Brightwood Lights

July 30th, 2011

Kid Updates: July 2011

Posted by Nancy in Family, Home Life, Parenting, kids

It’s been a bit since I gave a good update on the kids for those who really, REALLY want to know, so here we go:
Simona is 5 and starts Kindergarten in one short month!! She is an incredible helper and great big sister, and I think she adores her role as “oldest.” I sometimes have to remind her that she is not Mama, though, when she starts to take a tone with Andreas if he doesn’t do as she says!

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She is getting better and better at coloring and drawing and can sit for relatively long stretches with her crayons and colored pencils. She’s also slowly starting to read and write! Her German is better at this point, largely because it’s a much more phonetic language than English, but she’s picking up both very well. She has some of the same easily-frustrated/wants-to-give-up tendencies that I recognize in myself, but then her joy at finally “getting it” is that much greater. Speaking of “getting it,” she mastered bike riding this spring! She has been able to ride without training wheels since Christmas, but stopping and starting still required help. Since April 29, though, she is a fully independent bike rider!
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She also took swimming lessons in Germany (with the same swim instructor who taught me to swim!) and is now a certified competent breast-stroker. She passed the “Seepferdchen” (Little Seahorse) test, which is a nationally standardized swim test requiring the swimmer to a) jump into the pool, b) swim 25 meters without stopping / holding onto the sides, and c) retrieve a ring from the bottom of the pool (in relatively shallow water).

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We are happy for our little seahorse. . . who also has become our little ballerina. She took ballet & tap lessons once a week this spring and had her first recital in June. She also had the chance to be a flower girl yet AGAIN this summer. One of the two flower girls at my cousin’s wedding had stage fright, so Simona was asked to stand in last minute. Of course, she didn’t need to be told what to do!


Finally, Simona is anticipating her losing her first* tooth, which will probably fall out any day.

*Technically, second, but the first was not exactly “lost.” (See December 2009 if you need a refresher!)

Andreas is a busy, busy little guy.


He’s still “all boy” in that he loves tractors, balls, trucks, and other stereotypical “boy” toys. He still loves fish, though the obsession has died down a bit. In many ways he’s a typical two-year-old, with endless curiosity about the world and constant energy. He runs very well now and continues to be an amazing climber.
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He loves to swim, though a lingering “complication” of his eye issues is that he has very sensitive eyes. He can’t blink or squint very well, which makes getting sun, water, shampoo, or sunscreen in his eyes very painful. That makes being outside and around the pool a bit more complicated, but he does love it.
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Andreas is also quite a clown, cracking jokes like, “Das Baby heisst Nancy!” when pointing to Maria or “Ich heisse ‘mas o menos’!” (“The baby is named Nancy!” or “My name is mas o menos!” which he got from Simona bringing home lessons from Spanish class.) He has learned to turn on the iPod and also likes to do “ballet” by hopping around the living room. He’s sweet but can have a bit of a temper, so we’re working on not screaming or hitting when we don’t get our way. (Again, typical 2-year-old!) He’s also having some trouble sleeping through the night, which can lead to funny half-sleepy conversations like the night he woke me up at 3 AM to ask me, “Koennen wir Vogel und Spargel essen, Mama?” (translation: “Can we eat some bird and asparagus, Mama? . . . who knows what that means or where it came from!).
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He also refuses to even consider potty training, but we plan to push that a bit more after we are settled into a new routine in the coming months. He’s extremely cute with Maria, and I sometimes catch him trying to comfort her when she’s upset. (Occasionally, she’s upset because he’s climbed into her crib and woken her during nap time!) He and Simona alternate between playing well and fighting like crazy, especially now that he’s able to stand up for himself a bit when she gets bossy. It’s just too bad that his attention span is so short; it makes getting his tender moments on camera nearly impossible.

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Maria changes constantly and quickly!


It’s amazing to look at how far she has come in seven and a half months. While I was pregnant, she was so calm that I predicted that she would be my most mellow baby and that she would likely be a little slower on some of the gross motor skills. Boy, has she proven me wrong! She is, in fact, my most calm and peaceful baby; however, she continues to surprise me with her quiet resolve and determination! She was sitting up at just over 5 months, scooting by six months, and is now fully crawling. . . and getting faster by the day! She can climb up one step and is working on creeping up a staircase. Time to get serious with the baby-proofing!


Though she is my “earliest” at all of these skills, she is my “latest” teether. She got her first tooth on July 10, at exactly 7 months, and cut her second tooth just this week. Maria also wins the distinction as my only non-thumb sucker. She soothes herself pretty well with her “Frosch” (frog) blanket but also settles down quickly when she is picked up. She has started to take a liking to solid foods and so far has been a great eater. (We did have to try spinach a few times before it went down!)
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Maria ADORES older kids- especially her older siblings- but is a bit more judicious with her laughs now that she is starting to distinguish familiar faces from strangers.

Overall, these three kiddos keep me BUSY! I have been spoiled with plenty of help from family during these weeks of transition, but we are looking forward to settling into a new routine in Baltimore, too. No telling what antics these three will come up with . . . stay tuned!

July 21st, 2011

Schleswig-Holstein

Posted by Nancy in Baltimore, Travel

When an American thinks of Germany, here’s what usually comes to his or her mind:
- Wienerschnitzel
- Lederhosen
- Cars (VW, BMW, Mercedes)
- Beer / Oktoberfest
- Mountains / yodeling
- Hitler / WWII
Did I hit them all? Maybe some think of a few others: the Autobahn with its famous lack of speed limits, soccer, Bratwurst, Sauerkraut. . . and if they’re really on their game, they may even come up with something like the Berlin Wall or so.

I ought to know, because I have spent my life having Americans reference any or all of these topics when the fact that I am German comes up in conversation. While I appreciate the efforts to make conversation about Germany, it feels a bit to me like someone from a ranch in Montana being asked to talk about Times Square or the beaches in Florida. Americana, yes, but probably quite different from the day-to-day American experience in Montana.
So here is a glimpse into “my” part of Germany, Schleswig-Holstein (“S-H”). Sorry if this is boring. . . I’ll include a brief family update at the bottom, so feel free to skip the geography lesson.

S-H is the northernmost German state and is bordered by Denmark to the north, the Baltic Sea to the east, the German state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (Mecklenburg- West Pommerania) to the southeast, the Elbe river to the south, and the North Sea to the west. Hamburg, the 2nd largest city in Germany (after Berlin), is a separate city-state located on the Elbe River between S-H and Niedersachsen (Lower Saxony), the state on the other side of the river.




S-H is similar to the Midwest in that much of it is flat or gently rolling, fertile farmland. Cabbage and cows dominate the countryside around Glueckstadt, the town in which we spend most of our time. Other prominent features of the landscape are dykes, sheep, and, more recently, large windmills. S-H is home to Germany’s main beaches, which are characterized by their extreme tides, especially on the North Sea side. In fact, the “Wattenmeer” is a designated UNESCO World Heritage site because its tidal ecosystem is so unique. It truly is a site to behold: During low tide, the dunes can be separated from the water literally by miles of beach. These pictures are from the beach near St. Peter-Ording on the North Sea:

S-H is home to the Nord-Ostsee Kanal (NOK), the third-most-important shipping canal in the world (following the Panama & the Suez Canals). The Elbe is also a major shipping route, and huge container ships, ferries, and cruise liners traveling to and from Hamburg’s massive port are a frequent site from the shorelines.

Because it is the “Land Between the Seas,” S-H has a relatively mild temperatures year-round, with averages of 55L/75H in the summer and 28L/38H in the winter. Don’t be fooled, though- S-H is so far north that it stays light from about 4:15 AM to 11:15 PM in the summers. It is extremely windy and very rainy, which can make even a summer day quite cold by our standards! The hidden benefit to the grey, dreary weather, though, is a subtle beauty borne out in the lush landscape and the frequent, awesome cloud formations. My Oma has instilled in me a deep appreciation for both the scenery and the hardiness of the locals.

Glueckstadt, where my dad grew up, was founded by a Danish king in the 1600s. (S-H was a contested territory for much of its history and was controlled by the Danish at various points in time.) The town lies directly on the Elbe and is home to a ferry across the river, which many vacationers and even large trucks utilize to bypass the notorious traffic jams in the “Elbtunnel” in Hamburg. In fact, during peak summer vacation season, the ferry itself can have a multi-hour wait time! Watching the skilled seamen dock and then quickly direct traffic on and off the boat is a past time in and of itself.

Glueckstadt is a cute, walkable town that attracts quite a large number of tourists, especially during its annual “Matjeswochen,” or town festival celebrating the local delicacy: pickled raw herring. (It tastes great with some tomato slices, pepper, and pickles on black bread. Trust me!)
Glueckstadt also boasts a marketplace with a beautiful church and a twice-a-week market, where locals purchase food and other items directly from area farmers, bakers, and other vendors. Some of our favorite town establishments have always been the local public pool (the “Fortuna Bad”) and an Italian ice cream shop with amazing gelato.

I hope you have enjoyed a brief tour of some of the lesser-known parts of Germany. Tour books usually skim over Schleswig-Holstein, but I’m proud to call this one of the many places I feel “at home.”
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Other Updates:
Caleb has begun his job in Baltimore, and we have decided to live in that city instead of Washington, D.C. It was a tough decision, but ultimately, we realized we would have a much higher quality of life as a family if we lived close to Caleb’s office. Maria and I joined Caleb in looking for a place to live last weekend, and all of us will be moving into a new (rental) home in Baltimore on August 1. We are looking forward to being reunited and to beginning a new chapter in the Old Line State.

June 15th, 2011

Big Girl and Big News

Posted by Nancy in Atlanta, Family, The District, Work, adventures, kids

BIG GIRL!
Simona turned five this week!

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We cannot believe that she is so big (and that we have been parents for so long)! Of course, as her parents, we cannot help but take every opportunity we can to brag, so here goes:

Simona is funny. Just ask Maria! No one can make Maria belly laugh the way Simona can with her silly dances and faces. Simona is also amazingly good at math. She can figure out basic multiplication problems (four times three, etc.) on her own, and she recently was able to tell us that half of sixty is thirty. She is learning some basic reading but is much better at it in German than in English. This not surprising, since we speak German here at home and since it is a much, much more phonetic language than English. Simona also has a kind heart and overall is quite empathetic. She is creative, artistic, and far more graceful and girly than I’ve ever been. She balances this with a love for swimming, bike riding, digging, and climbing. We delight in watching her grow into her own person.

(Just so you don’t think that all of the preceding praise is made up, I will throw in the honest truth: she can be harsh with her little brother, sometimes lies to avoid getting in trouble (bad move!), and doesn’t quite yet get the nuance between being proud and excited vs. being proud and boastful. But she tries so hard to please us and to be a “good person.”)

We celebrated her fifth birthday twice. The first event was a pool party on Saturday at our apartment pool.


Simona had three friends from the neighborhood and four from her preschool, all of whom had a blast splashing and swimming. Opa, Papa, and Mama were on lifeguard duty outside while Oma was inside with Maria (and on potty duty). Between swimming, lunch, and cake, the party was over before we knew it!

Her second party took place on Sunday, her actual birthday, in “Berbree City,” as Andreas calls Oma and Opas house. Opa took the kids swimming and kayaking in their pool (yes, he put the kayak in the pool. . .) and then went on a bike ride to the elementary school playground. Simona got her requested meal of “hamburgers and mac-n-cheese,” supplemented by some tolerable green beans, followed by presents and ice cream cake. Sounds like a successful day by any 5-year-old’s standards, I’d say!

BIG NEWS
Our big news is that . . . we finally know where we’ll be moving! We had planned on “knowing” by graduation, but graduation came and went back in May. Lest you think Caleb was dragging his feet in the job search process, let me assure you: He was not. He spent many, many hours over the past year drinking gallons of coffee at various “meet for coffee” networking meetings throughout the Atlanta area. I think he knows every individual who has ever been even tangentially involved in the real estate industry in this city.

Along the way, we learned that a job search like this can be a bit of a geography bee. There were MANY places we considered moving during this job hunt process. Some of these were serious considerations, complete with actual interviews or job offers, Google map geography lessons, elementary school research, etc. Others ended up being long-shot scenarios– job postings to which Caleb deliberated applying, job leads that quickly dried up or ended up not being the right fit for us, etc.

A few of the cities we considered:
- Piscataway, New Jersey
- New Delhi, India (yes, the country!)
- San Antonio, Texas
- San Francisco, California
- Chicago, Illinois
- Birmingham, Alabama
- Charleston, South Carolina
- Charlotte, North Carolina
- Boston, Massachusetts
- Hanover, New Hampshire
- McLean, Virginia (near Dulles Airport)
- Baltimore, Maryland
- Atlanta, Georgia

But in the end, we are moving right back where we started: Washington, DC! Caleb has accepted a job in Baltimore, Maryland. We have been deliberating whether to move to Baltimore or DC, but for a variety of reasons, we have decided that at this point, DC makes more sense for us. We are very open to the possibility that the commute will be too much, so we plan to reconsider our situation after 6-12 months. In the meantime, however, we are excited to return to the District!!

We will be moving out of our apartment here in about 1 week and will spend time in Germany before beginning our next adventure: Round 2 in the Nation’s Capitol!

June 6th, 2011

A party in the USA

Posted by Nancy in Family, The District, kids

When Simona was first born, we had the idea to try to get a picture of her (and of all subsequent children) at the state border sign at each new state she (they) visited.

At times, getting these pictures has meant going to great lengths, braving seedy industrial areas or making a 20-minute detour just to get the photo taken. And sadly, we’ve missed a few state pictures along the way, which just means we’ll have to re-visit those at some point.

However, it’s been a fun way to document our kids’ travels. So without further ado, I present the states our kids have visited (or in which they’ve lived), in alphabetical order:

1. Alabama

2. Arkansas

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3. Connecticut

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*Simona had been to Connecticut once before this, but I was not able to get her picture on that trip*

4. Delaware

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*Andreas has also been to Delaware, but we have not gotten his picture at a state sign yet.*

5. Georgia


*Obviously, Maria has been to Georgia, despite the lack of a picture. . . *

6. Illinois

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7. Indiana

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8. Iowa

9. Kansas

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10. Kentucky

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11. Maine

12. Maryland

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*I’m going to have to search our photo archives a little more for Andreas’s Maryland picture. . . for now, please take my word that he has spent A LOT of time in Maryland.*

13. Massachusetts

14. Minnesota
*We flew in and out of Minneapolis and didn’t see a state sign on our drive up to Longville, so these had to suffice for Simona:

15. Mississippi

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16. Missouri

17. New Hampshire

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*Yet another state which Andreas has visited but for which a picture is lacking. . . *

18. New Jersey


*The first picture is of Simona pointing to the NJ Turnpike on the map at a rest center. . . getting the “Welcome To” picture is nearly impossible on that turnpike, so Andreas’s picture is of lesser quality here, too. Believe me, I have had a flat tire with him in a pack-n-play on the side of the highway in NJ. I’d say that counts as having been there!*

19. New York

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*Yet again, Andreas does not have photographic evidence of being welcomed to the Empire State, but his attendance at Tante KK and Onkel Mike’s wedding and graduation affirm that he’s been. . .*

20. North Carolina

21. Ohio

22. Oklahoma

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23. Oregon
*Sadly, we had to choose between catching our return flight or getting our picture at the “Welcome to Oregon” sign at the airport. Andreas and Simona definitely attended Tante Janice & Onkel Gus’s wedding, and we’ll definitely all need to return to get that photo (not to mention visit Tante J & Onkel Gus!).*

24. Pennsylvania

25. Rhode Island

26. South Carolina

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27. Tennessee

28. Virginia

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29. Washington, D.C.

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30. West Virginia

31. Wisconsin
*The last shall be first! Maria beat both of her older siblings to this one!*

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TOTALS, in case you are keeping score:
Simona- 30
Andreas- 28
Maria- 5
(and for good measure, Nancy- 45, Caleb- 41).

**PLEASE NOTE** that this is out of 51. . . we can’t omit DC, the land of two of our children’s births. . .

May 10th, 2011

MBA!

Posted by Nancy in Atlanta, Family, School, adventures

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Caleb graduated from Goizueta Business School at Emory University this week! He completed the One-Year Accelerated Masters in Business Administration, with a concentration in Real Estate and Finance.

He’s not the type to brag, so I will do so for him. Caleb has won award upon award during his one year at Emory, including being named to the Dean’s List, being named a Dean’s Scholar, being inducted into the Beta Gamma Sigma business honors society, and being voted as the one-year student who best exemplifies integrity by his peers. I’m proud of him for all that he has achieved, but the peer “integrity” award is especially sweet. I know that I am married to a man who embodies hard work, honesty, and humility, but it’s flattering to know that his friends and classmates see those same traits in him, too.

He also entered two Real Estate “case competitions” (yes, nerdy- don’t worry– I’ve teased him plenty). One was a competition among Emory students, and Caleb’s team won. The second was a state-wide competition, with teams from Georgia Tech, UGA, Georgia State, and Emory. Again, Caleb’s team won.

Besides accumulating these academic accolades, Caleb has managed to spend plenty of quality time with his kids, build lifelong friendships with his classmates, be a devoted husband, exercise (relatively) consistently, and network with just about every living GBS alum in the entire world.

The future for us is still up in the air. We are in the process of making some tough decisions, trying to balance career and family considerations as we try to discern what next steps will be most honoring to God. We’ll be sure to report back once those decisions are made!

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