Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Blog Post 3: State

Claymont High Schools isn’t known for the most appropriate things. However, our wrestling program is something our community is always proud to be a part of. Sure, we get supporters at other sporting events. But the turnouts are nothing like that of a wrestling match. Of course, the main goal is to get our boys to the state tournaments level. Every year we get quite a few, and have made plenty of traditions out of it.
            In order to celebrate the boys’ achievements of making it to state, many activities are held and performed. When it comes to state time, no one is in town. It’s like everyone just packed up and left. Leading up to that though, we start by decorating cars and rooms, making sure the boys know we are all proud of them.

            When the boys pack up onto the bus and leave for state, the town hosts a send off. In recent years, not many other sports have participated in something big. So this has mostly become a community tradition among the wrestling program. What happens is, parents, students, friends, and family, line the roads to which the buses are routed. They hold signs and banners as a form of good luck, sometimes airhorns. We watch the boys head for state, screaming and cheering. Then, the whole town packs up and heads off with them. And when they come home, we’re all still lined on the streets celebrating their achievements (and the fact they can finally eat now).

By Olivia

Blog 3

  For my family Thanksgiving is the most important holiday of the year. Thanksgiving is all about thankfullness , kindness and the act of giving. From a young age we are taught to be thankful for what we have and recieve, as well as we are taught to understand the power of giving. But, you could also say Thanksgiving dinner is always wonderful. 
   We all rush to get everything prepared in time, and stress ourselves out over the samethings every year, that in the end never actually really matter. We stress ourselves out about making sure everything is done on time, when we already know as usual everyone will be late for some reason or another.
    But once everything calms down and everyone get seated we all understand why once again we have celebrated this important day. We all then talk about the things we are thankful for over the last year. As well as talking about the things we didnt even realize we were indeed thankful for. 
     Generally after the dinner the men all go outside and show off the new guns from this past year. They also make sure everyone gets to take a turn with the new gun. The women usually stay inside to clean up and gossip. Also, talking about how everyone thought they day would go bad, but as usual Thanksgiving had been another memorable and successful year.

By Harlie

Monday, February 27, 2017

Blog 3


I wish I had some extraordinary family tradition. Although, most of our get togetherness are full of laughter, nothing exciting stands out. However, I do have  tradition that is different, which is that is spending most my free  time in a spiritual journey of recovery.  When I am not at working or going to school, I am surrounded by recovering alcoholics and addicts. I am highly involved with helping women who struggle with addiction and alcoholism.  I go to 12 Step Meetings, where they practice living an honest, spiritual and sober life. I have three years of sobriety and my “drug of choice” was alcohol.  I don’t think it really matters what your drug of choice because they  all involve an “obsession” of  the mind and end with powerlessness.

This has  been both a  painful and beautiful journey.  I have watched people recover and become compassionate human beings, I have also seen people who have succumbed to addiction. I know several people who have died due to the Heroin Epidemic. One of my closest friends is out there  and i can’t talk to her. She is not the same person i knew when she was sober( none of us are). In my own opinion,  there is a strange comparison between alcoholism and the story Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. I can’t think of a better description of addiction.

Oddly enough, there are  the  12 Steps and 12 Traditions that assist with this spiritual walk in these meetings. It is suggested that going through all twelve steps, getting a sponsor, and helping others are the keystones to recovery. It also suggests to have a “Higher Power.” There are plenty of agnostics in the program,  it  simply states in the book of Alcoholics Anonymous ,  “having a God of our own understanding”, and realizing we are not God. There are Buddhist, Jews, Christians, etc. . There is no discrimination on religions. Just a group of people trying to stay sober.

I have failed on my journey to abstain from alcohol and I have succeeded. I tried to get sober when i was 22,  but I hadn’t reached my bottom. My  last sobriety date was when i was July 5th, 2013.  These people  and meetings taught me that the only way to get out of my own head and misery is to help another alcoholic, and to be grateful for whatever i have.  It basically comes down to selfishness which we trade for selflessness.
My daughters usually go on Sundays with me and most my friends are recovering alcoholics or addicts. My children have a wide diversity of knowing people of all walks of life because alcoholism doesn’t discriminate .  My oldest daughter,  once told me that she told everyone at school that i was an alcoholic, of course her teachers seemed immediately  concerned. However, when she talks about alcoholics she is referring to those who don’t drink anymore. My point is,t the only alcoholics she knows are the ones that don’t drink anymore. Unlike some stereotypes, of  an alcoholic with a brown bag that sleeps underneath a bridge.  She was proud of these people, because they are our friends and family.  We drink Coffee and smoke cigarettes and we have a lot of fun doing it.  

Blog Post 3

When we talked about holidays losing their value and meaning, I couldn't agree more. The way that the experience of different holidays has changed is almost sickening. I used to celebrate almost every single holiday with my family as I was growing up, but now it doesn't feel the same. It almost feels like they're being forced to come each holiday.

My favorite holiday every year is always Christmas. There's something about the Christmas season that always makes me happy. However, over the past couple years, the joy I get from Christmas has steadily gone away. Christmas now is just a commercialized holiday that everyone looks forward for it to be over.

Another holiday that I love celebrating is the 4th of July. As my feelings for Christmas are slowly fading away, I have started to love the 4th of July even more. What's not to love? Celebrating our country, having barbeques and cookouts, nice summer weather, and ending the night watching fireworks. It just seems like everyone is in a good mood and enjoys the day.

The spirit of most holidays is quickly fading away. Sitting back and watching how these things are changing is very hard to do because there is nothing I can do to stop it. I wish everyone was as enthusiastic about the holidays as I am and showed more spirit.

Blog Post 3

       These past few years, my family and I have enjoyed different holiday traditions than we have in the past. Since I can remember, my entire family has gotten together for every holiday and special occasion. Barbecues after the 4th of July parade, Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve/Day spent at our church, and every birthday party was spent together.


Anymore, we can't even get all six sisters (my five aunts and mom) to attend their nieces and nephews birthday parties because of feuds between themselves. Or one sister gets mad and just doesn't invite specific people. They can't get over themselves long enough to celebrate another year of someone they are supposed to love.

My family hasn't celebrated an actual birthday party in nearly three years because someone's birthday is always close to another's so they all want their party on the same weekend. Then they worry that either no one will show up for their child's party or no one will have the money to buy them something.

One person or another tends to think they are better than someone else and then all hell breaks loose. My aunts have the tendency to block their own family from their phones and social media when they get upset with one another (EXTREMELY childish, I know).

I think that everybody is just so full of themselves sometimes that they don't really notice or care if they hurt someone that they love. And then they expect that person to just brush it off when they need someone because everyone else has turned their backs on them.

For the last three years, my family and I have spent New Year's Eve, Easter, 4th of July, and Christmas at home with each other rather than with the rest of our family, to create less stress and anxiety over the holidays for us. My mom does all of the cooking while my sister and I bake, trying not to screw anything up so I don't have to run to the store to buy more.

Sure, we still go to church for the big holidays like Easter and Christmas with the rest of our large family (we easily take up 3-4 pews depending on how many show up). However as soon as church has ended, we go right back home and just have quality time together.

During Easter, my mom and stepdad will fill the plastic eggs with candy for our little stepbrother and once he's found all of the eggs the "Easter Bunny" had left hidden for him, it is time for the big kids to search.

Since we are older, our eggs were filled with money! Thanks Easter Bunny! XD  Each egg had a different amount in it. Some had quarters, others had $1 or $5, but the whopper we all searched for was the ten dollar bill. Guess who found the big daddy... Me! My brother and sister were completely jealous of me.

As for Christmas, every year I wake up around 6:30 am to make my mom and stepdad's morning coffee. Without it, no one would be opening gifts until they've had their first cup! Waking everyone up is my favorite part because seeing my little stepbrothers face once he's seen all of the gifts under the tree left by Santa, he looks like he almost can't breathe.

First we open our stockings to find candy and headphones or toy cars. After that, we play a game where you toss a marshmallow into the snowman's mouth to see who gets to pick their gift first. Whoever wins can choose who gets their gift next and so on. This past year my sister and I got a matching yoga mat set that we use every so often. It's something that bonds us because we both like to try different yoga poses together.

Also, my brother, sister and I all received new softball/baseball gloves. Every summer or warm day we go outside together and practice.

Holiday traditions may not be the same as they used to be, even from just a few years ago, but I still look forward to them every year.

Blog Post Three - Fading Family Traditions

          In life, the ones who are closest to us are the ones who are related to us through blood.  This is common.  People who aren’t directly related to us will be kept at a certain distance compared to those who are.  There are certain extreme circumstances in which this is not the case, but I think we can unanimously agree that this is a standard.  There are exceptions such as spouses, or maybe a steady boyfriend or girlfriend.  When speaking of family tradition, however, your blood relatives always come first.
         
When I was much younger in the late 80’s and early 90’s, we would meet at an almost randomly chosen household for certain holidays.  Everyone was much closer back then.  Sometimes it was my grandma’s house in Dayton for Christmas, or it was my Uncle Bob and Aunt Velma’s house in West Virginia for Thanksgiving.  This would have been my mom’s side of the family.  There were other times when we would choose to share these holidays with my dad’s parents, siblings, and in-laws.  The strange thing about these gatherings is that there was almost always a dominant “host”.  There was one person who always held the entire thing together.  Like a general rallying his troops, these people were the ties that held everyone at the same pace.

On my mom’s side, it was my Uncle Bob.  Full blooded Italian, he was my Uncle by marriage.  There were times that he found his laughter at the expense of me and would tease me about my once lethal fear of insects, but damned if the man couldn’t cook just about anything you could imagine and do it better than most people ever could.  As a young boy I remember him.  Regrettedly, I was not there for his funeral as it was my job to look over the house while everyone else went to see him off.  I only remember his cooking, his hoarse laugh, his salt and pepper hair, his powerfully fluent speaking of the Italian language, and the look he always carried in his eyes.  Some of the best holidays were spent in that outlandishly scenic house, and I haven’t been there since he passed.

On my dad’s side, it was always a combined effort of my grandma and grandpa.  Much tamer than my mom’s side of the family, it was always religiously infused.  In these days, my family and I don’t say grace.  It’s not that we don’t believe in God, but perhaps that we never understood the tradition of saying grace.  As a child, I can attest to the fact that I certainly didn’t.  My uncle Dennis, a college professor of sciences, was an agnostic.  Each and every time though, he would agree to the set rules of the household and humbly nod and pray, even though he must have thought the entire thing to be played out.  I recall their old furniture.  I recall that same grandfather clock, and the sound of whooshing cars zipping down the busy roadway 100 feet from the house as I nodded off to sleep in the nighttime hours.  Hearing my grandpa walk along the semi-damp linoleum of an ever-aging house, knowing he still had his apron on from cooking all day was the last thing I could recall while falling asleep.  Just the same as my Uncle Bob, he and my grandma were the staple which held the whole thing together.

Fast forward 16 years later, and there is one thing I can say for sure.  There are so many family members that I haven’t seen in good times.  My cousins Aeryn, Jason, Jarrod, Zack, and Angie have only been seen during funerals.  This is the case every single time since they comment on how much I’ve grown (or a lack thereof).  Small talk is had between us, and we all go our separate ways just as before.  In fact, I’m certain that there will come a day that we are all alive and well, young, and still with our wits about us that we will never speak again for one simple fact: The ones who held us together are no longer here, and have been gone for quite some time.


I personally can’t explain the reason behind this phenomenon, but I can certainly theorize.  The people who held us all together and kept us communicating between one another were so respected that we all came to spend our time with them.  Not unlike going to a concert to hear one-of-a-kind music, we came to them to experience the rare form of hospitality that they had presented to us.  On top of an adamant desire to bring everyone together, this was what kept everyone close.  Without them, we all fall apart.  Traditions, like people, fade away as the years pass.  Depending on your family’s closeness, this is not always the case.  We grow older, we learn new professions, we raise our separate families, and we expire.  Not to sound grim, but this is the pattern of life in our modern age.  The great thing about particular moments is that they can live on in our memories forever so long as we don’t forget where we come from.  It’s what we choose to pass along which is presented to the next generation.  Not to sound cliché, but remember to choose wisely.

An Important Tradition

In my family we have found it necessary to celebrate birthday's on two separate days. The idea came when my brother moved to Pittsburg.

Last day of our Bahaman vacation. 
He moved to go to school there and it was quite difficult considering I had always relied on him for just about anything. But I'm gonna guess that he would say other wise. It may have to due with me being just like Nonna, but that doesn't matter.

So with the timeline, my birthday came first and Dennis wasn't able to come home on my actual birthday. However, he was able to make it to the party I had for my friends.

He arrived the day of the party, to find our house in complete and utter chaos. The kitchen was filled with a dozen teenagers stuffing their face with pizza and a competition to see who could down the most Mountian Dew in one go. For the record, I won. I'm not saying how many I got because you'll think that I'm absolutely insane, if you don't already.

The idea of having the party was so I could spend time with my friends. Looking back, I should've paid my brother the respect and actually have a full conversation with him because he did drive all the way back just for me.

So because of me completely ignoring my brother that day, we instated the new tradition to prevent that from happening. Because I mean would we actually have a birthday to celebrate without our family being there. In my world family comes first, no matter what.






Blog Post #3 - Dying Traditions (pun intended)

     
        A tradition that has been around in European culture for centuries is Halloween. Halloween is rooted from the feast of All Hallow's Evening, which celebrated all of the dead saints of the Catholic Church. Now, it has been modernized to kids of all ages in costumes roaming the streets in their neighborhoods, gathering candy from their neighbors and family members.
     
         I don't only love Halloween for the history behind it, but I also feel like the haunted houses and the aspect of celebrating dead people makes it exciting. The tradition of carving pumpkins and taking walks out in the crisp, fall air relax me and the leaves are beautiful shades of red, yellow, and brown.

        Obviously, Halloween is a very old tradition, but it's very beautiful and celebrated on a global scale. There may be other ways of celebrating this holiday, but it is in no way less important. I'm glad that humanity can keep a tradition going for so long. The downfall of celebrating a tradition that has been celebrated for centuries is that we lose the meaning of it. Then, we begin to make the holiday materialistic and unappreciated.

        I wish that Halloween was the way it used to be. I used to get so excited to dress up and walk around my small town and enjoy seeing whatever anyone else is wearing. It wasn't even about the candy for me, even though that was a good bonus. I liked seeing the intricate details to everyone else's costumes, and I especially liked it when I was able to see the really cool decorations on the houses in the neighborhood. My mom would always walk with me and encourage me to introduce myself and tell people who I was dressed as. This was also a good time to gain confidence in myself and talk to new people and potentially make new friends.
 
        I also used to love going to haunted houses (even though I usually could never finish them). I really enjoy them now, and I usually end up laughing through the whole thing. Another tradition that I love about Halloween is the marathon of scary movies on T.V. and making fun of the really dumb ones with my best friends.

        Every year, I feel as if Halloween is slipping away and being tossed aside for things "more important". I always found this holiday fun and exciting for the whole family, but as I get older, I see myself go out less and less for Halloween and I never go costume shopping anymore.  I haven't carved a pumpkin in maybe 7 years because I never go to pumpkin patches or fall festivals.

       I want to keep this tradition the same throughout my whole life because if we don't keep it alive as a society, we'll lose a part of history. I want to make it a priority to keep celebrating Halloween not only for me, but for generations to come so they can enjoy it as much as I do.
       

BLOG 3

In our reading we talked about traditions. The main point that was brought up was Holiday Traditions. I agree that Holiday traditions are not as fun as they used to be. As a kid Christmas was a fun holiday of just getting presents. I remember getting presents from my grandpa or grandma and being so happy and play with those toys, these toys distracted me from the family issues.

Sadly as I got older Christmas became more as a chore. Its pretty much me showing up to get money from my grandparents and eat food. Now I don't mind a good meal, but its the conversation we would have. My family is very christian oriented. Half our discussions have to deal with religion. I'm not very active in my religion any more so this has always been a stressful thing for me and I'm usually feeling left out.

Traditions suck when your're not active in them, and for me Christmas with my grandparents really sucks.
Things From The past

They don’t make things like they used to, that is for sure. When I was a kid and something broke, you fixed it. Now a days if something breaks, you buy a new one.

19 years ago I bought my first brand new stove. I just had a baby and bought a new house. I was very careful to buy quality name brand appliances because I wanted them to work for a long time. I thought it would be a good investment.

I spent $600 on my first stove. It had all the bells and whistles. It was all digital and it had a flat top, timers galore, a pot warmer, and a double oven. It came with a 1 year warranty and I purchased an additional 2 year warranty for $50.

It broke 2 months after the warranties ran out.

So I bought another new stove. This time I didn’t buy one with all the bells and whistles. I didn’t buy a “name brand”. It was just a plain stove with minimal options. It lasted for 5 years and then it died a tragic death, it caught on fire.

That is when I bought my antique stove for $100 on Craigslist.
This stove is a beast! It has all the bells and whistles I need. It has a timer, clock, and best of all an outlet so I can plug in things like crock pots. I have never had a problem with this stove. It keeps the perfect temperature for baking. The ceramic top is very easy to clean. I have had this stove for over 10 years and I will probably have it for the rest of my life. It was made in 1960 and it still works great! Why don’t they make stoves like this anymore???

I now have a great respect for things from the past. I started shopping at thrift stores and searching craigslist for things we needed. I was tired of spending my money on new cheap crap that breaks.


Almost everything you see in this picture above is from a thrift store. My desk, antique chairs, globe, shelf, lamp, and picture frames.

Not only do you find quality things from the past at a thrift store (or on Craigslist) but it is also a good way to recycle. The more crap we recycle and the less crap we buy new, the better it is for the environment. Me and my family always stop at the thrift store first to see if they have what we need before we buy anything brand new.

Thrifts stores are awesome for Halloween. Not only do you find cool costumes (that were probably only worn once) but you can also buy old wedding and prom dresses to make your own costumes out of.

My daughter's outfit in this picture is actually a black evening gown I turned into a witch dress and cape. My son’s costume I bought gently used for $2.

Can you tell their clothes are from a thrift store?

I think thrift stores are great but you can’t buy everything at a thrift store. I don’t buy shoes and socks there for instance but whatever you can buy used, do it. Do you for your wallet, do it for better quality, and do it for the environment.
I know this is a tradition I am passing down to my kids. My oldest son bought a canoe off of Craigslist instead of buying a new one. Atta boy!

Blog Post 3


                In Translating Traditions, we talked about the decline of the importance of holidays to most people. I think this is true of many holidays as of recent. One of the holidays everyone in class, myself included, agreed upon is losing its touch is Christmas. Christmas used to be a big part of my life when I was a kid, but now I don’t care for it at all. The last six or seven Christmases for me have honestly been pretty boring. Since it feels like Christmas is becoming more of a commercial than a time to be generous, it loses its meaning and becomes boring. It is nice to give and receive gifts, but that feeling only lasts for about ten minutes in the morning and the rest of the day just becomes a typical day. A lot of my family is in Florida at Christmas, so the most that happens with my family on that day is my maternal grandparents come over to see us.

                The one Christmas that really ruined the holiday for me was this most recent Christmas. On top of initially feeling like the last few Christmases, I was sick that day, so that wasn’t fun. If being sick on Christmas didn’t seem bad enough, something terrible happened that day. My uncle, one of my favorite family members, died that day. He was rushed to the hospital in Indianapolis (where he lives) that morning, and around 11 A.M., my parents told me that he passed away. At first, it seemed like a big “Did that really just happen?” moment, but I felt sad when I realized that this was a real event and not a strange thought. On the Friday after Christmas, we had his funeral in Dover. Many people he knew from Indiana came over to mourn at his death, which made me realize how important he was to the lives of many people.

In addition to Christmas, another holiday that has lost its touch with me over the years is Easter. I loved Easter as a kid, because I thought getting candy and gifts was fun, and I enjoyed looking for Easter eggs. Now that I’m older, the concept of finding Easter eggs grew childish and boring for me, and I don’t really care about getting gifts or candy when it also happens on Christmas and it’s even less exciting here. It just feels like another big sales event for stores to take advantage of. Also, since Easter is about the reincarnation of Jesus, why did we all associate that with a bunny instead of celebrating him now?

The final holiday I want to talk about is Labor Day. It’s supposed to be a day where everyone gets off work, but stores take advantage of this to get people to come in and buy stuff on sale. This means that the store’s employees have to come to work on a day where people are supposed to be off work. It’s very flawed execution if you ask me.

To sum it up, the holidays are becoming too commercialized and are losing their purpose for a lot of people. Some personal events of mine have also hurt certain holidays as well. I just wish people could actually celebrate them for what they’re intended to be rather than getting stuff on sale.

Blog #3


 

My Sad Sob Story




 
      After looking at both options to write about for this I can say that I do not relate to either at a very personal level. Most of these blogs I have to try extremely hard to find a way to make something that isn't very big or happens often in my family as a big deal.

 
     For me, I don't have a big tradition with my family. My parents kept the fact that we had grandparents, aunts, uncles and, cousins from us. So most of my life I grew up believing that I had zero family.

 
      My immediate family and I spent all of our holidays and birthdays with just ourselves and family friends that we would call family but, we would move so much that the people who we spent our time with was always changing.

 
      When I first actually met my grandparents I was in the third grade and that was only because they looked my mother up online and found her address. I didn't know who they really were until I was in the fourth grade.

 
      When my grandparents walked into my life my parents took up everything and moved us across the state to get away from them. (People in my family don't deal with confrontation very well.)

 
      As the years went on my grandparents began to try harder and harder to get into our lives and my mother finally gave in to meeting them and later let them begin to have a relationship with my siblings and I.

 
      When we began to get closer my dad packed us all up and moved as to the great state of Minnesota filled with their 10,000 lakes and gazillion killer mosquitos. My relationship with my grandparents was put on hold by all of these moves.

 
      After six years of living away from the only family we have my parents finally decided to “come back home”. But, at this time in my life these people hardly seem like family. I've spent the majority of my childhood without the grandparents the aunts, the uncles, and the cousins.

 
      I am not a fan of these posts because even though they are supposed to be easy it is hard to me to relate to big traditions with my family because I have do not know them long enough to have a long term tradition or a process orientated tradition either.

 
      Even now my family doesn't get together on holidays as much. Somebody doesn't like someone and don't want to look at them or, your grandparents disown them before you even get the chance to develop a relationship with that person.

 
      I wish my family loved each other or that I knew them more than I do. For me it sucks thinking that I have zero traditional family gatherings to complain about or a process orientated tradition that we do.

      Even though not having that kind of sucks I am still incredibly lucky and blessed. Sometimes I forget that I have more than other people with parents and siblings who I know will come to my side when I need them.