Thursday, December 25, 2008

"The world is too much with us;

...late and soon,
Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers;
Little we see in nature that is ours."




"I'm sitting here la la. Waiting for my Ya Ya Ah huh. Ah huh."

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Monday, December 22, 2008

Let it snow, let snow, let it snow (not...)

Here is some good morning warmth and good cheer for our chilly and exhausted family on Crosby Road.

We love you and are relieved that you are all safe.






Thank you for visiting.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

"What a difference a day makes.."

A Hong Kong sunrise from my window on a (almost) smog free Sunday morning.



...and, of course, the requisite picture of Miss Muffet.




Thank you for visiting.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Saturday, December 13, 2008

"I call your name, and you're not there..."

There is a main street in Fort Lee, New Jersey named Bruce Reynolds Blvd. It runs parallel to and above the confluence of highways that flow into the George Washington Bridge.


Being new to the area, I wondered who Bruce Reynolds was and why Fort Lee had named a street in his honor.


I found the answer in a New York Times article dated Dec 5, 2001. It is reprinted below in its entirety:


New Daffodils for Garden That Outlived a Creator
J. A. Reynolds knew that a mesh bag of daffodil bulbs had been sitting under a tree at the corner of his block since October, awaiting him, his trowel and his bent back. A Dutch businessman had sent a million bulbs to New York residents, a gift that has kept hands busy across the city during an anxious season.

Although the ration of bulbs for Isham Park was only a two-minute walk from the home of Mr. Reynolds, the master of his community garden, he just could not face it. "I'm surprised that I am able to sit in the apartment all day and not be bored, just B just melancholy," Mr. Reynolds said. "I've been avoiding people. When I go out, naturally, everybody wants to talk about him."

That would be his son, Bruce Reynolds, who died Sept. 11 at the World Trade Center. The whole neighborhood knew him.

The Reynoldses were probably the first black family to move to the Park Terrace section of Inwood, at the northern end of Manhattan. They arrived in 1965 from Pittsburgh and loved how the streets rolled high and low along the Hudson, against parkland, in sight of the Palisades.

"I felt it was the perfect playground, the perfect community for my son," Mr. Reynolds said.

Yet he worried for his young son, as the first of his race and an only child.

"If we didn't get involved in the community, it wouldn't be an ideal place for Bruce to go out and play, considering the singular position he was in," Mr. Reynolds said.

So the Reynoldses set their eyes on a trashed lot in a northeastern corner of Isham Park, at the end of their street. All the benches had been burned. Teenagers drank beer, smoked, cursed. Mr. Reynolds, a social worker, had a plan. He organized the children, nearly all Irish-Americans.

"Little by little, we cleared the rubble," he said. "Then we began planting. Once they were organized and directed, like any group of kids, they responded beautifully."

Bruce Reynolds worked the garden with his father. His parents sent him to private schools. Mr. Reynolds worked for the city, then for the Fashion Institute of Technology. His wife, Geri Reynolds, also a social worker, worked with the elderly, wrote a column for the neighborhood paper and helped administer the business of the garden.

"Even though Bruce was younger, they knew who he was," Mr. Reynolds said. "They respected what my wife and I did. The neighborhood is fabulous, as far as we're concerned. We had no bad incidents. As a result of the garden, Bruce became very well known."

In the apartment, they built a cage to the ceiling for lovebirds. The floor in Bruce's room was left bare of carpet so that he could run Matchbox cars along it. They built a loft, so their only child could have two friends sleep over.

When Bruce Reynolds was very young, his father took him to the woods in autumn to collect leaves. They brought them home in bouquets, and compared their colors to the skin tones of the family.

"We would compare the oak leaves to each other, and we could compare them to his mother's coloring and to mine," Mr. Reynolds recalled. "He was totally unintimidated about being African-American, about being black or being Negro. He never felt he had to apologize for being a man of color."

When money for seeds was scarce, Bruce Reynolds propagated ivy by putting the cuttings into jars of water until the roots grew. Then he laid them as ground cover beneath the tall trees. With his own earnings, he bought cherry plum trees. He attended the Fashion Institute of Technology, studied advertising and communications, then became a ranger in the city parks. He joined the Port Authority police force in 1986.

"I didn't want him to go into law enforcement," Mr. Reynolds said. "We had spent all that money on education, but that's what he wanted."

Then love brought him to peat bogs in Ireland. He met Marian McBride, an immigrant from County Donegal. They married and bought a house in western New Jersey, where he could fish in the streams and they could raise their children in the country. He joined the Ancient Order of Hibernians in Hudson County. The family traveled often to Donegal, and Officer Reynolds sang in the pubs, drank Guinness and walked the bog with his father-in-law, Patrick McBride. In July, the couple celebrated the first birthday of their son, Michael. On Sept. 8, they had a party for their daughter Brianna's fourth birthday.

Assigned to patrol the George Washington Bridge, he and his partners sped to the World Trade Center on Sept. 11. He was last seen helping a woman burned by flaming jet fuel. Then he was lost, along with 36 other Port Authority police officers. He had turned 41 in July.

"I feel anger and bitterness because of what the world has done," said Mr. Reynolds, 78. "A world we thought we really were not part of."

Since then, the days have run across him, usually with great tenderness, at times mercilessly. He cannot bear the word "hero." Mrs. Reynolds has had surgery for a difficult case of arthritis. Thousands of people went to memorials in New Jersey and Donegal for their son. At a diner in Fort Lee, he and Marian Reynolds discovered that a cheeseburger special had been named for Officer Bruce Reynolds, bringing them to tears. He worries that he did not fully grasp the breadth of his son's life.

"Now I have a different perspective on him," he said. "I would rather have my son. I wish I had a lot more children now. I guess it wouldn't have made any difference. Bruce is Bruce. I pray that one day, I am able to let go, to enjoy his memories, to keep his life everlasting."

He has started to leave the house. The other day, Mr. Reynolds took his granddaughter, Brianna, to Inwood Hill Park. They found a bouquet of oak leaves in autumn browns. At home, they compared them to the tones in a picture of her father. "I want her to be aware of how beautiful color is," Mr. Reynolds said.

The thought came to him this week that the Isham Park share of daffodil bulbs, part of the vast shipment to the Parks Department from Hans van Waardenburg of B & K Flowerbulbs, would soon begin to rot if they were not put in the ground. So yesterday afternoon, he headed for the garden they started so long ago, father, son and friends, back when they set out to grow good things in a good place.

Through the steady misting drizzle, he toted his pick, his shovel and his trowel. He has no son to bury, but he had flowers to plant.

Thank you, Fort Lee and the New York Times for the introduction.

Thank you Bruce Reynolds. You are the best of us all.

Thank you for visiting.



Blocks

What's the point of hauling 20 pounds of blocks from Fort Lee to Hong Kong??!!


Thank you for visiting.

Friday, December 12, 2008

Incheon

I've just landed in Incheon, South Korea on my way to Hong Kong.

It is a most historic place for United States Marines. 

Three ultimate truths were pounded into our skulls before the sun rose to our first morning of boot camp.  They were Incheon, Chosin Reservoir, and Chesty Puller.

As told in Marines.com

The Cold War escalated when communist North Korea invaded South Korea in what was seen as a global military challenge. As the head of UN forces, Army General Douglas MacArthur relied on the amphibious capabilities of the Marine Corps to reclaim South Korea's occupied capital, Seoul.

In a surprise attack, Marines landed behind enemy lines on the heavily defended shores of Inchon. Moving from landing ship tanks, they climbed the seawall with gunfire support from helicopters above. 
 
Within hours, the Marines cleared the beach and began moving toward Seoul. In two weeks, they reclaimed the capital and put the North Korean army on the run.

Puller is the most decorated Marine in history, having received the Navy Cross (one below the Medal of Honor) five times.  

Semper Fi, Chesty with thanks from a grateful country and legions of fellow Marines living and dead.

Thank you for visiting.