Category: Thoughts

Some new pictures

*** editor’s note – Found this old draft from 2009 – Published as is. ****

Thom upgraded the blog this week and then told me how much easier it would be to update.  Then the first day I used it, it was not updating properly and my computer ended up crashing.  Anyhow here are some pictures from the summer

LiLi loves to paint but she does spend a lot of time painting the “special” paintbrushes before painting on the paper:
Painting Again-4395

Painting Again-4391

In the spring, we went to Davis Farmland where LiLi had a blast and she is still talking about going back. She got to ride a horse, milk a goat and help a crowd herd a bunch of goats in addition to seeing many big and baby farm animals. The rat was one I could do without but otherwise we all enjoyed it.

Davis Farmland 2009 Spring-103

Observations

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Li Li and Poppy Shucking corn.

As we get ready for our trip back to China it’s started me thinking about how much has changed technology wise since 2007 when we last visited.

In January 2007 there was no iPhone, no iPad, Facebook was something only college students did, there was no Pinterest, Twitter was yet another thing only a few people did, and if you wanted to keep a bunch of people updated about something email was your best bet, although some people might go through the trouble to start a blog. Myspace was a big deal but it got more publicity than actual use.

That was the world in which in December of 2006 I bought a domain name, found a hoster, leveraged the simplicity of WordPress and started blogging. Reading through these old posts is a bit like time-traveling – dredging up memories and emotions. I can’t believe Li Li was ever that small – and yet her smile and her cheeks haven’t changed a bit.

200px-Samuel_PepysI’ve never been a diary keeper – too much like navel gazing for me and down that road lies the tendency to turn into another Pepsys, but in hindsight I really liked that every night while we were in China after putting Li Li, to bed I’d sit at the keyboard and try to gather my thoughts into a coherent digestible chunk leavening them with a few photos and maybe a bad joke or two. I’m not sure why I rarely feel the need to do that in a normal day in everyday life. Maybe it’s the lack of new stimulus that being in a new environment brings? Maybe it was the lack of other options to while away the time? Who knows but looking back on my old posts helps me relive each day all over again – something I’m not great at. My mental buffer is too small and I tend to lose many of those memories while retaining odd random shards that pop up uninvited.

Why can I remember the simple excitement and joy of hunting for crawfish in creek when I was 7 years old but not have no recollection of some of the conversations I’ve had in the last year? Why can I remember the light at sunrise in Yellowstone on a September morning but have no memory some people’s faces?

This trip back to China will be really interesting. We’ll be going back as a group of 7 people. We’ll be visiting 8 cities: Beijing, Xi’an, HengFeng and Nanchang (both in Jiangxi Province), Chengdu, Yangshuo, Guangzho and Hong Kong. We’ll be doing the usual touristy things without a ton of downtime. Our previous trip involved lots of hanging out in the hotel or going to see one local site or village before eating and napping each day because we had our new babies they needed naps and baths. . This trip evolved into a far more ambitious journey than we originally thought we’d be doing when we started planning a visit back to China – and I’m sure we’ll all be longing for naps before it’s over.

We suckered, I mean, convinced Catherine’s parents, her sister and our friend Anne to join us. So I’ve become the de facto travel agent booking tickets and hotels, finding drivers to handle our large group, arranging tour guides and planning activities. Since you don’t go to China every day we ended up adding this activity and that activity, oh and we’ve got to do that one as well. Hopefully our trip won’t devolve into planes, trains and automobiles – although we’ll be using all three modes of travel.

We’ll have guides and drivers pre-arranged for some of our cities, but for others we’ll just figure things out when we get there. Li Li and I have re-started Chinese lessons with a private tutor to at least get down pat a few sentences and phrases. Catherine will be the trip physician doling out medicines as needed and generally being the voice of reality.

Keep your eyes peeled for more updates -t

 

 

We’re starting to figure out this whole video thing

So, we’ve had a video camera since last year and we’ve taken videos but we were never able to do much with them. Catherine finally figured out how to upload them to Youtube and I’ve upgraded the back-end of our wordpress blog

You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video

Here’s the video of Li Li singing happy birthday and playing her Ukelele

After a significant amount of painful trial and error I downloaded and learned how to use the plugins so hopefully going foward we should be able to post more videos. Let us know what you think. -t

Li Li’s First Art Exhibit

The University Art Gallery displayed Li Li’s drawing in her first exhibit. The 22 drawings were chosen and hung by the artist herself. Critics praised her bold use of color and form, as well commenting on her strong use of technique in the texture and layering of her ink. The critics however weren’t universally laudatory – several found her use of non-archival means to exhibit her work as a short-sighted decision that reflects poorly on her sense of her own position in the evolving dialectic.

The use of irregular canvas sizes was deemed to be a commentary on the necessity to not accept the normal and the requirement to forge one’s own identity in a cookie-cutter world. In addition the choice to hang her drawing so densely forces the viewer to take them into their consciousness simultaneously and interact with them as a cohort versus isolating them individually. The 22 pieces are untitled and available for view until the artist, or her parents, decides the exhibit if finished. Prices are available on request. -t

Li Li draw and hung these pictures all by herself.

Li Li drew and hung these pictures all by herself.

 And here is a detail of some of the pieces.

The reason for the variation in picture hanging has not been explained by the artist.

The reason for the variation in picture hanging has not been explained by the artist.