Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Chanukah

I volunteered at Congregation Beth Yum to make 365 latkes. I do not like to make them. I do not fry foods. But could not say NO to friend Joan D. I was lucky to make my job drying pots and pans. And I also packed the pans with the latkes and counted them. They are for the Chanukah dinner at the temple. And the Sunday school party where Jack and I volunteered. I helped the kids decorate cookies and make dradels out of a marshmallow, Hershey kiss and a pretzel stick.










We had about 10 cooks all telling how they make their Latkes. We made 375 latkes and used 50 pounds of potatoes.


The G grands came up from FL to celebrate with the kids. These four kids all --have winter birthdays therefore a group birthday cake.
Holden, Lila, Jonah, Adley.


Adley and Emma both got this book written by Beth Ostrofsky Stern. She is Eve's high school friend and now married to the famous Howard Stern. Beth rescues cats and finds homes for them. She also is so beautiful and nice.


Thea and Richard Heimlech and Jack and I drove to Charleston SC for a day and dinner. We walked the Battery and went to Trader Joes's for shopping. This is a big one and such fun to shop at. I bought nuts and dried fruits. I love the shampoo and conditioner that is their brand. Store was very busy.
They have the bet flowers and plants, which I did not purchase.





I hosted the Chanukah party for the Cycle Babbles bike club. 22 people, a gift exchange, and great food. Everyone brought a special food and we bought Publix fried chicken which is the best.



This house is the perfect entertaining one. Big room so everyone can be together.


Nancy and Joel Lerner


The only picture I did not take and it is fuzzy.


Elaine and Ed Applebaum


Maxine Uttel and Jim Patsios


Lou and Morris Drucker


Angela and Howard Mistal


Charlotte a and Steve White


Sheri Farbstein and Howard Rothchild. Gordan F died last Feb. Howard is Sheri's ex-husband from 43 years ago. His wife died from cancer also, about 6 years ago. They are now together. Sheri says Gordan liked Howard and would be happy and approve of her being with him. They can now phone the kids together from one house when they are together in the same city. This is such a nice story.


Sandy and Richard Levin


Betsy and Morry Hess


Marcia and Jerry Mohl


Better picture of Charlotte and Steve White from their holiday card.


Maxine always wears purple. So we though she would look perfect on our purple sofa.


Here are most of the bikers. We also have the people that do not bike and are called, Eaters. We also have three dogs that often join us in baskets on the front of a bike. This is Sassy, the Levin dog.


Dave and Shirley Wright's house. Dog is waiting for Xmas.


I went to the gym for an 8:00 class. There were 6 of us. Then the 9:00 class had 20 people in it. I remember when I was the younger woman in classes. I was 30-40 years older than everyone in the 8:00 class. I am behind the record, speakers with the while hair, taking the picture. I am thrilled to be able to keep up with these women in classes. But how did I get to be so OLD. I remember looking at the people,in the Silver Sneakers classes and thinking how old they were and that I was never going to be in the class. Well, I now have a Silver Sneakers Membership but I exercise with the people in good healthy shape.


Holiday picture of the Lewis family. The kids live from CA, SC and London, England. Donald and Lois now living in Charleston SC.




Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Thanksgiving in NJ

It was a terrible drive. Jack is not sure he wants to do it again, ever.
We left HHI at 6:00 am on Tuesday for Ellen in MD. It was dark, raining heavy and thick fog for the next three hours. Then there were the traffic jams. The 9 1/2 hours drive took 12 hours. But then we had a nice visit with Sadie and Emma. P.F. Chang's for dinner. We left MD at 9:00 AM in heavy rain and fog. Also traffic. Arrived in Westfield to two inches of snow and COLD, three hours later. But happy grandkids. We stopped at the Bagel Chateau. Bought a dozen bagels for the cheaper weekday price. $8 Monday - Thursday. $11 Friday Thursday Sunday. A container of chopped liver and some nova and a great lunch was had.
This is the arrival into Westfield.


Eleanor G made there cupcakes with sweet potatoes.


Adley and I did hours and HOURS of art projects. And I am not artistic. This is the play dough. She had it least 20 jars of different colors. That she just got for her birthday. He her birthday party with many presents of arty items. There was the large art jar with all kinds of stuff. Make yourself bracelets. We made snow men kites. And there were the puzzles that we did over and over again. We used to do that with Sadie. She. loved to do puzzles. There would be 15 different ones at the house and we would do every one in an afternoon..






There was the hour long bubble bath with Adley. When she finally got our of the water, it was COLD. I had no idea or I would have put more hot water into it. But Adley and Sadie are never cold. Mollie has the cold blood running it her veins. Sadie does not need winter coats. Jim wears shorts in any season. I am COLD blooded.



Grandma Marilyn , mother Eleanor and Lila, age six. Marilyn made many different vegetables for the dinner.


Sadie


Emma


Holden is 5 feet 4. Inches and now taller than me. My white crazy hair makes me look taller


His face is getting longer. And the nose is also changing and getting bigger. He is a tall, lean boy,





This the the final picture of Maya with braces. We do not have one picture for the past two years with her mouth opened and smiling. I asked her to give me this picture as the last one before the braces come off on Tuesday. She has very thick and long beautiful hair. ADLEY has thin hair. Like Eve. And the same hair color as Eve and Holden.


On Friday we went to David Pennock's house for the afternoon and dinner. Kathy P is visiting for a month. And all her kids and family came. A very nice time. There was new and better art projects for Adley there. And they danced to the Wii.
Saturday we drove to the Burg since the K family did not get to NJ because of fear of the bad weather. First Eve made me her special. Hot cooked bananas, almonds in a Grape Nut type of cereal. It was very good. I will have to fancy up my morning cereals. I have given up SUGAR because of high sugar in my blood. And my counts have come down. But no chocolate and I do miss that.
The VH are in NYC. Saw Matilda and the Radio City Rockettes. It took the VH 5 1/2 hours to drive back from NYC to home on Sunday.
Dance class with the Rockettes.





Eve's Chanukah Bush. She always wanted a Xmas tree growing up. I never had any desire to celebrate Xmas . Not jealous. I hung up a sock and my mom put the candy that was already in the house into it. Went to talk to Santa at the Little's shoe store and that was that. Never got a Xmas gift. I do understand Eve.
Maya and Dave with the tree on the top of the car.






We then drove to Pittsburgh to see the K kids. Nathan and Mollie slept over. We went to the movies. Jack and Abe and Stu watched the Steelers lose another game. Good meals and fun with them. I forgot to take any pictures of the kids.
The house in the burg was fine. Grass looks wonderful. And the mailman is still delivering mail even though it is all to be forwarded. Luckily our neighbors check the mailbox and the house for us.
Drive thru West Virginia


It even rained heavy as we crossed the bridge onto HHI. By the time we got to,the house the sun was out and rain was dried up.


Sara Schreibman and Ruth. We stopped in Charlotte for an overnight visit. Mike's nursing home was in lock down because of the flu. So we could not see him. He is very ill and I am so sad for him and the family. This is a selfie that I took.


------------------------------------
Adley and Dave wrote a poem:

Goldilocks and The Three Bears

Adley walked in wood
The bears were making something good
The bears left for a walk, but not to far
Adley came upon a door ajar
She smelled porridge in the air
So she walked in without a care
Tasting each until she found one just right
Relaxing on chairs in sight
Broke chairs left her mired
She adjourned above very tired
Picked the softest bed to take a nap
When returned the bears from their lap
The bears roared a terrible fright
Adley jumped up with all her might
She ran out screaming
But in the end she was just dreaming

Monday, November 24, 2014

Article From the Huffington Post

Article about is she an Chinese Amerocan or an Ameican Chinese.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/emily-champion/post_8624_b_6173840.html?utm_hp_ref=parents&ir=Parents


- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Blog of adopted Chinese girl

The pictures did not come up on this blog when I copied and pasted.

Discovering Pieces of Who She Is -- In a Place She Has No Memory of Being
Melissa Ludtke 11/14/14 05:59 PM ET
My daughter Maya was three days old, a healthy newborn, when police officers in China's rural Xiaxi Town found her. Or so her adoption papers say. On the 25-kilometer drive to Changzhou's orphanage, the nearest social welfare institute to this farming town, a female officer cradled her. Maya learned this comforting detail when she was 7 years old and at Xiaxi's police station. The scant information in her official documents only hinted at her beginnings: "taken to the Changzhou Children's Welfare Institute by the Police Substation of Xiaxi," our English translation read. So, on a June morning in 2004, the day after Maya and I had been back in her orphanage for the first time, I asked our guide to take us to the police substation.

No officer at the station had been on Xiaxi's police force in September 1996, when Maya was abandoned due to China's one-child policy. If they couldn't recall her finding, they'd found other babies since then, so at my request they told us what happened when they did. With Maya standing next to the only female on the force, the officer revealed that the woman officer held the babies on the way to the orphanage. In hearing this, Maya's smile broke through as a rainbow sometimes does after an intense storm passes. Relief washed over her. Yet, to absorb this new reality as it collided with imagined inklings about being left in an unidentified location was exceedingly difficult. She had no questions, Maya told us.

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Maya, 7, with Xiaxi police officer. June 2004. Photo by Melissa Ludtke
"She's the first to come back," the policeman said, breaking an awkward silence. No other abandoned Xiaxi baby had come back to their station. "Happy and healthy," he declared, his eyes fixed on Maya. His pleased grin conveyed a sentiment in need of no translation. On our way into Xiaxi, Maya gazed out the window. I could not imagine the emotional stew this policeman's words had stirred inside her. I held her as we sat in silence. I wanted her to know the courage it took to hear what she'd heard, and so I leaned in and softly said, "Maya, you gave them such a magnificent gift. By seeing you happy and healthy you gave them an ending to their tough journey in finding babies. I know they are grateful."

More than anything, I wanted Maya to return to America feeling a positive connection to this country and town she'd come from. Once in Xiaxi, Maya and I went into the outdoor market. Merchants' eyes tracked us, mostly staring at my blonde hair. Foreigners do not show up in Xiaxi. Shoppers reached out to touch Maya and talked at her since she didn't know what they were saying. When she recoiled, they moved away. Why was a Chinese girl clinging to this foreigner? Maya was grasping my hand tightly as we circled the stalls of vegetables, meat and fish. We hurried to our car.

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Maya and her mom in Xiaxi market. June 2004
"Back to Changzhou," I told our driver. Our visit to Xiaxi was over. Setting off from Changzhou, I hoped we'd spend the afternoon wandering in Xiaxi Town. Yet, in my daughter's grasp and frightened look she was telling me that I'd made a mistake in bringing her here, especially after all she'd absorbed at the police station.

Back "Home" in Xiaxi, as a Teenager

At the age of 16, Maya returned to Xiaxi, and Jennie, her lifelong friend, was with her. The girls were born a week apart, Jennie in a nearby farming town. Police in Xixiashu found her when she was one day old. Or so her adoption papers say. For nine months, the girls lived in neighboring cribs in Changzhou's orphanage.

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Maya (front, left), Jennie, (second back, left) in Changzhou orphanage. June 1997. Photo by Melissa Ludtke
In August 2013, Maya and Jennie set out each morning from Changzhou to spend time with girls who'd grown up in these towns where they'd been abandoned. I had hired a bilingual video crew to capture these rare encounters among girls whose lives diverged so dramatically after their births. I sensed that the girls' cross-cultural experiences could illuminate for others how being back in a place of meaning, a place holding clues about a life that might have been, can become a powerful path to self-discovery.

"I felt at home," Jennie wrote, back home in America, "Even though I had no memories of Xixiashu, I finally fit in with the majority. After years of being surrounded by people who do not look like me, I was able to recognize physical features that were similar to mine."

Being with the Chinese "hometown" girls helped Maya frame a sense of her identity:

"So what are you?" the [Chinese] girls asked me. 'You look Chinese on the outside but you are American on the inside.' At first, I detested this description. If the substance of my being is not Chinese, I might as well be white. Once content with describing myself as 'Chinese American,' now I was hit with its vagueness. Where do I belong between being Chinese and becoming American?"
Adolescent adoptees often want to search for their birth family, some of them feeling that only a biological reconnection will buttress them during the challenging years of identity formation. Maya and Jennie did not return in search of their birth families, who had left no traceable clue about who they were. Instead, the "hometown" girls passed on to Maya and Jennie the gift of foundational pieces of self-understanding; after being abandoned as girl babies, now, as teens, they know what happened to some girls whose birth parents kept them. The Americans returned home feeling as though they now belong to a place that had felt so distant from their lives. Maya wrote about her feelings when she returned home:

"For those I met in Xiaxi, family is blood and ancestry. "You do not know your real parents?" strangers would ask me soon after we met, sympathetic and eager to help me find mine. "When is your birthday? What orphanage were you from?" To me, their words "real mother" sit heavy in my mind. Even if I'd spoken their dialect fluently, I am not sure I could have explained. I have a real mother, who raised me and loves me. My biological family might not be whom I romanticized them to be and finding such strangers would not instantly conjure love. Instead, it was in the welcoming care that countless strangers showed me -- in placing watermelon slices in both of my hands, pulling a comb through my hair, and attempting to cool me in 110-degree heat -- that I found home in Xiaxi, and that was enough."
Melissa Ludtke is a veteran national magazine journalist who is producing "Touching Home in China: in search of missing girlhoods," a transmedia iBook chronicling Maya and Jennie's return to their "hometowns" to be published in September 2015. A free download of its pilot chapter is at the iBooks Store. For more information, go to the project's website or check out its Facebook page. This is adapted from an essay published on The Broad Side in September.

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Location:Hearthwood Dr,Hilton Head Island,United States

Adley is 4 years old.

ADLEY opens her presents.

YouTube Video




Adley singing in Chinese

YouTube Video


Adley at her Frozen birthday party at the YMCA


YouTube Video





Halloween party with the Bike group.





Holden has good artistic ability. This is a drawing he did spelling his name. Another work of art has been entered into a contest at school. Every year he has won the art contest at the school.





The G family are on the Bar Mitzvah circuit of parties.









































The wild white haired Ruth is her new sweater jacket. Bought at Capriccios in Squirrel Hill from friend Edna Galioto. I went shopping with Shirley W. On our Friday's together. We went to Savannah. Lunch at Toucan.





It was Friends and Family day. I posted this on FB to thank Karen B. For telling us about it. But in truth, I did not buy a thing. It was just a fun picture. Karen used to work at Coach and now Talbots. She always puts pictures on FB wearing something from the stores as she is out and about. At meals with family or touring an area.





Every year the neighborhood has an Oyster Roast. We he good weather and Jack ate his fill of the Oysters.






The Cycle Babbles Bike Club.