blah day

June 24, 2009

This is a rather blah day. My husband was studying for some kind
of test he has to take for his job. He cannot start the job yet
because they did not give him his headset/microphone piece we
await in the mail. I had to leave the house because he needed
complete quiet in order to study.

Everything is feeling irritating to me today. But it’s okay.
There are such days.

I am tired of the little place where we live, want to know when
Al’s 1st paycheck will be, want to be cruising at our new
income level, want him to get it together to start actually
working, and all the stuff I have to do this month sounds too
boring to me. So it goes.

Came into my office and re-organized my books as a start.
Did a little work on ancestry.com. Guess I will go home tonight
and watch TV w/ my hubby.

study circles

June 23, 2009

I miss sharing heart to heart at study circles. Bahai’s have a workshop-type of “study” where we go through a book together, study Holy Writings, dissect their meaning and what they mean to us, pray together, share thoughts, play games, study the lives of the Prophets, memorize some of our favorite passages together. It brings a group close together in spirit.

Going to a Baha’i Center for a monthly meeting, even with prayers, doesn’t even come close. It is like going to church and sitting, vs. a prayer meeting. Even getting together at a feast in a home for formal readings and prayers is not the same. In a study circle, you meet weekly, you are committed to finishing the book together, and somehow it opens hearts to each other. I haven’t felt that for a year now, and it is greatly missed.

home

June 20, 2009

If this house in Chapin works out for us, I am so excited to think of having a real home, one that we can settle in for years to come. I didn’t want to move to Chapin. On the census, it is nearly all white. However, there are many good things about it. It is right on the lake (the big lake, Lake Murray). Some houses in the edition have lakefront property and are worth $350,000 or more. I have had a personal dream to own a pontoon or some type of boat and be able to go out on the water! It is NEW, the whole neighborhood wasn’t built whenever google did their satellite picture thing! (Only the streets show up as dirt roads.) The house inside is spic and span new. Walls and carpet are gorgeous. The main bedroom is downstairs, which we will need in years to come. It is large, closets are large. There are 2 full bathrooms and another 1/2 off the kitchen. There are quite a lot of cabinets in the kitchen. — Still not like the Indy house, nothing could match that! I couldn’t even fill those cabinets.

The pond in back right off our backyard is larger than the one in Indy. I haven’t seen ducks or life on it yet, but there should be something?? It has a walkway around it. Then the clubhouse meeting room, swimming pool and large playground make it a wonderful place for grandkids to visit, and possible meetings or children’s virtue classes. All in all, lots of great things about it.

The people there come to the lake from various places so it has more openness and diversity that way than Newberry. My husband is ancy to get our showers taken and go to Columbia to catch a matinee when movies are cheaper. So I need to go now…

6-19

June 19, 2009

My younger brother’s birthday. Need to buy a card & mail it yet today. I don’t like e-cards, somehow too impersonal for a birthday. They vanish into thin air. Maybe because my grandmother on my mom’s side saved every card she ever got, and in fact I still have some of those in boxes, I cannot bring myself to send e-cards.

Al got his new computer in the mail today so he will soon be working.

Still stuck on James Agnew. I think he was married twice. He shows up in the New Albany census in 1870 married to “Mary C.” with 2 children, Anna and Clith(?). Then he is listed as marrying Carrie Bybee in 1879, which is the union my grandfather & his twin sister came out of, as they were born in 1892 — later children in this marriage. Unless there were 2 James Agnews in New Albany, both saying they were born in Ohio, they are the same guy. One answer would be to see the New Albany city directory or phone books of the era.

However, James Agnew’s birth place remains unsettled. He says he was born in Ohio. There was a William Agnew near Cincinnati, who has a son names James around 1841, when my great-grandfather James was born in Ohio. But how do I validate that these are the same person? I have to find something on *my* James Agnew that lists his parents. Marriage certificate *might* do it, if they were still alive & if it lists the groom’s parents.

I was going to put a quote from the Baha’i writings in some of my posts, just because the Baha’i writings are uplifting and beautiful. I have none for this post, but will just post one from something I read last night:

“Would that pure and stainless hearts could be found, that I might impart unto them a sprinkling from the ocean of knowledge which My Lord hath bestowed upon Me, so that they may soar into the heavens even as they walk upon the earth and speed over the waters even as they course the land, and that they may take up their souls in their hands and lay them down in the path of their Creator.” — Baha’u’llah, “Gems of Divine Mysteries.”

family tree

June 18, 2009

I am blown away. Signed up to ancestry.com and started my summer project of researching the family tree. It is 3:15am! I am in awe of what I have found in the past few hours. Census records, death dates, some name changes, siblings of my grandfather. I learned my great-grandfather Agnew’s wife was 18 years his junior, and she had 6 children, 5 of whom lived, one of whom was my grandfather and he had a twin sister. Her name was Myrtle and according to the census records, she had a baby boy at age 14 and named him after her father. Family history is really weird.

James Agnew, my great-grandfather, said in the 1880 census that both his parents were born in England. Then in the1900 census he reported that his father was born in Virginia and his mother in Germany! What was he doing, being a disgruntled old man and making up stories? I know nothing of his parents– not their names, nothing. This doesn’t help. Oh, I’m going to enjoy this search!

Beauty of South Carolina

June 17, 2009

The beauty of South Carolina is breath taking. It always strikes me as odd that this was one of the 1st colonies of the country, and yet it is nearly all undeveloped. Forests abound everywhere. It is a state of small towns, most of them having an ice cream place, a pizza parlor, and maybe a few others stores, plus all claiming a “historic downtown area”. Across the street from our house I have seen a group of 5 deer running together. Seeing a deer cross the road is now almost commonplace. I never saw a deer until about 5 years ago, but down here they are common.

The pines are everywhere. Driving from one town to another is to pass acres and acres of untouched pines and forest. Flowering trees start in Feb./March. There are now apples turning red on the trees in our front yard, and it is mid-June. At a farmer’s market we were told they would have corn starting next week! In Indiana we always had a saying for growing corn: “Knee-high by the 4th of July”. Here, it is done and grown and being sold by the end of June.

Water lily at Table Rock lake

June 17, 2009

all of us at Table Rock cabin

June 16, 2009

cabin photo

Summer Blog

June 16, 2009

 

I am now officially “on vacation”. Last week was the first family vacation we ever planned and accomplished. Al couldn’t join us because his job training for a new job started the same exact week. But the rest of the family was there, minus Jasmine’s husband and some step-children. I don’t think I will write about that week right now, but we spent a week at Table Rock state park, which I would recommend to anyone. Hike as much as your body will take. Do not overdo it, but get a lot of walking in. For those more capable, you can hike as much as 12 miles on one trail (which none of us did), or you can hike to the top of Table Rock Mountain (which I could not do)! We had tiny scorpions and one mouse in our cabin. We counted 8 scorpions before we left. We put down sticky paper and felt better able to sleep at night, checked our shoes in the mornings, and had air conditioning, so it was not a bad set-up.  We hiked to and found a total of 5 waterfalls, plus saw many smaller ones on a 2-mile hike. Lots of mountain flora, water lilies, all very beautiful. Canoed around a lake. Played games together and watched movies at night, plus built a fire occasionally and roasted marshmellows. All in all, a LOVELY week! The expense was $900. for the cabin, for a full week.

I am now back home and officially have *nothing* to do, which is a primal necessity for me, at this time. Last summer, from April through the summer I was writing a dissertation, which nearly killed me. I firmly believe it did upset my health, which I have still not recovered from. Final defense was, I think, in October, and then graduation last December. Meanwhile last summer I searched for and applied to 5 jobs in the South, interviewed at 2 and rec’d offers from both. I am sure I took the best one. Started teaching at a new job in August, teaching 4 courses per semester and many I’ve never taught before. I have been working literally night and day since I got here to South Carolina. These two months off are absolutely ESSENTIAL.

My plans for this summer are to now work on organizing my office, bump my classes up a notch by having more activities that facilitate their learning critical thinking and applying what they learn, AND to find a publisher for my “book” which is my dissertation. We may paint my office. And I will work on family history. I have had many dreams with Native Americans in them. In one particular dream, someone told me we were descended from some tribe, which when I awoke I could only remember as starting with the letters “C-H.” I couldn’t even think of one and asked my husband and looked on the Internet. It was not as big as Cherokee, but something different. It may have been Chickasaw.   —  so who knows? I have learned to respect and learn from my dreams. They are not always true exactly as they appear in dreams, but dreams are always a window to the soul — to what is going on within yourself. Occasionally, but rarely, they are messages from perhaps the spiritual worlds. This one is not something I have yet deciphered, but it is something I cannot ignore. I cannot imagine having Indian relations, unless they are buried in the Agnew family tree, which is a total mystery after my own grandparents.

Levin has moved to New Orleans and thinks he may have an offer with Radio Shack; Jasmine is the only one left in Indiana at this point; Leah & Jean returned to Raleigh; Jamal & Shelly to Wisconsin, where they just put an offer on a house. Leah is wanting to get pregnant for the second one. Life is exciting and challenging.

I think about our legacy with money. This is something I will write more about later. We got married as teenagers. Al’s dad, though supportive as a family, would never think of assisting financially once one of his children got married. And he never did. I don’t think he believed in financially assisting children in ANY capacity, really. They all struggled and worked as children and teenagers, earning money however they could and buying their own things.

So– as far as my family with money, growing up I had whatever I wanted. Privileged life. New wardrobe for school twice a year, with our mother taking my sister and I to Sears, using the charge card, and buying us a lot of matching dresses and outfits. Basically, our mother never knew how to handle money and we never learned. Our dad loved us very much, grew up himself very poor, probably a poor hilljack family out of southern Indiana basically, and was very proud at what he accomplished and showered his gifts upon us. We were not “wealthy rich” but we had nothing we longed for. Not much anyway. We sometimes got used bicycles if it was not our birthday — the birthday person would get the new bike. But we lived in wonderful, big old houses and got nice clothes.

After my father died, my mother turned to alcohol and had no clue how to handle money. The social security payments she got which were supposedly for us kids, we never had access to. In a nutshell, my family was of no help when I got married at age 18.

Al and I have struggled financially all our lives and worked hard all our married life. We have no savings to speak of, which is the story for most American families today. Neither do we have a large debt until recently, when for the first time we were forced to take out parent loans to get our last child through college. We have 2 little tiny credit cards which we use for gas on trips.

I cannot tell you how many times I have gone forward on faith alone. But that is what poverty mixed with belief teaches you: trust in God and move forward, one step at a time. We have had blessings showered down on us, and have always made it through, we have sent every one of our children overseas for that experience, all on VERY little money. The stories of how these things happened abound in our lives, but I will not go into them right now. They have made me stronger as a person and given me an understanding of other peoples’ difficult life situations, which add a real depth to my teaching. However, I still feel that we should have done better, for our kids.

The main thing we need to do now is find a place to move to. I cannot tolerate this house another year, with no storage space, not much space in general, and no control over the furnishings (which are awful)! The owners are lovely people. They couldn’t be better neighbors. It is just the place. We need a HOME, one we can invite the family to, have room to have meetings in, and store things in. I want a garden, I want to paint rooms the colors we like, I want control over our household. However, we are not in a great financial position yet, to do this. So again, we are going forward on a prayer and hoping a rent-to-own opportunity works itself out. Inshallah, we shall see what happens.

“God sufficeth all things above all things, and nothing in the heavens or in the earth but God, sufficeth. Verily, He is in Himself, the Knower, the Sustainer, the Omnipotent.”  — Baha’i writings.

new subject!!

June 16, 2009

This blog has only been for the purpose of logging my thoughts of being with my older brother the last week of his life. I have decided to start using it for general thoughts & musings. For anyone who wants to read, enjoy.