered the Depression years, and I discovered a lot of disturbing secrets no one talked about. I learned my grandfather had kept the deafness in his family a secret from Grandma until he began to lose his hearing at a young age and after the births of my aunt and mother.

My aunt was born profoundly deaf, but my mom remembers hearing music when she was very young, 2 or 3. She remembers an old radio in the living room and would dance when music was playing. I knew mom was profoundly deaf as she shared the information and I wondered how she’d lost her hearing. Communication between Mom and my grandparents was very limited as I’ve written before. Mom’s understanding was that she had a bad cold, blew her nose too hard and blew out her eardrums. I don’t think that’s it, but I don’t have anyone else to ask now.

I also learned there was domestic violence. My grandfather beat Grandma and the children, including my mother.  When they got old enough, my uncles would intervene to stop him. When I showed the diary to mom after I’d read it, she looked at those entries and signed, “So I was right.” She remembered how grandpa would become so frustrated with her, he’d bang her head against the wall. My aunt had no memory of any of it. She was astounded when mom showed her the diary.

My Uncle John found out there was a diary, asked to borrow it and I never saw it again.

Grandma’s last entry stuck with me. It was written years later, just after grandpa passed away in 1965. All those years, she’d been heartbroken and resentful that he didn’t tell her about the deafness in his family and that it was brought upon her beautiful girls. She was relieved he was gone. She felt free.

I suppose there’s a reason we don’t learn a lot of details about our older relatives until after they’re gone. One reason is that they want to spare us ugly details by only sharing minimal good memories. Another, like my dad, just wants to forget their past.

My dad never wanted to answer questions about his childhood. Once in a blue moon, he’d let a few details slip out.  I asked him how he’d lost his hearing. Once again, he couldn’t get the full story from his parents. His explanation was that a surgeon cut his neck and he’d lost his hearing as a result. I wonder if he had a botched mastoidectomy. There’s no way to know for sure.  I knew that he and his brother Tommy were very close and went to the movies together.  I knew he went to a school for the Deaf and played football, played in the band, and acted. He never would answer questions about growing up during the Depression and World War II. His answer to my questions usually was, “Long ago, forget it.”

The reason I decided to write about talking to older relatives about their past lives is because of an article I read. There is so much valuable information that becomes lost when an older person passes away.

Grandma had done some digging around in our Ancestry and stuffed her notes in her diary. She’d traced one branch of our family, the Rulons, to Ruel Rulon. Ruel was born in France. During the Huguenot period, Protestants were being persecuted. The family had a shipping business, and Ruel’s brothers smuggled him out of France by hiding him in a wine barrel. The ship landed in Barnegat, New Jersey. The Rulon family line included a drummer boy during the Revolutionary War and a soldier during the Civil War. There were names, dates, and places right up to my great-grandfather, Gilbert Rulon. What a find!

It sparked my interest in genealogy and I tried to learn as much information as I could from my parents. My mother willingly filled out a questionnaire for me, but my dad absolutely refused. “Long ago, forget it.” I tried asking his sister, my Aunt Bea, and she was equally evasive. I wanted to know how and why the Scanlon grandparents had left Ireland, and how Grandpa Scanlon had become blind.

Recently, one of my cousins began serious research into the Irish branch of my family, the Scanlon-Meehans. I had reconnected with this cousin thanks to joining Ancestry and taking a DNA test.  I have happily reconnected with or connected with several distant cousins on both sides of my family, including my grandfather’s family in Norway.

I thought about how I don’t share a lot of stories with my kids.  My hubby knows everything because I do confide in him. I guess I was shielding my kids as much as possible.  As they grew older, though, they learned some of the more dysfunctional aspects of their grandparents. After my dad died, we had mom move in with us, but it didn’t last long.  Although she’d stopped drinking, my mom still suffered from the same mental illness she’d had all these years, and it was just too difficult.

She lived with my brother next, and it ended up causing a divorce between my brother and his wife Connie.  When my mom didn’t like the food prepared for her, she’d pull a tRump and throw the plate against the wall. There were other aggressive behaviors too.

Both my brother and I have PTSD. Mom ended up in an assisted living facility, and my brother made himself available to shop for her or take her to the doctor until she passed away a couple of years ago.

All these years, I’ve been keeping a diary or a journal. One long piece I wrote was about my growing up years. I try not to go into stories about my life when we’re all together, but I figured I would leave a record like my grandmother did.

The point of all this is: if you have a senior relative who isn’t reluctant to share and if you’re curious about your back story, then I recommend you talk with that person. It’s an engaging way to learn about what life was like years ago. It’s a good way to learn about why your family believes the things they do. Learning about where your family originated in the world opens doors to learning about other cultures and history. Most of all, the senior feels like someone cares enough to listen to them.

In the article, the author asked a senior about being willing to talk and her reply was: “Just ask.”

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