Friday, December 23, 2016

Christmas is for Miracles

Christmas is a time for miracles. A time for love and sacrifice—of sharing and giving. It is a time when we remember the Savior and the wonderful gifts we receive at this special season.

I remember a cold Christmas morning in Alabama we shared in a tiny trailer. Ed was going through
Our 1966 homemade Christmas tree
flight school and we were so poor we didn’t have a phone and all our possessions fit in our car. We couldn’t afford a Christmas tree so Ed scrounged pieces of greenery and build a small three-foot tree of chicken wire and broken pine pieces. My dad sent us boxes of Danish Dessert for our gift, and we cut out pictures from the newspapers of all the items we’d give each other “someday” and gave them to each other as our dream gifts.

The army gave us gifts: 1. two weeks off –but we had nowhere to go so we sat in our trailer playing monopoly and other games with other poor flight students and 2. Orders for Ed to go to Vietnam as soon as he finished flight school. The water pipes in the trailer froze so we had no water, but we scrounged everywhere under seat cushions and in the car until we found 100 cents and called home for three minutes. We had each other and love and that was enough.

Our Christmas gift--Marlowe 1967
I remember the next Christmas day when I came home from the hospital with Marlowe. I had been able to talk to Ed on the phone through the Red Cross and tell him about his new son, and even though a war separated us, we had each other, Marlowe, and love; we were a family now, and that was enough.


So many Christmases throughout the year were special, but another one I remember as blessed –even a Christmas miracle—was one in Italy when Ed was in the hospital in Vicenza. His left arm was extremely sore and getting progressively worse, but the doctors couldn’t find out what was wrong with it. The doctors tried with all their medical skills to identify the problem with his arm, and failed; Ed’s arm became worse until it reached a crisis on a December night when Ed paced the hospital floor. Despite the maximum amount of pain medications given him, he was in far too much pain to rest. I talked to him by phone and realized how serious the situation was, and I was waiting only until dawn to call our home teachers to ask them to give him a priesthood blessing. 

Suddenly, about 4:30 a.m. when my daughter went out to deliver the newspapers, she came rushing back to report that our home teacher Bob DeWitt was outside our house. Bob explained he had come to pick up our neighbor to fly to Turkey, but they had just been notified that their flight was postponed. Bob contacted another priesthood holder and they went over to the hospital at 5:00 a.m. and gave Ed a priesthood blessing before Bob flew to Turkey. Bob called and told me that in his blessing he’d blessed Ed with comfort and that he’d been inspired to bless Ed that he’d recover his health, and the use of his arm completely.
 
Ed in Landstuhl for Christmas 1985
Those words shocked me. Nothing was seriously wrong with Ed, was there? Soon after that blessing the surgeon examined Ed and noticed that Ed’s hand was becoming atrophied and his fingers were curled like claws. When more x-rays did not show anything, but there was obviously something damaging the nerves in Ed’s hand, the surgeon, radiologist and flight surgeon tried something they’d never tried before--they used they prenatal ultrasound machine to examine Ed’s arm.  It detected an infectious abscess deep in the muscle of Ed’s arm, near the bone—invisible to X-rays. 

They did an emergency operation to drain the abscess and Ed was transferred immediately to the regional medical hospital in Germany. Before Ed left, the surgeon explained told me that a lot of nerve damage had already occurred in Ed’s arm and hand, and that another couple of hours without surgery could have meant that Ed would have lost the complete use of his arm. I flew with Ed to Landstuhl in the medical evacuation plane. Ed spent Christmas in Germany in the hospital, but I made it home on Christmas Eve to be with my daughters. My sons had gone elsewhere for Christmas because we didn't know whether I'd make it back to Italy. 

Nine months in army hospitals in eighteen months and multiple surgeries would occur before Ed would recover, but the priesthood blessing was fulfilled. Ed recovered his health—and the use of his hand—completely.  A postponed flight and a priesthood blessing were wonderful Christmas blessings.

In 2007 we had another Christmas miracle that we didn’t even recognize as such at first. Ed was in a
Ed in 2007 before Christmas
minor car accident a day or so before Christmas. He was hit in an intersection by a young woman who ran a red light and hit his car right in the wheel area. It knocked his car around and he hit his head on the side window and was unconscious for a few seconds.

Apparently, it turned the car around and hit the rear of his car again before he ended up on the side of the road facing 90 degrees from where he had been going. It totaled the car and he had a headache so he was advised by the paramedics and the policeman to be checked out at the emergency room. 

Even then I doubt if he would have gone if I hadn’t come to pick him up and I insisted that since I was driving that’s where we were going--to the ER.  Since he had been knocked unconscious the emergency room personnel insisted on a CT scan even if Ed didn't think it was necessary and we walked over and got the CT scan and walked back. We were getting ready to leave, thinking everything was normal when the doctor returned and reported that there appeared to be no damage from the accident, but that the CT scan had shown a medium to large-sized aneurysm.


From that point on, Ed got royal treatment—rushed to the University of Utah hospital in an ambulance with a paramedical and EMT, sent directly to a trauma room where he was treated like he was in danger of dying, with neck brace, backboard, IVs in both arms. He kept saying, “I’m okay. I just have a headache and an aneurysm.” After further CT scans and tests by more neurosurgeons, they reported that the aneurysm hadn’t ruptured due to the trauma of the accident, but they wanted to keep him in an observation room until 12 hours after the accident to make sure. Finally, about 3:00 a.m. they took the backboard off, but he had the neck brace on all night. The neurosurgeons made sure he was okay and had an appointment to be seen in the neurosurgery clinic in January for follow up on what to do about the aneurysm before they released him. 

But the real miracle was that the aneurysm was found and located before it burst and that it could be
Ed after aneurysm surgery
taken care of. It wasn’t fun to have an aneurysm, but it was better to find one before it ruptured and could be taken care of than after it ruptured. I felt it was truly a Christmas miracle that he had the minor accident that made it necessary for him to get a CT scan, even if it wasted a good Christmas shopping night and day and he was  stiff and sore and had a headache. And the car he totaled was the old 1993 Nissan that Diana and Bryan used forever. Ed had been wanting an excuse to get a new car and there it was! The surgery to fix the aneurysm in January went well!

Ed's last Christmas
In 2014 we had another miracle with Ed's health. In 2010, Ed's emphysema became so bad that he received a lung transplant which gave him four and a half good years. During that time, Ed and I traveled to Australia, New Zealand, Denmark, England, Ireland, Scotland, and did many other memorable things. We had gained three grandchildren and life was good. Then Ed had some problems with his bad lung collapsing, and he grew worse and worse. After many operations, illnesses, treatments, December 2014 found Ed very weak and ill. Then on Christmas day, we realized he had the flu. He'd had the flu shot, but apparently it wasn't a good match and didn't work well. 

All Christmas day, Ed was so sick and struggling so hard to breathe that I wanted him to go to the hospital. But his grandson, James, was on a mission in Costa Rica and was supposed to call home. Athena's family was at our house and we were awaiting the call from Costa Rica. It came as a Skype call which was broadcast on our large-screen TV. Ed was able to hear from James, although Ed couldn't talk by that time. The day after Christmas, Ed was so weak he couldn't walk, so he was carried to the car to be transported to the hospital where he died two weeks later. But he had been able to spend his last Christmas with his family and to Skype with his grandson as he had wanted to. 

Sometimes Miracles are large and obvious; other times they are small and sweet. Ed's last Christmas was the last. 

Friday, December 9, 2016

The Lord Can Touch Us and Make Us Shine

In the Book of Mormon, in the chapter of Ether, the story is told of a people that lived in the time of the Tower of Babel. The Lord promised to lead them from there to a place where they could live without their language being confounded. When they had completed building ships according to the Lord’s instructions, their leader, the brother of Jared, realized that they would have no light in their ships or barges. So, he turned to the Lord and the account is in Ether 2 through 6 of the Book of Mormon.

The Lord asked the brother of Jared, “Therefore what will ye that I should prepare for you that ye may have light when ye are swallowed up in the depths of the sea?

“And it came to pass that the brother of Jared . . . went forth unto the mount . . .  and did molten out of a rock sixteen small stones; and they were white and clear, even as transparent glass; and he did carry them in his hands upon the top of the mount, and cried again unto the Lord . . .

“And I know, O Lord, that thou hast all power, and can do whatsoever thou wilt for the benefit of man; therefore touch these stones, O Lord, with thy finger, and prepare them that they may shine forth in darkness . . .
“Behold, O Lord, thou canst do this. We know that thou art able to show forth great power, which looks small unto the understanding of men.

 “And it came to pass that when the brother of Jared had said these words, behold, the Lord stretched forth his hand and touched the stones one by one with his finger. . .

“And thus the Lord caused stones to shine in darkness, to give light unto men, women, and children, that they might not cross the great waters in darkness.”

Here we have a good example of how the Lord asks us to come up with a way to help ourselves, rather than to just automatically do something for us.

But I see this story as an example of how the Lord can take ordinary things—us frail, weak human beings and turn us into something better.

In a stake conference recently one of the high councilmen talked of how when he was a Young Men’s president years ago, he had some difficult dealings with one of the young men he was supervising. This young man got into a fight with another young man, and the father of the young man called this high councilman and really swore at him and caused a problem.

Years later this high councilor was called to be a bishop and asked to choose his counselors. While pondering on who to call, the name of this gentleman who had caused such a problem came to the high councilor. He tried and tried to deny the prompting because he had bad feelings about this gentleman, but he finally gave into prompting and submitted the name of this man to be his counselor. He turned out to be a wonderful counselor and truly made a difference.

Years later he discovered that at the time he was pondering who to call as his counselor, this gentleman had been going through an extremely difficult time. He had back pain that was so debilitating that he had decided to take his life if nothing happened in the next 24 hours. And it was in those 24 hours he was called to be a counselor to this new bishop and his life completely changed. He was touched by the Lord and his life was changed just as dramatically as the ordinary clear stones of the brother of Jared had been changed into incandescent light by the touch of the Lord.

This story really touched my heart and I thought of my children, and how their lives have been touched by the Lord in perhaps not so dramatic a manner, but in a similar manner.
I think of my one daughter who sang at a graveside service for my stepmother recently. A gifted vocalist who has trained to perfect her singing, she has a way of bringing the spirit whenever she sings. As she sang, “Consider the Lilies,” a common song, the spirit of the Lord was so strong that many of those present were brought to tears.

One said, “I didn’t even like that song, but when you sang it, it was completely different. It touched me and it meant something very beautiful and meaningful.” The last refrain from that is very potent, “He will heal those who trust Him, And make their hearts as gold.”

There are many ways the Lord can touch our hearts, some profoundly and others more indirectly. Another daughter of mine loves to serve others. Whether it is dinners for the sick, shoveling snow for the elderly, or just helping someone who needs help, she is always there! Her heart has been touched with service, and many benefit from her kindness.

A son of mine loves others unconditionally. He is interested in people and loves to talk to them. He never judges others, speaks disparaging about them, or gossips. He always looks for the best in others, and never criticizes. He is a natural leader who cares personally for each employee. He also is a wonderful father who has raised children who are responsible and caring.

Another son of mine has been gifted with the power of healing. I have seen him use it in ways that bless other’s lives. One example was when my husband Ed’s emphysema became very bad in the spring of 2009. This son flew out to visit us, and he gave Ed a priesthood blessing. He promised Ed that he had a lot more things that he had to do in this life. My first thought was, “How can he say that when we know Ed probably doesn’t have much time to live?” I really was afraid to hope that Ed could get well, because the doctors had insisted there was nothing more they could do.

My heart was softened as Marlowe continued the blessing and told Ed to persevere and keep after the doctors to find answers to his medical problems. Months later his doctor recommended a lung transplant in California (the local hospital wouldn’t consider him for a transplant because he was too old). He received a lung transplant and his life was extended for almost five years; it was good quality of life, too, with us being able to travel to many places and for Ed to teach my family many things. This is just one example of his gift of healing.

My third son always loves to help others and truly cares for the people he works with. He is always there to help when he is needed, and he always helps friends willingly. He has a unique and comic personality, and he uses it to perform and lighten people’s hearts. His patriarchal blessing says, “Your personality is from the Lord. It is your gift from God. These things can be used to bring success in spiritual ways, and also temporal ways.” He blesses others in many ways.


There are many ways I have seen others touched by the Lord’s hand, and use their talents to help others. I have two artistically talented sisters whose artwork can really touch your heart and bring you closer to the Lord. I have brothers whose lives are anthems of kindness and service. One has been trained in social work and uses his skills to evaluate and help those less fortunate; he does it with loving concern, never looking down on people or feeling he is better than them.

How grateful I am that the Lord can “touch our hearts with gold,” or in other words, transform us as certainly as the Lord touched the ordinary clear stones of the brother of Jared and turned them into light.



Saturday, November 12, 2016

If I'm Doing Okay, Why Am I Trying So Hard?

[This was written years ago when my children were young]



When the baby eats the dog's food, my first thought is, "If I were a good mother, this would never happen!" When I realize I have forgotten my daughter's fourth grade class concert, I think, "A good mother remembers things like that." Many times a day the "If I were a good mother...." refrain plays in my mind and I feel inadequate and frustrated as a mother.

If I were a good mother. . . .  
I would know instinctively what to do,
From the day they take their first breath
To the day they take their marriage vows...
And beyond!


          I don't remember my mother agonizing about motherhood. She didn't read Dr. Spock, child development manuals, or take parenting (or even Lamaze) classes. Yet she seemed secure and confident in her identity as A MOTHER! She just assumed that she would know what to do and she did. I recall her saying that the most important thing about parenting was loving your children and enjoying them, and everything else would fall into place. She also said that knowing how to be a good mother was instinctive and that when I had children I would automatically know what to do.

          I didn't! I worried and fussed from the first minute, armed not only with my sister's child development manual, but the most popular Baby and Child Care book I could find. I recall the overwhelming inadequacy that hit me as I looked down on my new firstborn and thought, "What on earth made me think I would know how to take care this?" Is such an awesome feeling of responsibility for another life normal or even common? Years later, I still worry that maybe I'm not doing my best and I'll pay for it with delinquent, drug-crazed, undernourished, unhappy, unloving or, heaven forbid, maladjusted children?

If I were a good mother
I'd always know where my kids are at l0:00 p.m.!
And before--not after--I hear a crash,
Or blood-curdling screams.


          Did television give me unrealistic expectations? I grew up with Claire Huxtable and Carol Brady of the Brady Bunch as my examples. Did it brainwash me into believing in an ideal mother, who always solved the problems of her children with a smile and in less than half an hour. Am I trying to live up to the mother in the TV ads who always has home-baked cookies warm from the oven for her children along with the perfect retort! Television not only gave me examples of "perfect" mothers, it also countered by showing me, every night on the 5:00 news, all the things that could go wrong if I failed as a mother: the delinquency, drug abuse, murders, gang wars, mental illness, kidnappings. And it instilled a feeling of guilt as it declaimed sententiously, "It's l0:00 p.m. Do you know where your children are?" even when they were in bed asleep.

If I were a good mother...
My home would always be spotlessly clean
With floors you could eat off and
Plates you can see yourselves in.

          Did commercials that sang of shining floors and shinier plates convince me that cleanliness was the embodiment of motherhood? Did it depict "mother love" as smiling when the baby threw the cereal on the floor or the dog tramped mud in on the new carpet? Did sitcoms that never showed clutter make me feel uneasy if my daughter cut out in the living room? When I bought a toy that wasn't "educational" or the latest fad, did I feel I was depriving my children? If they weren't computer whizzes, was it a reflection on me? Did it subconsciously (or consciously) influence me that love is giving your child all the toys, computer games or designer jeans he sees on TV? Or giving him only the "right cereal?

If I were a good mother...
I'd buy only organic food,
Serve only low-calorie, fat-free, high fiber
Peanut butter snacks carved in animal shapes!

           Was my generation the first to feel that there was a "better" way to do things? We wanted organic food, nutritious snacks, low-cholesterol breakfasts, sushi, Quinoa, tofu and bean sprouts. But our children still became junk-food junkies! Did we feel that if we bought the "right" food, they'd avoid all the obesity, heart-attacks and cancers that have plagued the earth for generations? Did we feel that supervised exercise and fun activities would make our children thinner and happier than we'd been?

           I must have subconsciously felt that my parent's generation must have been ineffective or our world wouldn't be in the mess it was in. I wasn't the only one I'm sure that wanted to show we could do a better job doing things "our way", but not even child psychology books could agree what the "best" way was. There has been free love, more welfare, living together, more "friendly" divorces, more single parents and same gender families, but has our generation done better than our parent's generation? We wanted to save the world with peace on earth and universal love, but our children are still unhappy, faced with greater problems, not only physical but sexual abuse, different wars, more dangerous drugs, expanded crime, increased poverty and homelessness, not to mention plagues like AIDS, than our own generation!

If I were a good mother...
I would help my kids with the "new" math,
So they'd become the class valedictorians
Or Olympic champions and make me proud!

          Do I try to live vicariously through my children? Because I was a full-time mother do I equate success or failure by my children's achievements? Or when I work outside the home, do I rationalize that I am giving my children more responsibility and opportunities to garner awards? Do I claim my children's honors are bonuses earned partly by me? How responsible am I for my children's successes or failures? I recall the tongue-in-cheek song, "Officer Krumpke" from West Side Story where delinquency is attributed to failure of the parents, the schools, society and the child itself. Just as the song comes full circle in putting blame for personal problems on everyone and no one, we can't pin down absolutely why children fail or succeed. We try as parents to do our best, but more often than not we succeed or fail in spite of ourselves. I am too apt to take credit for my children's successes and blame their failures on anything or anyone else. And is that fair to them or me?

If I were a good mother...
I'd be my child's best friend
And we'd have meaningful "raps"
In our quality time together!


          Was my generation too idealistic?  The disillusionment when I realized I was not an ideal parent made me feel not just inadequate but a failure. I was not a "good" mother, whatever that meant! My mother on the other hand never expected to be the perfect mother; but she felt she was a good mother. Would I worry less about how good a mother I was if my own mother could have shared her insight and failures with me as I raised my children? Do I see her as a more "perfect" mother that I can't live up to because she died before I made her a grandmother? Because I can't recall the times she yelled at me and got angry do I worry when I lose my cool? Was she more like me than I realize?

If I were really a good mother....
I would realize the raising a child
Is not always easy, but it's worthwhile.
The rewards are not always tangible,
But the most important thing is to keep trying.


          I felt the same overwhelming awe and fear with my fifth baby twenty years later as I did with my first when I was young and fearless! "Now that I know how impossible it is to be a good mother, why do I think I will succeed as mother this time?" To the awe and inadequacy I had felt many years ago when my oldest was born, was added the knowledge and sad experiences of the intervening years when my youngest was laid in my arms. I know now what I only suspected years before-- that raising a child is the most challenging and difficult job on the earth today! And that no time, or person is perfect.

          My mother once told me that she realized she was pregnant with my brother on the day the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. She was saddened to think that this new babe inside her might only serve as fodder in some war to secure peace in the world. The day that the my pregnancy test came back positive with my youngest child, I looked at the world and wondered if things could get worse. There were still wars, poverty, crime and pollution. I wondered what dangers my unborn child would face in this imperfect world. I am aware of the dangers that lurk hidden within each new day-- accidents, illnesses, failures, arguments, disappointments, wars, sociological perils, plagues, radiations, global warming and air pollution. But I also know the joys and delights, the revelry, the accomplishments, companionship, fun and excitement that lie behind each new day also.

          I laugh when I recall how I woke up my first baby continually to see if he was wet! I was so naive and innocent then! Now I don't worry if I will know what to do, but if I will have the energy to do it! And I realize how different and unique each child is and I know I can't treat them the same or expect them to react even similarly.

          There are many days when I feel very inadequate and a veritable failure as a mother; when I am late picking up my son from soccer or too busy to notice my daughter is unhappy. On those days, my "If I were a good mother" inner tape plays repeatedly and I feel like declaring maternal bankruptcy. But there are far more days when I feel good about how I'm doing as a mother and pat myself on the back. It may be something as simple as taking the baby to the park or fixing a special picnic supper that brings a glow to my heart. Or it may be that we survived a family dinner without a disaster or phone call!


          On those good days, I realize that I worry about how I'm doing as a mother because it is so important! I recall my mother's long-ago words that it's the loving and the enjoyment that counts and her advice to never quit trying! And so, although motherhood may not be instinctive and I'm far from perfect, I begin each new day vowing to be a not just a "good" mother (if there is such a mythical creature) but only a better mother than I was the day before.


          I try to learn from my errors and keep my head above water as I travel along the bumpy road of motherhood. But the scenery is always different and the road is filled with fun and excitement as we go along! And motherhood is one venture where the destination is only one part of the journey!

Friday, October 28, 2016

Eternal Perspective

I went to the Atlanta Temple that spring day over 20 years ago seeking comfort and strength. My problems may have been small compared to others—but that day they appeared huge and insurmountable. The skies were leaden; the rain had been coming down in sheets for almost a week. The air was heavy and oppressive as I yearned for the sun to pierce through the gloom and warm my soul.

Sitting in the chapel in my rented temple clothing, my tears fell like the rain outside. One of the temple workers patted me on the back and whispered that it would be "all right." I looked at the name of the sister whose proxy I was that day, and wondered if all her days had been sunny; then the thought struck me with great force—of course not. Life on earth contains both joy and sorrow—too frequently we dwell on the sorrows and forget the joys.
That thought struck me with the force of an electric shock—perhaps our existence on earth was like the view we focus on when looking through a camera’s narrow lens. We determine our individual focus—whether we set a mental telephoto viewpoint which magnifies the large, immovable rocks, the encompassing weeds and the dreary mud. Or we decide whether to enlarge our focus to catch the rainbow on the edge of the sky, the gardenias blooming with breathless perfection, or the softness of the green velvet grass. The gardenia blooms whether we see it and appreciate it or not. 

Nothing limits our view except ourselves. If we move our imaginary lens too rapidly,
the landscape around us becomes an incomprehensible blur of color and texture. But if we focus on one thing to the exclusion of all else, we may miss the significance of something else. When we try to broaden our focus to include everything in sight, the panorama becomes so wide that we can see nothing distinctly. We pick and choose the focus which we concentrate on—and that affects our whole vision of life.
As the temple session began, I still slumped wearily in my seat. Although my thoughts were whirling with new insights, my shoulders still bowed with the accumulated problems of a lifetime. However, as I concentrated on the endowment ceremony, I felt an unnatural need to sit up tall, to slough off the sorrow and hold my head and shoulders high. I consciously decided I would do so, reflecting that I needed to represent the sister whose work I was doing with dignity and respect; she was not sorrowing this day, but rejoicing in the eternal significance of the blessings she was receiving.
The name of the woman whose proxy I was that day was Spanish and she had lived
over 200 years ago.  I wondered about her. Had she been rich or poor? Had she been humble or imperious? Throughout the session, whenever I would begin to slump, it was as though someone poked me in the back.  I would immediately catch myself, determined to represent the sister for whom I was proxy in a stately manner. As I concentrated on the words of the temple ceremony, and considered what they meant to her eternal progression, my mood began to change. It was as though I was adjusting the focus of my "mental" camera, and seeing things that had always been there, but which I had missed previously.
I reflected on the wonderful blessings I had been endowed with during my life, and gloried in my knowledge of the plan of salvation. I gave thanks that I had the blessings of the restored gospel during my lifetime--the Holy Ghost to guide my decisions, priesthood blessings to strengthen me, and covenants to give direction to my existence. I wondered about the sister for whom I was proxy, and if her mortal life had been difficult or easy, exalted or lowly. Most of all I wondered what her perspective on life had been. Did she mourn what she lacked, or did she see the joy and beauty which surrounded her? Whatever her life had been, I knew she was grateful for the service I was doing for her that day. For I felt a special fellowship.

          As the endowment session came to its conclusion, I looked down at my rented temple clothing, and another thought struck me. It was as though I felt a voice say, "I had much of that which men yearn for on earth.  I had wealth and did many memorable things.  But nothing I did on earth can compare with what you did for me today.
          “I wore satins and silks and was presented to royalty, but never have I been as honored as now-- for the temple robes that adorn you are more precious than any earthly raiment."  
 I reflected on my simple cotton robes I wore in her name that day. Nothing she had worn in her lifetime could compare in significance with them. For the robes I had worn symbolized covenants and promises that would not disintegrate and decay in earth’s fragile atmosphere as their earthly counterparts would.

It was still raining as I left the temple that day, but I did not feel its sting, nor did I notice the puddles it left in its wake. It seemed that my focus had shifted imperceptibly during the temple session from the mundane and dreary to a more exalted view. I looked out over the vista of Atlanta from the heights of the temple mound, and my heart took a snapshot. The scene had not changed since I entered the temple, but my focus had. The temple had helped me see with an eternal perspective.

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

North to Alaska, Part II

Fun Nighttime Activities

My son Marlowe is a party animal so he enjoyed all the shows in the Queen’s lounge, featuring the Amsterdam Sings and Dancers, the ABBA favorites in the Crow’s Nest, as well as name that tune and was a hit at Karaoke several nights. I watched him woo the audience with his karaoke performances, then laughed at him line-dancing and just dancing to the music. I didn’t dance, but it inspired me to take a Zumba or line-dancing class back at home.

I don’t know what other shows Marlowe watched (I was so tired I went to bed early many nights), but I know there was various “Name that Tune” shows along with various performer’s music including that of Frank Sinatra, Groovy 60s singalong, Billy Joel and Elton John, Motown, Abba, Neil Diamond, and country western music, just to mention a few—although I doubt Marlowe watched the last. There were various comedians and a magician that he relished, I know, as well as a number of trivia games. The ship definitely kept us entertained.

Meeting People

I love to meet and talk to people and that was especially fun on the cruise. My daughter texted me that a friend of hers from when we lived in Italy was onboard the ship, and we located and talked to her. Mostly we met people at dinner.

Most of the dining room tables were for eight people, so we shared with different people each night, and it was so fun talking to people and making new friends. By the end of the voyage, I was having trouble keeping straight who was who and what night we had dinner with them. On a ship as large as ours, you would think you would never run into people again, but we kept doing so.
Beginning our Victoria Haunted Tour


My Favorite Things

I am asked what were my favorite parts of the cruise, and it is hard to decide which was best. I loved all the excursions, the food, and the entertainment (although Marlowe’s karaoke and dancing has to be in the top five most enjoyable activities). I think the most enjoyable was meeting interesting people, and of course my scrapbooking and culinary experiences.


If you get a chance to take a cruise to Alaska—DO IT! TODAY! It will be an adventure of a lifetime.

Victoria habor
The Hubbard Glacier
Bear looking up at us
Chunk of ice from glacier
Juneau from the tram

Marlowe & a moose face off,

The Mendenhall Glacier looks like a frozen river



Whale jumping out of the water

North to Alaska, Part I

Marlowe as we left Seattle
My late husband, Ed, always wanted to go on a cruise to Alaska. I admit I wasn’t too enthusiastic. However, now having been on a cruise to Alaska, I realize how wrong I was. A cruise to Alaska is a blast, especially if you are going with family.

My oldest son Marlowe invited me to go on a cruise to Alaska with him, and even took care of my
trip from Salt Lake City to Seattle where he lives. We went on a 7-day Holland America Cruise, stopping in Juneau, Hubbard Glacier, Sitka, Ketchikan and ending up in Victoria before returning to Seattle.

What is a cruise like? No cooking, cleaning, or picking up for a week is one biggie. As well as no gardening, no wi-fi or phone except in port, and fabulous food. But there is far more fun than just that!

We boarded our cruise on Sunday afternoon, after I attending church with Marlowe and his family; I heard Marlowe and his daughter sing in the choir. We took Lyft (an alternative to a taxi), and dropped our stuff in the room before going to dinner.

Food on a Cruise

Marlowe & Beth at Gala Night
There were several options to eating on a cruise—
  1. The Lido deck (on the 8th floor), a perpetual buffet with food almost all day and half the night
  2. The formal dining room (call La Fontaine on our ship), where you could eat breakfast and dinner at certain times of the day, plus several Gala Nights where formal wear was requested
  3. Specialty dining room where you paid extra to eat there. Ours were the Canaletto Restaurant, where you had authentic Italian food, and the Pinnacle Grill where you had steak and seafood in an intimate setting
  4. There were several fun events, like the “Klondike Gold Rush Dinner,” “Alaska Lumberjack Sail away & Salmon Bake,” and “An Ice Cream Social” (with ice sculpturing)
  5. There were also some cafes where you could get drinks and coffee throughout the ship. 
I loved the convenience of the Lido deck food, especially when we had to be on the dock at 7:45 a.m., but the elegant food of the formal Dining Room was nice, especially the steak and lobster night.

Activities

The hot tub
People have asked me what I did all day when we were at sea—everything! During the day, there were craft classes, cooking classes, lectures about the upcoming port, fitness classes in the workout room, Microsoft classes, newly released DVD movies in the theater that you could see next day on your room TV, seminars on painters, “Name that Tune” and other trivia games, line dance classes, art auctions, Bingo—indeed you might say, you didn’t have time to do all the activities.
At night there was Karaoke, piano bar entertainers, Showtime with the Amsterdam singers and dancers, magicians, comedians, singers, music and dancing—you name it, there were all kinds of entertainment—often geared to the port, so no one was bored onboard.

And of course there was also shopping, shopping, shopping onboard the shops, with special sales. Whether you were looking for something inexpensive or very expensive, souvenirs or diamonds.
There was also the Greenhouse Spa, with various seminars from feet, to backs, to flawless skin, acupuncture, teeth whitening, as well as all the services of the spa. As soon as we were underway on the ship, I began to get dizzy (I have a middle ear problem), so one of the first things I did was get an acupuncture treatment to deal with it. In addition to the regular acupuncture, she left four small beads in the folds of my ear. I had no further problem, even when the seas got rough as a storm hit as we were going to Sitka. It was a small price to pay to have no problem with my balance during the cruise.

I took several of the craft classes (and made envelopes and cards from Alaska magazines), a few cooking classes, some “Location Guides” where I could learn about the history of the upcoming port,



I took several Digital Workshop Classes to learn about Microsoft features like Photo Gallery,

MovieMaker, Cortana, One-Drive and even several Q&A sessions, where you could meet with the Digital Workshop host and she would answer your individual computer or Windows problems. But then everyone knows I’m a technology nerd.  I was surprised how full the classes were.

Atmosphere of the Ship

Being onboard was like being in a luxury hotel, with far more amenities. Several pools, a hot tub, gorgeous artwork everywhere, game rooms and a casino, with lots of seats to just watch the ocean.

Port Excursions

Marlowe & Beth in Sitka
Some people go on cruises for the excursions, and I can see why! There are hundreds of excursions, from flying on a seaplane or helicopter to see the sights, tours of the local towns, underground mine and gold panning, tramways to see over the scenery. There were even Zipline expeditions, dry-suit snorkeling (yes, in Alaska), sled dog and musher’s camps, kayaking, bike or extended hikes, wildlife quests, whale-sighting adventures, jetboat expeditions, guided fly fishing expedition, floatplane flights over the magnificent Misty Fjords (the only way to see them), deep sea fishing, backcountry jeep & canoe safari, off-road adventures—there were too many to choose from. The more adventuresome and exotic they were, the more they caught.

Marlowe allowed me to choose which expeditions we went on, as this was “my” cruise, indicating that someday he’d be back and do his own thing, while I probably never would. I love history and nature, so most of the excursions I picked were based on that.



In Juneau, we went to the Mendenhall Glacier, Rainforest Gardens, and took a trip via the Mt.
Mendenhall Glacier
Roberts’ Tramway to an eagle raptor’s nest.  We saw the city down below from an eagle’s view while learning about the Juneau gold-mining history.

The Hubbard Glacier was not a port, but a close view of the majestic Hubbard Glacier near Kodiak, where we had Dutch Pea Soup and hot chocolate while we enjoyed the glacier. Marlowe and I kept trying to find the best place to view the glacier, so Marlowe’s fitbit recorded the 29 flights of stairs he walked (or ran) up that day, as well as the 16,000 steps he made. As we left the glacier, they hosted a polar bear plunge in the Lido pool for those crazy enough to do so. Obviously, we didn’t. I enjoyed the hot tub!

Beth taking photos of the Hubbard Glacier

In Sitka, the Russian capital of Alaska, we went on a nature hike, visited bears, saw the salmon going upstream, and learned about Sitka’s history. All of this was done in driving rain, but it didn’t deter us or negate our enjoyment. We learned a great deal about the native Tlingit natives and that was fascinating.

Marlowe mimicking a totem







In Ketchikan, we took a Cultural Discovery
Excursion, learned a lot about native culture, saw the Totem Heritage Center, and explored the Potlatch Park, including a fully recreated native Alaskan village, and saw how they carved the totem poles. I really enjoyed the history and understanding of the culture, including how you got into the clan house.

Our final port, Victoria, British Columbia, was different as we arrived in the evening, so Marlowe and I decided to tour the Empress Hotel, Parliament Buildings, and go on a haunted tour of Victoria—on foot. Luckily it was a beautiful, warm night and we learned more history than being scared. Instead of high tea at the Empress Hotel, I bought a miniature tea set for my collection.

Beth & Marlowe in front of the Victorian Parliament



Marlowe & Beth as we came aboard











Marlowe by entrance to the clan house


Potlatch Park--a Tlinget Clan House




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