Thursday, January 22, 2009

Family Vacations

The only way to live is to accept each minute as an unrepeatable miracle, which is exactly what it is - a miracle and unrepeatable. ~ Margaret Storm Jameson

Well, we're off again on the family vacation circuit: 15 relatives, 2700 miles, eight states, 14 days. South from PA to friends in WV, a recently widowed uncle in Charlotte, Ed's parents in GA; back through VA. Scattered along the route are various siblings, nieces & nephews. Maryland is just a blip on the route, but I still count it! It's quite a trip, but a wonderful way to hug everyone and tell them how much we love them.

The elders are in their mid-80s so we travel this route more often than we used to. Now it's three times a year or more. Sad to say, when they are gone, this trip won't be such a priority. Somehow, once parents are gone, traditions change and many families lose touch. It's part of our scattered lifestyle.

Sometimes, though, the loss of a parent brings siblings closer. That's true for my brother and me. Now we make an effort to get together on a regular basis (he lives in NY), something we never did while mom was still alive. Our sister is on the 'relative vacation' route, so we don't see her as often.

It's interesting to compare stories of our childhood. They are younger than I so the memories are different. I remember vividly our Christmas trips to Florida; he recalls only snippets. My sister remembers almost nothing. I was in college when the 'family' toured New England – no memories for me there. But we love to share stories.

I hope that 2009 is your year for family ties. With cell phones, email and gas prices lower, there's no reason not to keep in touch. No matter what has happened in your past, it's the only family you've got. We lost a much loved younger brother last May – to cancer at 52. There will be no more reunions with him. Forgive, forget, remember the good. And stay in touch. God bless you and your family. ~ Ruth & Ed

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Thursday, January 15, 2009

Backward A-B-C's are the answer ...

What the mind of man can conceive and believe,
the mind of man can achieve. ~ Napoleon Hill
This backward ABC – conceive, believe, achieve – has been running through my mind a lot lately. It's the conception that always starts a thing … whether it's the worlds greatest invention, a new project or your next vacation.

First, we have to think a thing. Then we meditate on it until it becomes believable. Finally, we act on what we now believe … and whatever it is you thought of becomes physical reality. How awesome!

Where do you want to go? What do you want to do? What would you like to accomplish? In life, for your family, on your next trip?

Dream it.

Think it until it becomes real … until you can 'see' it in your mind.

Then go do it. The world is waiting for you …

Share your dreams with a comment below.

And remember: Life is a journey, travel first class!

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Thursday, January 1, 2009

Happy New Year!

We've been neglectful for several months. Sometimes life just throws more at us than we can handle. Two surgeries, ailing parents, two family deaths, crises at our 'regular' jobs … last year was a roller coaster, and we're glad to see it go. We have great hope that 2009 will be easier, happier, more peaceful. We also have more travel plans for the coming months and are looking forward to sharing our explorations with you, our dear reader and friend. In the meantime, start this new year with anticipation. Meditate on the good things that you want to draw into your life. Stay focused on the goodness around and always be thankful! May this year be your best ever …

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Wednesday, January 30, 2008

We're Ba-a-a-ack!

We're home. Twelve days, 2500 miles, 15 relatives. And a desk buried in mail when we returned. Not to mention about 200 emails.

We spent two days at my in-laws sorting old pictures with my mother-in-law and my daughter. Three generations listening to stories of a wooden shoe factory in Sweden, her father's arrival at Ellis Island, and growing up in the 30's and 40's in New York.

It was fascinating.

Go. Visit your oldest relatives while you can. Hear their stories. Preserve your family's history. A family tree is great, but it just knowing the names can't tell you the tales. So do it while you can.

It's the best use of your travel time, especially if you can get three or four generations together.

Remember, life is a journey - travel first class!

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