Tuesday


7
Jul 15

British selfies

(A few extra shots from our last visit to London, because it is summertime and our trip was grand.)

We were playing around with the selfie stick. Yes, we have one, and it facilitates the production of quality photographs. We’re actually laughing at you for not having one.

Anyway, this was outside of our flat in London. We were waiting on a family friend to stop by. She goes way back with The Yankee’s folks and lives and works in London. Turns out she lives not basically around the corner from where we were staying. We only had time to take a few pictures:


30
Jun 15

An observation on animals

When you see pets — or people, for that matter — only occasionally you see them in a different light than if you had daily interactions.

People’s personality traits are more endearing or obnoxious. Things you thought you liked, you might rethink. Things that you thought you disliked might not seem so bad after all.

With animals it is a little bit different — personalities and interactions being what they are. But I look at this pup and I think there’s something worth learning.

Ya know, she’s got the right idea.

I didn’t even run that far today. It was one of those days where I ran precisely enough to get in a 5K. And then I stopped, right away. But tired? That’s me.


23
Jun 15

The more I think about it …

(Holdover thoughts from our time in Belgium.)

I want a waffle.

Perhaps the biggest disappoint of visiting Brussels — aside from not meeting Jean Claude Van Damme — was that you couldn’t find a waffle magnet. We do the complete tourist thing with the magnets, yes, and our fridge is awesome.

I’d just want a waffle magnet that looks like this:

Of course I’d probably walk by it every day and do that, so maybe it is a good thing.


16
Jun 15

Hier wohnte

You see those words all over the parts of Berlin we tromped around in, and it is sobering.

You get the sense in that great old city that this has been a psychologically hard place to live. I know from books and film footage how bad things were in the city during the war. I’ve read about the divided city and remember the Wall falling. I’ve been to the Holocaust Museum in D.C. and seen historical footage.

It isn’t history or grainy footage or an abstraction when you’re there.

“The past intrudes into our society,” said Wolfgang Thierse, president of the Bundestag.

Now I’ve seen the bullet holes in the buildings. I toured the Checkpoint Charlie Museum, documenting the East Germans who conceived incredible ways to get across to West Berlin. I read there about the frustrations of oppressed East Germans who didn’t get the support from the West they’d hoped for during the uprising in 1953. We met people in Berlin who grew up in East Germany, of course. One guy told us about how his mother, who was an East German tour guide, was disciplined for once calling it the Wall. (East Germans said “the anti-fascist protection barrier” was for keeping out spies.)

The city is living with a lot. Pick any emotion. That burden must be heavy.

And then you see these:

Those are stolpersteine, “stumbling blocks.” The monuments, created Gunter Demnig, commemorate a victim of Nazi oppression. They remember individuals – those who died, survived or emigrated – who were condemned to prisons, euthanasia facilities, sterilization clinics, concentration camps and extermination camps.

Jews, Christians, gypsies, homosexuals, blacks, communists, the disabled, they’re all represented by stolpersteine. More than 48,000 have been laid in 18 countries. You see them all over Berlin. (And in some cities they are still, apparently, somewhat contentious.)

Hier wohnte means here lived. Ermordet means murdered.


9
Jun 15

Evening view

Dinner with friends tonight.

That’s not a bad view.