Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Spreading hope
The girls I made a few months ago have arrived at their new home in Nicaragua. I don't know exactly where they ended up, but I'm sure each is with a little girl (or boy) that loves them. You can read Eren's account of distributing the dolls here.
Craft Hope project 3 is already over (look at all that handmade baby love!), but project 4 will be announced shortly. Hopefully, I'll have some time to participate in this one. Maybe you will ,too?
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Oy, the things you can learn at the flea market
There's a huge antiques show about 10 minutes away from where we live that's held the second weekend of every month. It's one of my favorite things ever. It's not really a flea market, because there aren't any tables selling Tide and tube socks and diapers and other random junk like some flea markets I've been to, but flea market sounded better in the title of the post...

The last time we went it was mainly to browse, but we did find a couple of small things and the real gem of the day - this Yiddish primer found in a pile of old books. It's sort of like a Dick and Jane book for kids learning to read Yiddish. I didn't know much about Yiddish except that some words are commonly used in English usually for comic affect - putz, schlep, schnoz, glitch, chutzpah, klutz, meshuggener, tuchus... You may also recognize "schlemiel" and "schlimazel" from the Laverne & Shirley theme song. To find out what all of those words mean if you don't already know click here.


I originally picked the book up because I thought it was in Hebrew.... but now I know that Yiddish is also written with Hebrew letters. Barak can phonetically read it, but doesn't know what all of it says since Yiddish is most closely related to German, not Hebrew. His mom, however, knows Yiddish fairly well because of all the family research she's done throughout the years and he says she was able to read it.
There's actually the National Yiddish Book Center devoted to saving books like these which are becoming increasingly rare. I feel kind of privileged that I found one. The history of the language is pretty interesting... and sad as it seems to be slowly dying out.
If you've never heard Yiddish spoken here are some jokes from a fluent speaker.
The last time we went it was mainly to browse, but we did find a couple of small things and the real gem of the day - this Yiddish primer found in a pile of old books. It's sort of like a Dick and Jane book for kids learning to read Yiddish. I didn't know much about Yiddish except that some words are commonly used in English usually for comic affect - putz, schlep, schnoz, glitch, chutzpah, klutz, meshuggener, tuchus... You may also recognize "schlemiel" and "schlimazel" from the Laverne & Shirley theme song. To find out what all of those words mean if you don't already know click here.
I originally picked the book up because I thought it was in Hebrew.... but now I know that Yiddish is also written with Hebrew letters. Barak can phonetically read it, but doesn't know what all of it says since Yiddish is most closely related to German, not Hebrew. His mom, however, knows Yiddish fairly well because of all the family research she's done throughout the years and he says she was able to read it.
There's actually the National Yiddish Book Center devoted to saving books like these which are becoming increasingly rare. I feel kind of privileged that I found one. The history of the language is pretty interesting... and sad as it seems to be slowly dying out.
If you've never heard Yiddish spoken here are some jokes from a fluent speaker.
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Am I officially a grown up now?
Big things are happening in real life which is why I haven't been around the old blog lately. We've just begun the home buying process, and since this will be my first home purchase ever it's a very BIG deal. Until about three days ago I was pretty sure we couldn't even afford to buy a house, as my last delve into the whole confusing mess was sometime early last year, but then I started to do a little research. It is most definitely a buyer's market now, and I hadn't paid much attention at all to the $8,000 tax credit for first time home buyers that was put into place by the stimulus bill passed earlier this year, but hey, cool, we qualify. How about that? Plus, we're currently paying waaay too much in rent and actually buying a house and paying the mortgage/insurance/property taxes every month would be CHEAPER than renting this too small apartment. Now that's crazy.
So we're looking for a cute, little place with lots of character (and I mean real character, not the real estate code word "character" which means "old and needs a lot of work") just across the border in Wisconsin where money goes a lot further in a house. Look for updates as the home search begins...
So we're looking for a cute, little place with lots of character (and I mean real character, not the real estate code word "character" which means "old and needs a lot of work") just across the border in Wisconsin where money goes a lot further in a house. Look for updates as the home search begins...
Thursday, July 09, 2009
"Uplifting obit" is not an oxymoron
I know it sounds strange, but reading this obituary was the highlight of my day:
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Written by the deceased herself, it's a glimpse into one woman's life and the small and not so small things that were really important to her. Most of it made me smile, but I was really touched by the detail about how she saved the 50 varieties of antique apple trees... and how she lovingly described each of the important people she was leaving behind... It's nothing at all like the generic Mad Lib type form obits that most people get when they leave this mortal coil. I'd like to think that I'd have the presence of mind with smidge of self-deprecation to write my own obit one day. It's also just a good exercise in taking a moment to think about what's really important in your own life and how you'd like people to remember your time on this earth.
I found this via the 37 Days blog. Check it out.
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(NANCY) LEE HIXSON of Danville, Ohio died at sunrise on June 30, 2009. She was born Nancy Lee Wood in Cleveland on April 17, 1944, baptised at St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Valley City Ohio, and confirmed at St. John's Lutheran Church, Independence Ohio. In addition to being a teetotaling mother and an indifferent housekeeper, she was a board certified naturopath specializing in poisonous and medicinal plants; but she would like to point out, posthumously, that although it did occur to her, she never spiked anyone's tea. She often volunteered as an ombudsman to help disadvantaged teens find college funding and early opened her home to many children of poverty, raising several of them to successful, if unwilling, adulthood. She also enjoyed a long life of unmentionable adventures and confessed she had been a rebellious teen-aged library clerk, an untalented college student on scholarship, a run-away Hippie, a stoic Sunday School teacher, a Brownie leader, a Grange lecturer, an expert rifleman, a waitress, a wife once or twice, a welder, an artist, and a writer. She was in earlier years the president of Rainbow Systems Trucking Company, Peninsula Ohio, and she drove tractor-trailers over-the-road hauling freight commodities to startled customers from Minnesota to Florida. She was the CEO of the Cuyahoga Valley Center of Outdoor Leadership Training (COLT), where she lived in a remote and tiny one-room cabin in the Cuyahoga Valley National Park. Despite the lack of cabin space and dining table, she often served holiday dinners to friends and relatives and could seat twenty at the bed. She lived the last twenty-three years at Winter Spring Farm near Danville where she built a private Stonehenge, and planted and helped save from extinction nearly 50 varieties of antique apple trees, many listed in A.J. Downing's famous orchard guide of 1859 - among them such delicacies as Summer Sweet Pearmain, Sops of Wine, Westfield Seek No Further, and Duchess of Oldenburg. Her homemade cider and wine were reputed to cause sudden stupor. She befriended countless stray dogs, cats, horses, and the occasional goat. She was a nemesis to hunters, and an activist of unpopular, but just, causes. In short, she did all things enthusiastically, but nothing well. After moving to Danville, she bravely suffered with a severe and disabling disorder and a ten-year battle with lymphoma that ultimately took her life. She was often confined to the home where she continued to tirelessly volunteer and donate her limited resources to needy teens in the area, always cheered by their small and large achievements. Sympathy and big donations may be extended at this time. She was predeceased by her father Dwight Edward Wood of the Ohio pioneer Wood family of Byhalia, who died in the Columbus Jail having been accused of a dreadful crime, and by her second father Ted A. Cznadel of Danville who adopted her, loved her and raised her despite it all. She is survived by her dearly beloved son, her heart and soul and every breath, Christopher Daniel Hixson of Akron, (a sterling citizen who rose above his murky childhood with a scandalous mother), and by his loving partner Mitchell Kahan. She is also survived by her mother, the opinionated and stubborn Ann Gall Cznadel; by her brother the Rev. Dr. Thomas R. Sluberski, a Lutheran minister and professor, most recently of Rio de Janeiro; by her gentle, ecological brother Gregory T. Cznadel, a quality manager of Cleveland; by her talented sister Linda R. Cznadel Hauck, a librarian from sea to shining sea, of San Luis Obispo; by her genius nephew and godson Matthew Hauck of Minneapolis; and the other half of her heart, her patient friend and backstairs lover of thirty years, David Paul Bleifus who resides at the farm. Ms. Hixson traced her lineage directly through eleven generations to Governor William Bradford of the ship Mayflower and the Plimouth Colony, and was in the process of membership to The Mayflower Society. She was a long-time card carrying member of the ACLU, the Democratic Party, and of MENSA. The family wishes to thank Dr. Gene Morris for his care, understanding and sense of humor through it all; Dr. Paul Masci of Cleveland Clinic Wooster; and Dr. Skip Radwany and the nursing staff of the Palliative Care Center at Summa for their compassion as Lee shuffled off this mortal coil. Cremation has taken place. Immediate family and friends will gather at Stonehenge on a sunny summer day to celebrate her life. Interment is in the family plot at Brinkhaven Hilltop Cemetery in Brinkhaven, Ohio, where she will await an eventual and probable slide down the cliff to the Mohican River below. In lieu of flowers, please pray for the Constitution of the United States. "Now Voyager depart, (much, much for thee is yet in store)…" - Walt Whitman
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Written by the deceased herself, it's a glimpse into one woman's life and the small and not so small things that were really important to her. Most of it made me smile, but I was really touched by the detail about how she saved the 50 varieties of antique apple trees... and how she lovingly described each of the important people she was leaving behind... It's nothing at all like the generic Mad Lib type form obits that most people get when they leave this mortal coil. I'd like to think that I'd have the presence of mind with smidge of self-deprecation to write my own obit one day. It's also just a good exercise in taking a moment to think about what's really important in your own life and how you'd like people to remember your time on this earth.
I found this via the 37 Days blog. Check it out.
Sunday, July 05, 2009
Happy 4th!
The day didn't quite go as planned. It was rainy most of the day, so the fair at the nearby naval base was out. So what else could we do on the 4th of July, but go to the mall and get a photobooth strip with a patriotic border?

Oh, and have fun in the parking lot with sparklers we got at a garage sale sometime last year?

Yeah, we know how to party.

Oh, and have fun in the parking lot with sparklers we got at a garage sale sometime last year?
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