18 January 2009

Lillian's Laws for Living Life




Today would've been my mother's 82nd birthday, and it's gray and dreary here. An appropriate backdrop for my reflective mood. The best way I can think of to honor her memory is to republish her collected wisdom; she and I worked on this short piece a few months before her death. Actually, I take it back, that's the second-best way. The best way was to use some of our inheritance from her to complete the work she was unable to complete herself, and we set up an endowed scholarship in her name; more on that another time.





Lillian's Laws for Living Life




You can be anything you want to be, if you're willing to work hard enough. No one else has the right to define you, your hopes, dreams, priorities, and goals. Never accept limitations or labels put on you by anyone.

You control your environment. You have the privilege and responsibility for making it what you want to live in -- both your physical environment and the types of people you surround yourself with. If you abdicate that responsibility, you deserve to live in what you get.

When you've really arrived, you don't have to shout about it. Understatement is often the most elegant way to call attention to something (or yourself).

Concentrate on getting an "A" for effort, and the rest will take care of itself. Doing your best is more important than being the best.

Keep your promises, no matter what. If you're not certain you can keep it, don't make it!

Always tell the truth. Not only is it ethically correct, it's easier to remember than a lie.

Moderation is always the wiser course. There is no black or white, just shades of gray.

Education is the most valuable thing you can acquire. The truly wise person knows how much there is still to learn, and is willing to take lessons from everyone and everything in the world.

All of your most valuable possessions are intangible. Your skills, your friends, your health are more important than "stuff" you accumulate because it is useful, or beautiful, or amusing, or reminds you of someone special.

Never let anyone pressure you for an immediate answer. Any important decision is worth sleeping on. A good deal can stand scrutiny and will still look good in the morning.

Make your own decisions, and take responsibility for the consequences.

Buck the trend -- do what makes sense for you, no matter what "they" may think.

Stand up for your rights; no one else will do it for you.

Keep things in perspective and pick your battles. Identify what's really important, and fight as hard as you can for that; be ready to give in on anything else.

Contemplating the nature of God is a procrastination technique--the world becomes a better place only through your positive action. Even if you don't know what God is, you know what good works are. You should be out there making a difference!

Tolerance is one of the most beautiful words in the English language.

Don't burn your bridges -- keep as many options open as possible, as long as possible.

Saying "thank you" is a great investment. So inexpensive, and you never know when a kind word to someone else will give you a delightful payback.









16 January 2009

I'm jazzed!

Got an email complimenting my writing for my newspaper blog Life Afloat. Unlike efriends like Krissie (Australia) and Moni (Netherlands), who received an excited email from me telling them my blog was being published, this guy is my first international (Canada) reader who found me on his own. I didn't send the link to him. Kewel!

It came in as an email in my inbox with the vague subject of "good day" from a sender whose name I didn't recognize and my first thought was, ugh, my spam filter's getting sloppy, I'm guessing this is an ad for Viagra or a request to help move some Nigerian bank money ... almost deleted it without reading. So glad I didn't! Brightened my whole day.

Well, that and the fact that I have 6 days off. Monday is a holiday anyway (MLK Day). For the inauguration, they close all Federal offices in the Washington area - no one would be able to get in to work anyway. It's going to be cold so I'm not going to try to brave the crowds. I'm going to try to find a 'viewing party' somewhere near here to watch the events on tv and celebrate.

12 January 2009

An Awkward Re-gifting Situation

(This is the sort of thing where I miss the input from the GWF board. Sigh. FIE on Vista!)

A friend gave us a bottle of wine for Xmas in one of those gift bags; it had obviously been regifted. At least, the bag had, it still had the original tag on it (oops). We think there's nothing wrong with reusing the bag, it's better for the environment that way. Our problem is that snugged into the (reused) tissue paper surrounding the bottle was a gold pin, still in its original package. I'm having a hard time figuring out if it was intended for me. Not really my 'style' hence not picked out with me in mind, but our friend is not from the US and this pin is very much in the style of his native country.

So, if it was truly intended for me, I'd like to accept it with grace. OTOH, if it was an oversight, sooner or later the original gifter will ask our friend how his wife M. liked the pin. Yikes!

I think I have to bust him on the regifting to make sure?? Normally, I'd invite him over to share the excellent wine with us, and broach the awkward conversation, but, making it doubly difficult, there's a language barrier! The only thing I can think of right now is to enlist the help of his daughter as a translater via email (she's in school out-of-state). I hate to spread the potential embarassment but don't know how else to make sure I'm not hijacking a (possibly pricey) gift meant for someone else.

A Very Pleasant Business Meeting

Friday was Dan's BD, and we had plans to meet friends for dinner, but first, a business meeting with our financial planner was scheduled for the AM. He walked us through the financial plan booklet he'd prepared for us and as he was talking about page 3 he said, "I think you'll be happy to see the numbers on page 4." <*insert drum roll here*> We're on track and if we retire at the end of August and then after a few lean months, by the following January 2010 we should expect our monthly income to be almost exactly what we're living on now. It was clear that he had almost as much fun saying this as we had hearing it ... especially as right now in the U.S. he's worked with a lot of people whose investments have done so badly that they've had to put off retirement for YEARS.

Our new friends J. and A. met us for dinner at a local bar/restaurant that's popular with sailors. They had just closed the deal on a new boat and they were full of news. We talked excitedly and had dinner, and as we got up to leave we noticed that we were the last ones there. We got home and I was stunned to learn it was 11 PM. We had spent 4 hours at that restaurant table! I sent an email to J. and A. that said OMG I can't believe we talked about boats nonstop for 4 hours and never noticed the time passing! They sent back an email saying they'd noticed the same thing. Sounds like this particular friendship is off to a roaring start!