Archive for the ‘Julie’ Category

A triune conversation about The Van, with special guest The Analyst

Posted by jonesey on Monday, 15 February 2010, 22:29

I happened to mention to a few friends that our family had acquired a new vehicle, and one, who is a bit farther into middle age than I and who makes his living as an Analyst, posed an inquiry.

A mini-van or an SUV? Welcome to America!

I, attempting to clarify, replied with a link to my previous weblog entry, complete with photo:

It’s a van van. https://www.tovis.com/weblog/?p=1153

He replied with some Analysis. Trying to be helpful and explanatory, of course.

Nice ride. And Dude, it’s a mini-van. A mini-van has unibody construction, front wheel drive, coil springs, an automatic transmission, a “family” seating configuration and, usually, a V6 engine between 2.5 and 4.0 L. A van is really a truck. It has body on frame construction, rear wheel drive, often leaf springs in the back, and various seating, transmission, and engine configurations based on application. If I bought a mini-van, it would be like yours and it would still be a mini-van.

Well, you see, my lovely wife, my better and prettier half, Julita, light of my life, fire of my loins, does not like minivans. She has no truck, if I may be so bold, with minivans. She despises them. They call out to her, but she scorns them, declaiming her Kahlil Gibran, who once wrote:

[The minivan] stands at the turn in the road and calls upon us publicly, but we consider it false and despise its adherents.

So of course, I, being a truthful and honest and communicative husband, forwarded The Analyst’s message on to my wife, saying, yea verily:

These are the people I call my friends.

She set me straight:

That man is NOT your friend.

I, being one to protect my friends, and also my NOT-friends, because I do so love them all, forwarded her correction to The Analyst, with the following preface:

For future reference. Best not to use the “M” word around the wife if you value your intact body.

The Analyst, for his part, cut out the middle-man (your humble scribe) and replied to both of us with a rambling message about a medicated woman, a spade, a Subaru, and something called a “Johnson unit” (I didn’t ask).

I used to work with a woman who got very upset when I called her Subaru a station-wagon. After a stay in the Johnson unit and a long battle to stabilize her meds, she’s back at work and feeling fine.

Anyway, welcome to middle age. Denial of conformity is an important part of feeling that one, and one’s family, is “special.” So its not a mini-van. It is a special vehicle for special, gifted non-conformist people.

[T.A.]

P.S. In my professional life, I’ve had countless run-ins with people who got pissed at me for calling a spade a spade. The trick, as in the present case, is to have unarguable data.

I think this chapter is complete, but I still say he should keep his mouth shut around the loin-firer.


A shopping day

Posted by jonesey on Thursday, 11 February 2010, 22:53

We all took a quick trip up to Portland today. Julie took the kids to Ikea. She came home with a table, a big pillow, and a bin for some blocks. Maybe something else. She might post some photos of that stuff.

I came home with something a little… bigger.  And greener.

Yeah, it's got a pop-top. With a bed in it. And curtains.

Yeah, it's got a pop-top. With a bed in it. And curtains.

Forest Kindergarten Notes

Posted by julie on Friday, 4 December 2009, 10:24

This New York Times article about a Waldorf-based forest kindergarten in Saratoga Springs has lingered in my thoughts for the past couple of days, popping up when I see my son playing outside on his school’s playground or when I get a glimpse of the full moon and long to be camped out in the cold. The slideshow that accompanied the article was particularly affecting, from the leafless November woods to the children sitting around a family-style lunch table in a beautiful old farmhouse. The truth is, this is certainly not the first time I’ve wanted something a little different for my children, a day-to-day existence that involves more exploring, more time spent playing in streams and running around outside until I call them in for dinner (okay, while I realize that Elena’s only one, she’s growing up fast). The formative years that I remember (let’s call them ages 4-11), were spent first on a cul-de-sac and then on a dairy farm. I roamed, I had a fort in a bush in the backyard, I biked, I played cops and robbers, I spent hours engineering the stream, climbing on the hay, and traipsing through the pastures. When I was in fifth grade, I couldn’t believe it when Melissa, in sixth grade, said she had no time to play outside; she was always doing homework. While my jaw may not have literally dropped, I remember that slackjawed feeling, wondering how it was possible to live without playing for hours outside.

Those of you who know me recognize, of course, that I take my kids outside pretty often: we play in the snow, hike, go to the playground. But that’s scheduled by me, and it’s on my terms, really; Sylvan’s not just going outside to splash in the stream (there is no stream, although, if it rains hard enough, the street hosts a stream). These forest kindergarten kids spend three hours outside every morning, just being kids in the outdoors.

We do have a relatively new preschool in town, Dancing Sol, which has gotten rave reviews from the parents whose kids have gone there. I’ve been tempted to send Sylvan there. But that would involve lots of extra driving, and lots of retooling our schedules. Now, we drop off and pick up Elena and Sylvan in a double jogger; we can walk to their school from home, Chris’s work, or my rehearsal. It fits our needs and our values, and Sylvan and Elena know and enjoy their friends and teachers. And, honestly, I would feel like a parent over-engineering my son’s time if I made the switch.

I’ve also been influenced lately by Lenore Skenazy’s blog, Free-Range Kids. She’s been called “the worst mom in the world” for letting her son, who was nine at the time, find his way home on the subway by himself from Bloomingdale’s. This might seem like a scary thing if you don’t live in Manhattan, but this kid grew up there; he been riding the subway for nine years, reading subway maps for three. Her blog is dedicated to encouraging independence in your children by giving them independence (and also pointing out the absurdities of hovering parents and panic-inducing media).

My problem derives largely from our choice to live in the city in order to be able to walk to the grocery store, work, and school. That’s inherently different, of course, from living on a farm or in the forest. But that doesn’t stop me from wanting it all.

So I’m looking for ways to let out the leash, to give my son and my daughter real freedom, real opportunities to get outside and explore and construct without me. And without being turned in to the Department of Human Services.

Another Halloween photo, by popular request

Posted by jonesey on Thursday, 19 November 2009, 11:48

One more for the fans.

The Riddler and Robin, Halloween 2009

The Riddler and Robin, Halloween 2009

A picture of a rainbow

Posted by jonesey on Tuesday, 3 November 2009, 16:28

This post is mainly to test the new, wider format of the Eugenious weblog.  I’m hoping that we can post bigger pictures right in the posts, instead of having to use the tiny little thumbnails we’ve been using.

OK, here goes nothing:

Julie and Sylvan walk in front of a rainbow and the Kienzle barn at Mt. Pisgah, 3 Oct 2009

Julie and Sylvan walk in front of a rainbow and the Kienzle barn at Mt. Pisgah, 3 Oct 2009

Yep, that works.  Nice.

Tea with John Muir

Posted by julie on Sunday, 4 October 2009, 0:29

Before tonight, I never knew how to answer the question that comes up in some games and quizzes: “With which historical figure would you most like to have a conversation?” But, after a phone call with my Dad and an e-mail from my Mom, in which they independently extolled the wonders of Ken Burns’s National Parks series on PBS (which you can watch online until October 9), I was sufficiently intrigued to make the show my companion as I cooked some potato-leek soup and prepped tomorrow morning’s breakfast, a puffed sliced apple dish (sounds good, doesn’t it? We’ll see how it goes.).

Not surprisingly, the National Parks footage is beautiful. How could it not be, with the “crown jewel” nature of the places that we Americans own together? Old photographs fill in some historical information in the 12-hour documentary, and a number of eloquent historians, authors, and park rangers share their thoughts and experiences.

I’ve only watched half of the first episode, The Scripture of Nature. I found myself near tears on a number of occasions. While I was, actually, chopping onions, it was, instead, the film’s declaration of ideas that stirred me–of public ownership of this country’s most jaw-dropping places, places that more than one urban easterner in the 1880s just stood before, speechless, before writing of his religious experience there; of the contentious decision, later, to include in our National Park system those battlegrounds where blood was shed as this nation struggled.

John Muir, when he started working in the Yosemite Valley, built a cabin near the foot of Yosemite Falls with the floor’s flagstones just far enough apart that ferns could still grow. The moment I heard that, I knew how to answer that niggling question about with which historical person I’d like to chat. While I wouldn’t know what to ask John Muir, how to open a conversation, I would like to listen to his ideas, just hear him speak about the Sierra.

Of course, as we drank tea from the thermos, Mr. Muir would eat only crusts of bread as I lavished clotted cream on my scones. And he would still hike 50 miles in two days. That man was truly fueled by sequoias and granite.

Wind

Posted by julie on Monday, 24 August 2009, 0:36

I listened to the wind in the conifers on three consecutive days last week. And I noticed it. Hooray for small miracles of mindfulness.

Last Saturday, I had a good run on the Ridgeline Trail, enjoying how strong my out-of-shape body actually felt (hefting 22-pound babies counts for more than I give it credit for) but not enjoying the sharp, 2-3-inch crushed gravel on the new section of trail (no rock plates in my otherwise fantastic shoes equals sore feet). Wind in the Douglas firs.

Last Sunday, I climbed Diamond Peak, a solo hike that felt really tough for the first four miles. My body has always reacted strongly to a little altitude. I remember showing up at the Noble Hotel in Lander, Wyoming (elevation ca. 5350 ft.) for NOLS courses and sucking wind as I climbed the stairs, thinking, “How am I going to go out and heft a 60-pound pack around at 8000 feet?” Then, of course, there was the stroke, after I’d been up to 11,000 feet. Dehydration and my body’s goal of making more red blood cells to compensate for the difficulty in acquiring oxygen couldn’t have helped.

My body turned it around last Sunday, though, and the objectively difficult part of the climb, a steep, well-worn and heavily-cairned climbers’ trail with lots of scree and gravelly footing that gained the last 2300 feet to the summit, seemed much easier than the first four trail miles. After snapping a few pictures on the windy top, I had a late lunch back down at the false summit, all the while convincing a cheeky ground squirrel that I don’t share chocolate with rodents. There was no one else on the mountain on that sunny Sunday in mid-August. I saw two Pacific Crest Trail through-hikers that evening, back on the trail as I headed to the trailhead. I also surprised a long-tailed weasel, who skittered away up a log, looking back, then finding cover. Wind in the mountain hemlocks up high, then Douglas firs toward the trailhead. And, whew, the mosquitoes down near Summit Lake, on the Forest Service road I was walking on back to the car. I put on my raingear and RAN.

On the summit. Nice gaiters, NOLSie.

On the summit. Nice gaiters, NOLSie.

On Monday, Sylvan, Elena, and I hiked up the Amazon Headwaters Trail. Elena fell asleep, as planned. Sylvan, on his first apprentice-hike, preparing to climb Diamond Peak with me (when he’s 10? 11? I think he’s thinking this reward will be a little more immediate, but I’m happy to have him excited about hiking again.), powered uphill with nary a whine. The ripe blackberries helped. Wind in the Douglas firs.

Little Ears and Furry Ears

Posted by julie on Tuesday, 3 March 2009, 0:51

Last night I tried making pasta for the first time. No, not boiling up spirals. Making pasta. It was remarkably easy, but the results were less than stellar. May I recommend making your orechiette thinner than mine, more like these lovely, delicate ones resembling seashells? And boil them longer than one minute after they float to the top, regardless of what your recipe says. And have your husband come in and try them before you stop boiling them, too. But do flavor them with garlicky olive oil, garlic, toasted hazelnuts, broccoli, salt, and asiago. Then, even if they are thick and mealy, you can smile through your garlic breath.

Orechiette

Orechiette

This afternoon, Tephra and I shared 30 minutes of uninterrupted sunshine when Elena’s and Sylvan’s naps overlapped. I enjoyed a cold drink, Tephra enjoyed the smell of spring, and I read quite a few pages in Jhumpa Lahiri’s Interpreter of Maladies. And I wore a T-shirt and jeans. Bare feet and arms – spring must be around the corner (where was winter?).

Tephra mid-meow

Tephra mid-meow

Fierce Love

Posted by julie on Saturday, 28 February 2009, 23:03

My friend and mentor, Debra Gwartney, recently published a memoir, Live Through This, about a terrifying stretch of time in the mid-90s when her two older daughters, then in high school and middle school, ran away first for a few nights at a time and later for months. Debra’s finishing up a book tour, and she read in Eugene the other night. After her daughter Amanda’s moving introduction and Debra’s heartbreaking reading, Debra mentioned, while answering a question, that Amanda and Stephanie are both superbly creative, intelligent women. A family friend told her that they had needed to express their creativity somehow; they couldn’t have just sat home and done their homework, essentially. Debra wishes she’d known how to channel that energy.

It scared me a bit, both the reading and this comment. I mean, Debra’s sometimes discouraging but ultimately family-strengthening experience could put the fear of daughters into any red-blooded parent. But that comment about smart teenagers scared me even more. I think I have at least one of those children – those creative, brilliant ones.

And I’m not like that. While I have some artistic talents, it’s more in the execution of an idea, not in the development of said idea. I sat home and did my homework when I was in high school. I wasn’t full of passion and creative energy and spirit. Sylvan might be.

I’m started the channeling of his creative energy right now. We’re working on cutting and collages.

Tonight, Sylvan pulled himself onto my lap and told me that he loves me. Unsolicited. Some people might not have to wait nearly 3 1/2 years for that. Debra might have waited longer.

Happy Birthday, Elena: 5 Months

Posted by julie on Tuesday, 20 January 2009, 0:14

Dear Elena,

To celebrate your five months breathing air, you took me on a hike up Spencer Butte on Thursday, where I breathed lots of air (actually, it’s called “sucking wind”). Just out of the parking lot, the Douglas firs rained on us, so soaked were they by clouds blowing through. But, as we climbed, the trees quickly dried out, then the sun shone through the clouds. I just assumed the fog was burning off, but, when we hit the bald summit, I looked out to see a sea of clouds dotted with nunataks, all those hills higher than about 1600 feet. Even Mt. Pisgah, north and east of us, was just an undersea mount, hidden in the foggy sea. Mt. Jefferson and the Three Sisters, completely snow-covered, stood tall on the eastern horizon, though. The sky appeared lit from within it was so blue and perfect.

I was reminded, as I am nearly every time I actually get outside, that the nature nearby inspires in me a desire to be outside even more, a convenient consequence. I’ll try to take you on more walks, Elena. (Shh, don’t tell him, but we might have to hike when that brother of yours is at school, since he tries to ride on my shoulders every time I take him for a walk longer than two blocks.)

This is  your view at the start of the hike (minus my nostrils, to spare our readers):

elenas_view1

Then you took a rest:

elena_asleep

Then the sun broke through:

sunbreak

And – cue the boys choir – the mountains:

threesisters_spencerbutte

You’ve been busy recently. On Christmas day, you finally managed to roll from your back to your belly, and we haven’t been able to keep you in one place ever since. You roll to your tummy and push up into a flawless Cobra position, then you scoot yourself backward, traveling impressive distances and lodging your legs under chairs.

elena_sohappy

You’re not crying much in the car any more, although you’ve realized that we’ll love you even if you cry at home. Or at work. Or in the grocery store. Still, though, you’re pretty receptive to distraction, especially of a musical sort – if you can call Little Rabbit Fufu music.

Hey there, what's your name?

Hey there, what's your name?

Daddy set up your crib when we returned from our Christmas travels. You spend the first part of every night on your own, then you come into bed with us at your first request for milk, usually between 1 and 3 a.m. You take naps in your crib with little fuss; just twenty minutes ago, I put you in your crib, and, after only seven minutes of a very sad Elena, you turned your head into your pink lovey bunny from Uncle Tim, Aunt Michele, and Elliot and gave in to sleep.

Santa's cutest elf

Santa's cutest elf

The U.S. Senate wanted to commemorate your first five months, too. They voted on January 15 to set aside two million acres of public land in nine states as Wilderness. Yippee, more room to roam without encountering any cars!

I love you,
Mommy