Wednesday, February 4, 2026

So many Aunts and Uncles - Weepy Wednesday, episode 3

I am the world’s worse niece. From 1978 to 2007, I lost nine aunts and uncles, and I only remember going to the funerals of two of them. Sure, I was away at college some of those years or living in Colorado, but I really think I could have made more of an effort. I do have some memories though.

I was still in high school when my uncle Bob passed away in November of 1978, following years of debilitation from Huntington’s Disease. I really don’t remember him not having those uncontrollable movements and walking like someone who is drunk. It’s a horrible disease.

His funeral was on a cold, dreary day, but at some point during the service, the sun broke through the clouds and shot its rays of hope through the beautiful stained-glass windows.

I think my Aunt Clara died from lung cancer. She smoked like a chimney her entire life as far as I know. It had been years since I had seen her, but I had a dream about her the night before she died. I can’t remember at all what it was about, but I kind of freaked out when Mom called to tell me she had passed away.

I was at college when Uncle Frank died. That was in the days before cell phones and even before there were phones in the dorm rooms. Somebody came down to my room to tell me I had a call on the pay phone at the end of the hall. I didn’t know what to say when Mom told me. Again, I hadn’t seen him in quite a few years. We grow up and move away and start having a life, one that excludes a lot of family members.

Uncle Fritz had stomach or colon cancer, I can’t remember now which. I had still been seeing him and Aunt Min, off and on, as they came down to our house to play cribbage regularly. If Mom got a phone call, or was busy with something else, she would let me play her hand. I thought I was pretty smart then. I need to start playing cribbage with Hubby more.

When the other three aunts and one uncle passed away, I have no clue what the cause of death was. I am really a slacker.

But there was Aunt Helen, by and far my favorite aunt and like a second mother to me.

I was still at work that day in December of 2005. For some reason, after everyone else was gone, I stayed to clean out one of my cupboards. Mom called on my personal line. She was at her sister’s apartment and though I don’t think she said it in so many words, I knew what she was getting at.

I drove to her apartment, where the EMTs were still working on my aunt. They wanted clarification that it was okay with the family for them to stop what they were doing, and Mom waited for me to agree with her. It was a long sad night after that. (To be continued.)

Uncle Bob, in the 1940s. How's that mustache? 
 
Aunt Clara. Every picture I have of her is in profile or sleeping. 

From left to right, Dad and his brothers, Fritz and Frank

While looking for pictures of Aunt Helen, I found this one. Aunt Helen, my sister Pat, and my baby Val are all gone. My brother Tom, with dementia, is gone mentally. Wie Traurig.

Sunday, February 1, 2026

Happy Adoption Anniversary, Hannah

Hard to believe that this little niblet came home with us one year ago. I've shared some of these pictures before, but wanted to just throw them all on my blog. She is just too cute for words, so I won't write many of them.   
She loves sleeping on her back
First day home and fit right in
 
Checking out Goose. She still doesn't understand why she doesn't have long legs like her cousin.

Tolerates the cat - most of the time. 

Loves laying in her chair, looking out the window. 



Some of her Christmas presents. 

Christmas Elf


Sleeps in my bed, under the covers with her head on the pillows. Not spoiled at all. 

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

And Now, Dad’s Parents - Weepy Wednesday, Episode 2

Two weeks ago, I told you what I knew about my maternal grandparents and how and when they passed away. Today, I'm over on my dad's side of the family. There are a lot more holes in their story, but at least I do have memories of Grandma.

Dad's dad was born in Germany in 1886, and his mom in 1888. They married in 1906 and had three boys and three girls. In 1923, Grandpa immigrated to the US with his oldest son. The following year, Grandma came over with four of the other children. One daughter, Hannah, remained behind. I've never known why and have found absolutely nothing about her online, except that she is listed as still living in Germany when Grandma died in 1968.

I'd like to think I got some of my determination from my grandma. She came over on that ship by herself, certainly not knowing any English, with four children in tow, between the ages of six and twelve.


 Their passport photos tell the story. My dad is on the far left. This picture of his sisters always reminds me of those two little girls in the original movie, "The Shining", for some reason.

Anyway, they settled in Chicago, where one of dad's aunts was living with her husband. Dad was only nine years old at the time. He never talked much about life in Germany. He did say, though, that they had a hard life in Germany, and that when the Great Depression hit the US five years later, they didn't live in poverty any worse than they had in the Old Country.

My grandpa died before that, though, in January of 1929. I've been told he died of Black Lung and that he had worked in coal mines in Germany.

Grandma didn't mourn his passing for long, as she remarried sometime later that year. It was more out of necessity. She still had kids at home that she needed to support.

According to the 1930 census, she and her new husband were part-owners of a delicatessen in a Chicago suburb. By 1940, the family was living on a farm way up north in Tripoli, Wisconsin. Her second husband passed away sometime between then and 1945, when my parents met.

So, poor Grandma was widowed twice, one daughter was left behind in Germany, and another one died in California of a heart condition when she was only 43.

I don't really remember much about Grandma, except for the old farmhouse she lived in in Tripoli. On the dining room table, there was always a tablecloth with fringes on it, and I remember braiding them or combing them out with my fingers.

She died on May 15, 1968. Mom said I was too young to go to the funeral, so I stayed with one of my aunts from the other side of the family. The saddest part, though, was that her grandson, my cousin Ben, died in Vietnam on May 7, and I don't know that the family got the news until after Grandma had died.

They are buried side by side in the local cemetery. Wie Traurig.      


And I don't know why I can't find a picture of Grandma's headstone.

Sunday, January 25, 2026

In with the New, Out with the Old

 

Jesus answered, “‘You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your strength, and all your mind.’ And, ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’” (Luke 10:27, New Living Translation)

I know that I have told you this before. I am no theologian, and you couldn't call me a Bible scholar. I know way less about the Bible than I do know. I've read through the entire book only two times, and even then, some of those Old Testament stories are still way over my head.

So, I want you to read the following with that in mind. This is just a thought I had; if I got it wrong, don't be afraid to let me know.

When most people read the Old Testament, they don't get a lot of warm, fuzzy feelings about God. He instituted a long list of rules and laws for the Israelites to follow. You've read the Ten Commandments? Easy-peasy to keep compared to what God lectures on in the book of Leviticus and repeats in Deuteronomy.

On top of that, God was always instructing the Israelite army to wipe out another city, country, or ethic group. He clearly did not want them associating with anyone who was not of the Jewish faith.

When you read all of that, it's easy to believe that God is not as loving as a lot of believers say He is. He always loved us and always will, but everything changed in the New Testament.

God came to live among us as a human, as Jesus Christ. He preached love for your friends and enemies. He cut down all of those laws in the Old Testament, not just down to those Ten Commandments, but to two rules.

Love God with all your heart, soul, strength, and mind. (Which was taken right out of that book of Deuteronomy, but is also in three books of the Gospel.) And, love your neighbor as yourself. (And when asked who our neighbor is, He answered that we need to love everyone – friend, foe, and foreigner alike.)

So what changed between the Old and New Testaments, or did anything change? I think the big thing is that God came here to offer us forgiveness from our sins. With all the weight of the world on Jesus' shoulders, that weight was lifted off of ours. We didn't have to fight anymore; all we needed to do was ask for forgiveness and spread the love.

Turn your life over to God. And love and accept everyone, treat them with kindness and compassion. You don't have to agree with them or condone their behavior, but you can still love them and pray for them. (Especially in our current political climate.)

"But to you who are listening I say: Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you. If someone slaps you on one cheek, turn to them the other also. If someone takes your coat, do not withhold your shirt from them. Give to everyone who asks you, and if anyone takes what belongs to you, do not demand it back. Do to others as you would have them do to you.

        “If you love those who love you, what credit is that to you? Even sinners love those who love them. And if you do good to those who are good to you, what credit is that to you? Even sinners do that. And if you lend to those from whom you expect repayment, what credit is that to you? Even sinners lend to sinners, expecting to be repaid in full. But love your enemies, do good to them, and lend to them without expecting to get anything back. Then your reward will be great, and you will be children of the Most High, because he is kind to the ungrateful and wicked. (Luke 6:27-35, New International Version)

Friday, January 23, 2026

Wishing it was Stifling Hot Outside

Journal of Our Journeys, Chapter 13

Beach Houses and Old Houses

Besides their yearlong residences, one of our relatives in Virginia owned a beach house on the Atlantic Ocean at Virginia Beach, where we stayed for a few days when we visited in 1972.

          All the houses along the beach were on stilts, looking like cartoon-figure ostriches. The beach was many yards from these buildings, so why they had to be up so high was beyond me.

          "The water can indeed reach this high at high tide," I was informed. "And in hurricane season, it can reach even higher."

          Hurricane season! Living in the upper Midwest, we occasionally experience tornadoes. Trees pulled up by the roots, and roofs off of barns blown into the next forty, but these storms rarely made the national news. And no tornado that I know of ever had a name. But a hurricane? That was something that only happened on the evening news with Walter Cronkite.

          There, in Virginia, however, where I only saw ocean waves lapping peacefully at the shore in mid-June warmth, a tropical storm could become a hurricane and wreak havoc on the best-prepared. All the plywood in the world could not save a beach house if Mother Nature meant to have her way with things.

          After allowing us to be awestruck by the beach house, Mom decided we needed to learn a little history.

          Up the Potomac River from Virginia Beach lay the historic site of Jamestown, the first permanent settlement of the white man in the New World. It seemed too primitive to me to be considered anything permanent. And the replicas of the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria were surely way too small to have journeyed across the vast Atlantic. How cramped those pioneers had to be! It was impossible to compare these vessels with today's cruise ships.

          Further up the river, historic Williamsburg was a much more refined destination. Many years later, when my son was 14 and returned from a trip there with his class, his first comment was, "You can only see so many old buildings."

          His second comment went something like this: "A couple in authentic period costume was in front of an authentic old building. My buddy was about to take a picture when a minivan drove into view and parked, ruining the whole picture."

          When I visited Williamsburg for the first time in 1972, things were only slightly more authentic because the minivan had not yet been invented.

          Like my son's class, we also visited Monticello, home of Thomas Jefferson. I must've secretly shared my son's belief of overdosing on old buildings because, by the time we made it to Monticello, I'd had my fill of historic structures made of red brick.

          A perpetual-type clock over and around the central doorway of Jefferson's home was the only thing that stayed in my mind. The clock was one of his many inventions on display. 

          The stifling hot kitchen was the only other thing that left an impression on my young mind. I cannot imagine the women in their long dresses and petticoats stoking a fire in an eight-foot-square brick room with two tiny windows, while it was 90 degrees outside. Wouldn't it have been easier to open a can of tuna and make sandwiches? That's invention Jefferson should have had in his house.

With the temperature at 27 below outside this morning,
I could stand to be in a stifling hot kitchen. Somebody start a fire! 
This was at Monticello when Hubby and I were there in 2019.





Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Happy Birthday to Someone Very Special to Me

Last Wednesday, I started a series of posts about saying goodbye to loved ones, but when I realized what today was, I was like – no can do.

In the wee hours of this morning, forty years ago, in a quiet maternity ward in Aurora, Colorado, instead of a goodbye, I said a big happy hello to this seven-pound, twelve-ounce sweetheart. 

Happy Birthday, Nicholas. Momma loves you very much, and I will always keep you close to my heart.  

Even when you cry. 

Or burp. 















But this picture is still my all-time favorite of both my kids. 

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Cleansing My Soul

 
But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness. (1 John 1:9, New Living Translation)

I found a Bible verse which fit today’s theme much better, I thought. But I decided to open with the one above instead.

If you have followed this blog for a while, you know that I am not averse to sharing too much information. I don’t keep much to myself.

One thing I haven’t shared with you lately is my continuing problems with pain. Constant pain and stiffness in my low back and upper back, pain that pops up in my one knee, then the other, the next day a shoulder, the following day my wrist. This has been going on for nearly three years. I’ve been to lots of conventional Western medicine providers and none of them had any answers.

The day after Christmas, I started going to an alternative medicine, holistic clinic. They did some testing, started me on lots of supplements, and put me back on that anti-inflammatory diet – remember the one from two years ago, where I didn’t eat anything with gluten, processed sugar or dairy? The diet which nearly made me give up my will to eat anything and which caused me to lose thirty pounds, about twenty pounds more than I needed to lose?

So, here I am, trying to work on that diet without get more stressed out than I already am. Still not seeing much relief, but I know this will take time.

But here’s the latest. When I went in on Thursday, they told me it was time to do the “cleanse”. Clean all the sludge out of my digestive track, gallbladder, kidneys and liver. Yikes! Like a colonoscopy prep on steroids.  

Anyway, it went okay. Again, no big improvement yet in my symptoms. (And I know my friends in the medical field will say this is all quackery, but I have to try something.) But here’s what it reminded me of.

It’s important for our physical health to eat healthy foods, exercise, and all that other stuff they always tell you. And sometimes, when the bad stuff takes over, you have to kick it out of your system somehow.

Isn’t our spiritual health just as important? Shouldn’t we monitor our thoughts and actions to make sure we are honoring God? Shouldn’t we purge ourselves of evil?

You must purge the evil from among you. (The same line is in the book of Deuteronomy eleven times!)

So, eat right, exercise, don’t smoke or drink alcohol or do drugs. Then read your Bible, listen to some sermons (at church or on line, just so they are Bible based and follow Christian values), keep the Ten Commandments as best you can, pray, draw closer to God, and talk to Jesus like you would your best friend.


(The picture at the top is Val working at the Saikeri clinic in 2010. Looks like she's mixing something similar to what I drank Thursday night! The picture above is the sunrise at the safari camp at Masa Mara when I was there in 2015. Looking at any of my pictures from Kenya brings peace to my soul.)